This past weekend ACHEA – the Australian Christian Higher Education Alliance – held their inaugural conference in Parramatta west of Sydney (shout-out to Rayna, the wonderful Airbnb host who saved me from a baguette-and-butter dinner with a delicious home-cooked meal!). Eastern College – the mob I’m doing my Masters through – is part of ACHEA, and I was encouraged by my course coordinator to submit a paper for presentation at the conference. While much of the conversation was well above my head and on a topic I am unfamiliar with (delivering higher education), it was a helpful and very gracious introduction for me into the world of academia.
The paper I submitted was accepted, and so I presented a paper called ‘what only the poor can teach’ – a potentially provocative title and topic for the Christian Higher Education scene, asking the question whether current modes of educational delivery at Christian campuses align with God’s apparent preference for revealing himself in the biblical narrative through the people we’d typically pick last. This paper was based on a previous small study I had undertaken called the road to transformation, a one way street?
The feedback I received from those present was encouraging and helpful; it was suggested that I do some reading on ‘grounded theology’ and dig into some of Rene Girard’s work on the concept of ‘scapegoating’. I also received an offer to co-author a journal article, and so I need to do some thinking about whether the academic world is something I have something to contribute to.
Anyway. It was a helpful introduction for me into the world of academia; they’re a highly intelligent, deep-thinking, well-read but gracious mob – well at least these guys were anyway 🙂 Have a read of this if the intersection of theology, modes of education and God’s self-revelation interest you: What only the poor can teach
I really enjoyed reading this Clint and it has stirred my heart and challenged my conscience on how I see the ‘marginalised’ right here in my backyard/even at my own church. Thank you for sharing.
Sent from my iPad
Hi Clare,
I’m glad that you found this one helpful, and thanks for your encouragement. I wasn’t planning to put this one on the blog, as I thought it would be irrelevant for most folks, but I’m glad that you were able to relate it to where you’re at and what you’re doing. I’d be keen to hear what reflections about God arise out of your engagement with the ‘least of these’ in your context – and good on you for being with/among/serving/loving them. I hope it’s good for you as no doubt your company is good for them…
Cheers,
Clint.
Hi Clint, it’s Friday evening, my feet up on the desk, and I’m enjoying catching up on some reading. It’s a continual two way street of learning and living for the other, so thanks for the reminder not to forget the other in this two way street. God works where we may least expect. Thanks heaps, Daniel