Thursday, March 24, 2022

Luke Timothy Johnson on Scholarship

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Nijay Gupta has just published a short interview with the prolific NT scholar Luke Timothy Johnson. It follows on the publication of his new memoir. It is well worth reading. There is quite a bit of wisdom here and I especially appreciated this part about how he views the place of scholarship in the light of eternity.

Book cover

First, I have always considered only one thing essential — to become (or better, to allow God to make one) a certain kind of person. Everything else I have considered as secondary and non-essential. The judgment of other humans is trivial compared to the absolute judgment of God. Such a conviction enables one to speak boldly and without fear. 

Second, I have considered scholarship as a serious enterprise, but one without ultimate importance. It is, indeed, a game that, like all games, must be played seriously if it is to be played well. But it is played best when it is played with the freedom that authentic faith gives and is not erected into an idolatrous project. 

Third, if scholarship is non-ultimate, then an academic career is even more nugatory. The academy should be regarded as a social arrangement whose importance is measured solely by the way it serves the ends for which it was designed. Do students learn? Do teachers grow in knowledge? Is the church and society made better by these processes? To the degree that “the academy” becomes absolute and self-serving, to that degree it has lost its way.

Read the whole thing here.

3 comments

  1. Further along in the interview is this priceless gem:

    "Scripture scholars in particular seem by temperament and training to be content with plodding along lanes laid long ago. No wonder that so much scholarship on the Bible is predictable and pedantic and mind-numbingly dull."

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  2. It's nice to hear him make the "mind-numbingly dull" comment. Too often i've been trying to plod through some new tome, and when I find it hard to keep interest, it's easy to assume the problem is me.

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  3. This is great! Thank you for sharing. I would say that nearly all of our professions (such as helicopter maintenance in my case) lack eternal significance.

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