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343 Pages·2018·2.53 MB·English
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THE CHRISTIAN ACADEMIC IN HIGHER EDUCATION THE CONSECRATION OF LEARNING John Sullivan The Christian Academic in Higher Education Endorsement ‘This remarkable work, drawing on a lifetime of experience and reflection, goes deep into academic life and into Christian faith, and makes wise, illuminating connections between them. More than that, it succeeds both in facing honestly the pitfalls and difficult issues, and also in offering inspiration and practical guidance that is relevant not only to Christian academics but to anyone who is committed to learning and teaching as a vocation.’ —David F. Ford OBE, Regius Professor of Divinity Emeritus, University of Cambridge ‘This original book provides a creative dialogue between Christian faith and spirituality, on the one hand, and the everyday realities of academic life, on the other. Over against the increasing commodification and managerialism of uni- versities, John Sullivan shows how the basic tasks of academics may be evaluated from moral, spiritual, and religious perspectives. His insights, especially on the spiritual dimension of learning, will be illuminating and engaging for readers with a wide variety of commitments.’ —Jeff Astley, Professor, University of Warwick, UK; Honorary Professor, Durham University, UK ‘This is an extraordinary and impressive tour de force that explores the interaction and creative tension between the life of Christian faith and the life of intellectual and scholarly activity in the contemporary university. Sullivan draws from his extensive professional experience and expertise in a range of academic disciplines to produce this fascinating book about the nature and role of the Christian scholar. This scholarly book offers serious challenges to Christian and secular scholars and to the self-understanding and construction of the Academy.’ —Professor Stephen McKinney, Leader of Creativity, Culture and Faith, School of Education, University of Glasgow ‘This study explores what it means to be a Christian scholar and teacher in higher education. Reflecting the wisdom born out of high quality scholarship and extensive educational experience, the book does two things particularly well. While articulating the motivations and hopes coming from a Christian educa- tional perspective, it addresses the professional commitments that a scholar of any or no religious background should have, working in an open university in a pluralist society.’ —Graham Rossiter, Professor of Moral and Religious Education, Australian Catholic University ‘A timely and thorough consideration of university teaching and learning from a Christian perspective, this book is particularly valuable in addressing both the Christian university experience and the experience of Christian faculty in secular universities. Affirming that intellectual work is part of any Christian academic’s vocation, Sullivan explores ways in which to engage critically and constructively with the challenges and opportunities presented by today’s world of higher education.’ —Deborah Bowen, Professor of English, Redeemer University College, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada John Sullivan The Christian Academic in Higher Education The Consecration of Learning John Sullivan Theology, Philosophy & Religious Studies Liverpool Hope University Liverpool, United Kingdom ISBN 978-3-319-69628-7 ISBN 978-3-319-69629-4 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69629-4 Library of Congress Control Number: 2017961828 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2018 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and trans- mission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Cover image © danm, Getty Images Printed on acid-free paper This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by Springer Nature The registered company is Springer International Publishing AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland This book is dedicated to Dom Illtyd Trethowan, OSB, 1907–1993, monk of Downside Abbey, in gratitude for his generous and exacting intellectual mentoring. Foreword I have come to believe that the post-enlightenment university has lost its way; not because it has ceased to produce much of real value but because buffeted by every storm in the market place and by governments com- mending largely utilitarian ends, it is fast losing its coherence as a learn- ing and enquiring community. The ‘university’ resembles too often a disconnected ‘multiversity’ with self-contained academic units that have little or nothing to do intellectually with each other. Scholars often exist within it as self-contained ‘monads.’ These days, ‘think tanks’, ideologi- cally predisposed, influence ministers of state much more than a coun- try’s best scholars and thinkers—notwithstanding the endless ‘consultations’ about what has already been decided. This book dares to talk about learning communities and the inner compulsions of the teaching and researching scholar. The fact that Professor John Sullivan has to make a case (and a much needed one) for Christian scholarship today, describing its distinctiveness and its role in the modern Academy, shows to what extent our age suffers from histori- cal myopia. The unease about the importance (and the indispensability) of religion in understanding human society or about the naturalness of faith and serious intellectual enquiry is the accumulated result of much ignorance about how we came to be Europeans or British, or literate, for that