Years ago a book on Baptist principles took as its title the mildly assertive title, What Baptists Stand For. It's still a good reasonable introduction to what it is that makes the Baptist way of being a Christian distinctive. But times change. And traditions like our own have to change too. Jaroslav Pelikan famously said, "Traditionalism is the dead faith of the living; tradition is the living faith of the dead". Baptists have been impatient with tradition, jumpy about any concessions being made to that manipulative plea, 'the way it's always been done'. But we are a Christian tradition whether we like it or not. And I like it.
At the same time a tradition must be living, organic, able to adapt and grow into new situations, changed by, yet also able to change, circumstances. A living transformative Christian tradition is a changing continuity, a growing and maturing way of being Christian, distinctive, with its own integrity and its own inner dynamic urging and impelling towards that faithfulness that answers the call of Christ to be who we are.
We've decided this blog could do with a bit more action. News about the College community. Comment about stuff that pushes our justice and righteousness buttons. Argument, or at least discussion about what us Baptists stand for. Theological upstarting in a constructive way about the things we won't stand for!
So for starters. We are currently working on the next College Development Plan, and while much of that remains open and discussable, there are some fixed points for us. Amongst these are the four values and convictions that lie at the heart of our College, because they energise the core of our College life and inform the content of a Baptist theological education. They are what we stand for.
Christ-centred faithfulness
Baptist shaped community
Biblically grounded theology
Evangelical spirituality
In one sense these are self-evident to us. But it is also true that they remain carefully chosen descriptors with no effective purchase on our lives unless they are lived, embodied, practiced; unless they represent habits of the heart, values in our thinking and acting, virtues of a Christlike character formed and transformed by encounter with the Living Lord.
So what do they mean, in practice? What do people look like who claim to make these core values the energising and directing principles of Christian discipleship?
This blog is now one of the places where we face up to those questions. And also where we persistently and honestly ask other questions, share conversation, compare insight and experience, argue with passion and courtesy, entrust our deepest convictions to each other so that we are mutually enriched. Or at least, so I hope. And in doing so we will try to live within our own commitments to Christ centred faithfulness; to Baptist shaped community; to Biblically grounded theology; to Evangelical spirituality. And these are not meant to be hard edged exclusion zones, but affirmations around which we express our lives in the freedom of Christ and in the power of the Spirit.
Jim Gordon, 5 November, 2009
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