Tuesday
Tuesday we finished 1 and 2 Timothy, Hebrews, 1 and 2 Peter, and
Jude. Many of the questions that they ask are either not directly
answered by scripture, or far outside my experience. I do try to
answer their questions, but I also have told them them that I would
rather them learn HOW to think than WHAT to think. There are some
core issues. There are some things about which Christians must have
agreement to be truly Christian. But there are also matters about
which good Christians will disagree, about which there is no clear
statement in scripture. There are many places where the Bible simply
does not answer the questions that we have. And as people who will
likely, by the very nature of having this education, be leaders in
their churches, I want them to be able to study well and to reason
well, and to be people full of compassion as they work to reconcile
lost people to the God who loves them.
Tuesday afternoon we went to a nearby handicraft market. It was a
cultural experience as much as a shopping experience. I have never
before been to the sort of market where there are almost no prices,
but rather you wheel and deal and haggle. You walk by shops (most of
which are selling mostly the same goods as the shop before) and
people ask you, people almost beg you, to come in and “just look.”
Garry kept asking various shopkeepers “what do you sell here?”
and invariably the answer was “everything.” People kept offering
us their “special Tuesday prices” or the “special price because
you've been so kind” or in one case “special birthday prices
because it's my birthday.” It kind of left me wondering how many
birthdays he's had this year! They quite cleaned me out of the
emalangeni I had left – not that I had that much, but I hadn't
quite expected to spend all the rest of it. I probably paid more than
I ought to have, but I did haggle, and paid less than I might have,
and I was really impressed with some of it (particularly in the
“birthday” man's shop).
Tuesday evening some of the staff invited us for dinner. Sydney and
Misozi Mhango are from Zambia, but after coming to ACC they stayed
on, Sydney as the director of the Tree of Life operations, the
macadamia farm that provides so much of ACC's expenses, and Misozi as
their librarian. I have rarely felt such incredibly warm hospitality
Wednesday
Today I finished lecturing, concluding with the gospel, letters, and
revelation of John. In a school such as this where the students come
from a variety of denominational backgrounds, we had quite a diverse
set of viewpoints on Revelation. I explained to them first the main
interpretive options, a few interpretive keys that I use to try to
understand apocalyptic literature, and then I dove in and explained
to them how I understand it: a message of hope to the suffering
people of God, that no unjust human or demonic power can stand
against the worthy risen lamb who fights for his people and promises
a day of final renewal.
No outings today – a quiet afternoon, a time to finish up some
work, and dinner and evening service tonight. A good day to relax and
reflect, and to get my last bit of work done – marking the
assignments that they had to hand in at the beginning of the week,
and figuring out how I'll mark their sermons. I am glad to be done
teaching, and I am sad to be done teaching. I am looking forward to
the next two days of getting to be on the receiving end as I hear
them preach as part of their evaluation.
" I would rather them learn HOW to think than WHAT to think."
ReplyDeleteTHAT is what makes you a great teacher
Ditto!
ReplyDeleteI third that statement!
ReplyDelete