matter. vii viii Foreword It may be instructive to remember that in the eighth century Charlemagne invited and Englishman Alcuin from York to come over and help him establish the Cathedral School. The ‘cathedral school’ pre- ceded the first European universities by about 250 years. Though lost on the consciousness of modern people like us, the Carolingian Renaissance in the eighth and ninth centuries was one of the earliest cultural revital- izations in the history of how the west came to be civilised. It began with the Church and it was inspired by the Holy Book. Moderns tend to impose on these educational efforts normally a pros- elytising motivation, but that was seldom the driving force. In this case, with the Frankish kingdoms being so culturally backward vis-à-vis the more sophisticated Byzantines and the scholarly Ottomans (especially in mathematics), Charlemagne was faced with a largely unsophisticated court and illiterate population. His educational campaign was a civilising project. The Holy Scriptures spawned literacy as learning Latin promoted writing and discourse across the dialects of small tribes locked within themselves. The priests could then read the Latin Vulgate. Education was an escape from parochialism and petty warfare. Therefore, the steeples on our ancient cathedrals are not only symbols of our religiosity; they signify more than that. The idea ‘university’ was unprecedented in Europe. The name derives from the first university established in Bologna (late eleventh century), which was described as ‘a community of teachers and scholars’ (universi- tas magistrorum et scholarium.) The standing of the earliest European universities depended on papal or kingly patronage and often both; not as moderns assume to keep control of them but to ensure that they were protected from local politics. On numerous occasions the pope inter- vened to protect the academic freedom of scholars. For example, students were granted similar protection to priests by ensuring that they were tried in religious rather than secular courts. Pope Honorius III supported scholars at Bologna in 1220 when their rights were threatened; Gregory IX acted similarly on behalf scholars in Paris in 1231. Innocent IV granted the University of Oxford its degree awarding powers in 1254 so that its graduates would be recognised as teachers anywhere in Christendom. Forewor d ix And so, the Christian view on higher education is the long view. John Sullivan’s book helps us to speak meaningfully about this important tra- dition that has become marginalised. He is a seasoned scholar, much admired by his students and colleagues, who has applied his mind to these questions over a long career of dedicated scholarship. Into the hard pursuit of knowledge in a world that has elevated individual pursuit and success above everything else, Sullivan seeks to inject ‘the humane’— something transcendent to the quantifiable and ‘one-dimensional’ func- tionalism. The liberal arts tradition which is informed by the long view is presently under siege as Sullivan clearly discerns. He describes for us some solutions; an alternative way of living and working in the modern Academy. He writes, perceptively, “The scholar works best in the context of participating in, learning from and contributing to a community of other scholars and students who question and critique, affirm and apply, and who modify, build upon and go beyond one’s own efforts.” That is a vision of the University, Christian or otherwise, that I share and am delighted Professor Sullivan has prepared this book to help us recover these ideals still worth pursuing. Vice Chancellor Professor Gerald Pillay Liverpool Hope University Liverpool, UK Preface Christian discipleship is a life-long journey. When Jesus spoke about the progress of the prodigal son or daughter, he described the inertia and the pitfalls of the journey, but also the joy and transformation experienced when we arrive at a much better place. At the heart of the Christian vision for education is the hope that we can become ‘fully human and fully alive’. The goal of human flourishing should be the central concern of all educators and is at the core of the Christian faith: ‘I have come that you might have life and have it to the full’ (John 10.10). Professor John Sullivan is an experienced and wise guide for the Christian academic wishing to explore further both new and familiar ter- rain. He was the first to hold a Chair of Christian Education in England and he has very considerable experience of teaching at secondary and tertiary levels. His own commitment to research and reflection allows him to seek to discern truths and to integrate insights from very wide first-hand experience—in his own words, ‘this book brings together what has elsewhere been left separate’. In 2018 the Roman Catholic Church holds a Synod for bishops on ‘Young People, the Faith and Vocational Discernment’. The Preparatory Document talks of the ‘fluidity and insecurity’ experienced in today’s world—‘the transition to adult life and the building of a personal identity increasingly require a reflective course of action’. Christian academics have a crucial role in the guidance and formation of students. Professor xi

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This book offers a Christian engagement with the realities of academic life and work. Examining this topic from intellectual, institutional and spiritual perspectives, the author explores how the two identities – as a Christian and an academic – can both coexist and complement one another. The a
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