i

This content is paid for by an advertiser and published by CP Brand Solutions. The Christian Post newsroom was not involved in creating this content. Learn more about CP Brand Solutions.

 
 

Why the World needs an “Evangelical” Divinity School

By David W. Pao, PhD Dean of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Professor of New Testament

Many Bible-believing Christians no longer embrace the term “Evangelical” as evangelism has become increasingly perceived as serving a particular cultural and political agenda. Even self-confessed evangelicals acknowledge a movement within their fold from confessional biblical Christianity to a form of therapeutic pragmatism that centers on self-actualization rather than the worship of the Holy God. The “evangel” is thus redefined where the missional mandate that once laid at its core has become at best a secondary concern.

This does not mean, however, that the label “evangelical/evangelicalism” should be abandoned. Throughout the ages, the euangelion (“Gospel”) has always been one that many found repulsive. As such, theological education in the evangelical tradition needs to be boldly evangelical as we testify to the transformative power of the Gospel while providing a critique of the competing ideologies that threaten the life of the Church.

As an evangelical divinity school, seeks to train heralds of the Gospel who are firmly grounded in the Word. These heralds are to be bold prophets in their own social locations and humble students in global and cross-cultural contexts. Seventy years ago, Carl Henry had already noted that “evangelical Christianity has become increasingly inarticulate about the social reference of the Gospel.” The call to serve as the prophetic voice to the broader society becomes even more urgent in the current social and political climate. An evangelical divinity school is tasked to train men and women who can provide such prophetic voices that emanate from the prophetic biblical texts.

Today, the wider society in which evangelicals find themselves is no longer limited to the so-called “Western world.” The majority world ceases to be merely the mission field of the West as it has now been transformed into the major arena of God’s mighty acts. As an evangelical divinity school within the structure of an “international” university, is committed to testifying to the power of the euangelion throughout the world by both training and learning from global witnesses of this Gospel.

In the global theological scene, TEDS is well-known for its academic reputation. When Kenneth Kantzer came to TEDS in 1962, he recognized that TEDS needed to be a divinity school of the highest academic standard: “A seminary that could best achieve the goals I felt necessary to meet the needs of the second half of the 20th century had to be a special kind of school.” By this, he was referring to an academically rigorous orthodox institution capable of training men and women to interact with and counter the intellectual challenges posed by critical scholarship. This distinct academic focus, including the emphasis on the original languages, reinforces our commitment to the inerrant Word of God. 

The Word lies at the very heart of an evangelical commitment that seeks to demonstrate its power through robust preaching and teaching for the proclamation of the one true Gospel. Within this evangelical commitment, any dichotomy between academia and the Church cannot exist because the study of the Word is a study of its power in various ministerial and missional contexts. After all, while a divinity school is structurally an entity within a university, an evangelical divinity school is a servant of the Church. This is why the world needs an evangelical divinity school—perhaps now more than ever.

Answer God's calling and get equipped for ministry. Learn more about the MDIV, MATS and other MA programs at .

Systematic theology (ST to its friends) is faith thinking hard yet joyfully about what the Gospel means. It explores how truths about God and humanity, sin and salvation, Christ and the Church fit together and considers how best to express the meaning and truth of the Gospel in ways that people today can understand.