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Seminary Leaders Gather in Bulgaria
by Scott and Beth Cunningham, Serving with SIM and Overseas Council
30 March 2009
The first week of March, I (Scott) led the first Institute for Excellence in 2009 for seminary leaders in Eastern Europe. We had a dozen leaders from eight different schools located in countries from the former Soviet block—Bulgaria, Serbia, Poland, Croatia, Czech Republic, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The focus of the training, as it will be for all the Institutes for 2009, was on how to nurture spiritual growth in seminary students. Dr. Gordon T. Smith, who teaches part-time at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia, did a great job in giving the opening presentations each morning. He presented the role of community as both the context and a means of spiritual growth—drawing our attention to three very different examples of community from church history.
I gave a presentation on the Role of the Faculty in Spiritual Formation. Using an outline of the four concepts of Teacher, Model, Mentor, and Friend, I drew primarily on the relationship that is described in the New Testament between Paul and Timothy. “You know my teaching and my way of life,” writes Paul. “Our students know our teaching,” I said, “but how many of them know our way of life?” I opened the presentation by describing my relationship with Dr. Harold Hoehner, one of my New Testament professors at Dallas Seminary, as a true “scholar-saint” who had significant influence on my life and ministry. As part of our evaluation of the Institute one of the questions we ask the participants to answer is, “Briefly, what changes are you considering at your school in the area of spiritual formation?” You may be interested in a few of the responses:
Pray:
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