The world needs Goshen CollegeA chapel message from Jim BrennemanOn Nov. 18, 2005, the Church-Chapel was filled with more than 800 students, faculty, staff, alumni and community members awaiting the announcement by the Presidential Search Committee of the candidate of choice to serve as the 16th president of Goshen College. Rick Stiffney, chair of the search committee and vice-chair of the Goshen College Board of Directors, introduced educator, biblical theological and church leader Dr. James E. Brenneman to the community, culminating a discernment process that began following the resignation of Shirley H. Showalter in August 2005. Straight from the cowBy Jodi H. BeyelerWhen senior Adrienne Landis went shopping for “raw milk” – that is, non-pasteurized or homogenized – in the Goshen area and wasn’t able to find it, she approached a vendor at the local farmer’s market. Leaning over his stall, he told her in a hushed voice where she could acquire the specialty product. Close to the heart:“This I Believe” assignment yields personal stories, human truths
During the fall semester, Associate Professor of Communication Duane
Stoltzfus ’81 heard about “This I Believe,” a series being aired on
National Public Radio (NPR), from his wife, Karen Sherer Stoltzfus ’81.
Then on the radio, he heard Deirdre Sullivan, a lawyer from New York,
share her personal philosophy about funerals; she always goes,
something learned from her father. “I was so moved by her stories and
her thoughts,” said Stoltzfus: “‘Always go to the funeral’ means that I
have to do the right thing when I really, really don’t feel like it. I
have to remind myself of it when I could make some small gesture, but I
don't really have to and I definitely don’t want to. I’m talking about
those things that represent only inconvenience to me, but the world to
the other guy.”
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Brenneman reflected on his transformative experience as a student at Goshen as well as the impact the institution can continue to have "at the cutting edge of God's will for the world." |
If it’s true, as G.K. Chesterton once said, that “gratitude is happiness doubled by wonder,” then my joy and wonder at being called to be the next president of Goshen College evokes my deepest gratitude to many people. I am also grateful for the opportunity to meet many of you for the first time, and to reconnect with others whom I have known for a long, long time.
I admit that I became somewhat nervous about being here when I read in the Record a few weeks ago that some GC men are wearing skirts and remembered that psychology professor Julie Reese, a former member of our congregation in California, might dig up some old photos of me in a tutu taken at a church retreat. I was also a little worried that Professor [of Biology] Stan Grove might remember some heresy I espoused during my know-it-all pre-teen years back in our little church in Tampa, Fla., where he became someone I looked up to and deemed worthy of emulation.
One of my biggest fears was facing my former biology professor Jonathan Roth, after having ruined one experiment in Microbial class where I secretly inscribed – in a gelatinous Petri dish, using staphylococcus bacteria – the words, “Culture … for Service.”
So let me begin this morning by asking for a general absolution, and then move on with a clean slate.
Reflecting on the call to become the next president of Goshen College, I’ve felt the pull of a force beyond me like an iron shaving drawn by a sacred magnet – back to this little corner of the universe, this “spot in Indiana where the leafy maple grows.” This Church-Chapel sanctuary, with its magnificent beams overhead radiating out from the center of a grand circle, inspires the feeling that “this spot” is holy ground.
I remember a similar feeling when I stood in the great rotunda of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, the place of Mount Calvary and the Tomb of Christ. There in the center of the basilica, below the magnificent dome in the marble floor, is a circle that marks what is believed by worshippers to be the very center of the world. That very spot recalls the words of the Psalmist: “God is my King of old, who works salvation in the midst (or center) of the earth.” (Psalm 74:12) It is good and right to imagine that spot in Jerusalem as the center of the world, the place where God worked out our salvation.
But, for all of us whose lives have been irrevocably altered for the better, and for those whose lives will be changed forever still, and for all those who experience God’s salvation here at this little “spot in Indiana,” is not Goshen College in its own way a “navel of the earth,” the center of the world for us? I, for one, believe this to be so. So much so, that I want to invest my future in it. And I know many of you have done so also.
I believe the world needs Goshen College. Goshen College exists to pass on to a new generation the grand and glorious biblical values and Scriptural truths articulated 500 years ago by a forward-looking, outside-the-box thinking group of people called Anabaptists. I believe the core values of Goshen College: being Christ-centered passionate learners, servant leaders, compassionate peacemakers and global citizens are as revolutionary in scope today as were the values of our fore parents in faith and practice. These values, backed by a powerful Strategic Plan of action for Goshen College, are not ours to hold on to so much as ours to share. These values are much bigger than we are and are capable of influencing whole cultures, like leaven.
Brenneman as visiting pastor/scholar in 2001. |
And a bit odd, perhaps. Former GC President J.L. Burkholder once said that Goshen College assumes “that which is odd, or exceptional or different may be worthwhile, even revelatory.” It is this out of the ordinary, outside-the-box nonconformity that may be among Goshen College’s greatest assets, our pearl of great price. But I hope we will always be more than oddly nonconformist. In the words of John Howard Yoder, ours must be an “evangelical nonconformity” – articulated and expressed as good news to a watching world. The world wants what Goshen College has to offer.
So I would ask us, why the bashfulness about our faith and practice? Goshen College is part of a 500-year-old movement that first demanded the separation of church and state now enshrined in the constitution of nearly every Western democracy. Two hundred years before the Emancipation Proclamation, this movement of which we are a part called for the abolition of slavery. Before Congress passed
Brenneman (far left) met with students, current and former faculty and staff and alumni at a campus reception. |
Clearly, Goshen College is part of a movement that has been often centuries ahead of its time. That is good news, indeed.
Following such a wonderful precedent, “how can we keep quiet?” To the faculty, I would ask, are we preparing a new generation for jobs not yet imagined and still unknown in the market place? Are we thinking beyond the scope of conventional wisdom so as to train our students to live and be now what we hope the world will some day become? I believe we are. I would ask parents, why mainstream your child in a large state-university with mainstream conventional values that may be great, but less good, than Goshen College? To students, I would invite those already on campus and those not yet here to come join a revolution! Come join in what Dallas Willard calls a “divine conspiracy” to change God’s world for the better.
Yes, there is a “spot in Indiana where the leafy maple grows.” That spot may seem like it’s in the middle of nowhere, at the edge of the world. But in truth, I believe, it’s a spot at the cutting edge of God’s will for the world. And yes, I believe Goshen College can, with due regard, claim to be “in the midst (or center) of the earth,” where God’s salvation is made known to all who pass through its sacred portals. Goshen is indeed a gateway to the future. With your support, I’ll stake my life on it.
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