By Dr. Albert Moher
AlbertMohler.com
My great privilege every semester is to welcome an incoming class of
seminarians to the stewardship of theological education. This is not a
privilege I take lightly. I remember what it was like to sit in the same
room well over thirty years ago, being welcomed to the same campus. As I
welcome you as new students now, I do my best to tell you what I wish
someone had told me.
Theological education is a stewardship—a very rare stewardship. Jesus
told his disciples in Matthew 13:17, “Truly, I say to you, many
prophets and righteous people longed to see what you see and did not see
it, and to hear what you hear and did not hear it.” That same truth
relates to your opportunity for theological education. Many godly
Christians would long to have the same experience you will have: to
study with this faithful faculty, to live in the midst of this Gospel
community, and to enjoy all the privileges that come with being a
student at Southern Seminary.
To enter this seminary is to enter into a stewardship, and I know
that every one of you will want to make the most of that stewardship.
Theological education is a stewardship of truth. The Apostle Paul made
this clear to Timothy when he wrote these words from 2 Timothy 2:1-7
(ESV):
“You then, my child, be strengthened by the grace that is in
Christ Jesus, and what you have heard from me in the presence of many
witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others
also. Share in suffering as a good soldier of Christ Jesus. No
soldier gets entangled in civilian pursuits, since his aim is to please
the one who enlisted him. An athlete is not crowned unless he competes
according to the rules. It is the hard-working farmer who ought to have
the first share of the crops. Think over what I say, for the Lord will
give you understanding in everything.”
You have come to be a learner in order to be teachers. The succession
of faithfulness in the truth is spoken of by Paul in terms of truth to
be received in order to be entrusted to others, who will be able to
teach also. This is how the church is fed and sustained. Faithful
teachers teach a new generation of faithful learners who will then teach
so that yet more faithful teachers may come. The very word trust
implies that stewardship. Your stewardship of truth preceded your
arrival as a seminarian, but it is now front and center in your life. Be
determined from this moment on to be a faithful steward of the truth of
God’s Word and the deposit of faith that is left to us by Christ and
the apostles.
Some theological institutions invite their students to revise the
faith, to be creative with doctrine, to update the ancient faith for
modern times. This school exists in order to achieve the opposite. Our
goal is to produce graduates who believe as the apostles believed, who
preach as the apostles preached, and who maintain a stewardship of the
truth as the Apostle Paul here commands Timothy.
But we also find three vital metaphors for the seminary experience in
this passage. Paul tells Timothy that his stewardship of truth and
trust is made clearer by looking to three role models: the soldier, the
athlete, and the farmer.
The soldier endures suffering and avoids “civilian pursuits.” Why?
Because “his aim is to please the one who enlisted him.” Each of you has
been enlisted by Christ and called into the ministry of Christ’s
church. The single-minded sacrificial mindset of the soldier preparing
for battle must be your aim. Why? Because you live to please Christ.
The athlete “is not crowned unless he competes according to the
rules.” That verse takes on a whole new meaning in an age of vast
scandals in contemporary sports. The one who enlisted you in ministry
expects you to follow the rules. There are no shortcuts in ministry.
There are no rewards for cheating. Recent scandals in sports ranging
from cycling to baseball reveal the unspeakable embarrassment that comes
to the athlete stripped of his medals and crowns when cheating and
scandal are revealed. Even as there are rules in sports, there are rules
in theological education. There are basic rules to education, and the
importance of these rules is only magnified when the education concerns
the revealed truths of God. Let there be no scandal in your ministry for
your failure to follow the rules.
The farmer is the most unlikely of the role models Paul presents, and
the one most foreign to his personal experience. Paul was metropolitan
in background and focus, and his ministry was primarily to the cities.
We encounter few farmers in his writings; nevertheless, the farmer looms
large in this text. For the farmer from which we are to learn is the
hard-working farmer, who deserves the first share of the crops. Paul
knew enough to know that farming is arduous. Farming is hard work—just
ask a farmer. I learned this first-hand as a boy, observing the early
mornings, the long days, and the patient labor of the farmers around me.
Ministry is hard work—just ask a faithful minister. And so is the work
of the seminarian, for this is ministry too. Your hard work now will
reap untold rewards in the future.
A few encouragements to you at this juncture in your life and ministry:
1. Do not consider your years at seminary as a prelude to ministry—this is ministry.
Just as the preacher’s time in the study each week is ministry, so is
your theological education. This is not what you do before ministry
starts, this is your ministry right now, and in his sovereignty God
knows to whom you are ministering in the future even as you prepare for
that ministry in the present. You will misunderstand your seminary
experience if you see it as an interruption in ministry, or even as a
delay. You are like the farmer planting seeds. That is farming just as
much as the harvest is farming.
2. Do not believe that you will be more faithful in ministry in the future than you are now. Just as your ministry is now,
so is the call to faithfulness. The habits and practices you establish
now will foretell the habits and practices of your future ministry. Be
faithful in every assignment. Make the most of every test, every book,
every paper, every lecture, and every conversation. Be faithful in the
little things as well as the great. Be faithful as a student, as a man
or woman, in singleness or in marriage. If you are married, be faithful
to love your spouse with faithful and devoted love as you grow in your
faithfulness and devotion in ministry.
3. Do not believe that you will love the church more in the future than you do now.
Love the church. Be infatuated with the Bride of Christ. Join a local
congregation as soon as possible and get deeply invested in ministry.
Sit among 8 year-olds and 80 year-olds. Develop friends who are not
related to the seminary. Work in the nursery, or the youth ministry.
Teach a senior adult class and preach in the nursing homes. See a need
and fill it. Take every opportunity to preach and teach. Let no man
despise your youth.
4. Do not believe that you will be more evangelistic in the future than you are now.
Share the Gospel with eagerness. Talk to your neighbors about Christ.
Invite non-Christians to dinner in your home. Take a teenager with you
to go talk about Jesus on Bardstown Road. Develop a heart for the
nations. Pray for an unreached people group every day. One of them just
might have your name written on it—and that name written on your heart.
5. Finally, be morally strong and stay humble.
Knowledge does tend to puff us up, so give yourself the ministry of
deflation. Make many friends while at seminary, the kind of friends you
will want to serve with for the rest of your days. Read books like you
mean it. Write in them and build a library, not a book collection. A
well read book worthy of reading is a companion for life. Develop a
friendship with a Boyce College student who needs a big brother or a big
sister. Go to the art museums and attend a high school football game.
Learn what it means to study in the library until you get kicked out and
the lights go out. Eat in the cafeteria and sit with someone you don’t
yet know.
Take every class you can and put knowledge in your ministry bank.
While you are agile and mobile, take a trip to go visit a ministry you
want to see up close. Tell the folks back home what you are learning,
and let them see and sense your excitement. They are already excited
about you.
And so am I. You have no idea just how excited we are about who you
are and what God has done in your life and what He is going to do
through you.
So, consider the soldier, the athlete, and the farmer. Take hold of
the stewardship of your theological education, put your hand to the
plow, and never look back.