Editor’s Note from November 07, 1980

Each year CHRISTIANITY TODAY publishes a higher education issue. During the past year we received more manuscripts on this topic than on any other topic out of the hundreds upon hundreds that arrive unsolicited at my desk. No doubt college and university teachers tend to write more articles than other people! But this is not the only reason for the superabundance of articles on this theme: Christian people are rightly concerned about Christian higher education. They know our colleges and universities determine the theological and intellectual leadership for the next generation of the church and of the world.

In this issue, Leland Ryken analyzes Puritan attitudes toward education and finds illumination for the contemporary scene. Robert Baptista draws upon his experience as a college dean and president to discuss problems of Christian higher education and to suggest how these problems can best be solved. The growing popularity of Bible colleges (four-year colleges with majors limited to Bible, Christian education, and related areas) warrants an article assessing this trend in Christian higher education. Kenneth Gangel, after spending years as professor, dean, and Bible college president, notes the achievements, problems, and challenges of these schools. He concludes with a balanced exhortation that they take seriously their responsibility to provide a college-level education for Christian leaders. Finally, Charles Malik warns evangelicals that any evangelism that avoids penetration of the intellectual citadels of our great secularized universities is doomed to failure. It is there that the movers and shakers of tomorrow’s world are to be found. For too long evangelicals have shied away from the realities of our contemporary culture. If Christianity is not to drift into inconsequential back eddies in the twenty-first century, this retreat from the neural centers of influence and power must cease. Evangelicals must allocate energies and resources into evangelism of these centers of intellectual life and influence and reclaim them for Christ’s kingdom of righteousness.

Robert Culver and William Drescher conclude our three-part series on just war and pacifism with two solid pieces that will be of special interest to college and university students, but also of deep concern to all Christians.

Our Latest

Public Theology Project

Why I Changed My Mind on Bible Prophecy and Politics

“It is not for you to know times or seasons that the Father has fixed by his own authority.”

Hope for Freedom for Iran, but Expect a Mess for America

Trump rightly campaigned against “endless wars” and nation building in the Middle East. His war on Iran is likely to repeat those very errors.

You Don’t Need a Decoder Ring Each Time You Suffer

Liz Hall, Kelly M. Kapic, and Jason McMartin

Two theologians and a psychologist on offering comfort for those in pain.

We Should Demand More from MAHA

RFK Jr. and surgeon general nominee Casey Means identify real problems in American health and medicine. But their solutions are lacking.

The Russell Moore Show

Christopher Beha on Why He Isn’t an Atheist Anymore

The former Harper’s Magazine editor shares his journey from skeptical atheism to skeptical Christianity.

Review

Review: ‘Project Hail Mary’

Ryan Gosling’s new science fiction movie shows an astronaut who saves the world and dies to self.

The Bulletin

Kristi Noem Fired, Iran Chooses Leader, and Pakistan Fights Taliban

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Secretary of DHS fired, former Ayatollah’s son declared new supreme leader, and Pakistan’s war with Taliban.

A More Literal View of ‘the Body of Christ’

Thomas Anderson

Scripture’s description of the church is more than a comparison to human anatomy.

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