Church History as Family History (part 3)

Today I’ll recap the third of my three talks delivered on May 5-6 for Salem Covenant Church’s annual family camp, in the northern Minnesota woods at Covenant Pines Bible Camp. The overriding theme was to encourage Christian non-historians to approach church history with the same zeal that many of them apply to family history. I … More Church History as Family History (part 3)

Confessing History: Theory and Method

Today I’ll come back to my series on Confessing History: Explorations in Christian Faith and the Historian’s Vocation, eds. John Fea, Jay Green, and Eric Miller (University of Notre Dame Press). I should reiterate that I read the book alongside my students in HIS499 Senior Seminar, the capstone course for History majors at Bethel University. … More Confessing History: Theory and Method

Church History as Family History (part 2)

Today I’ll continue my recap of the series of talks I gave last weekend for Salem Covenant Church‘s annual “family camp,” held up at Covenant Pines, outside McGregor, MN. They concerned the topic, “The Family History That Most Christians Don’t Know, But Can’t Ignore: Three Biblical Tools for Understanding Church History.” In the first part … More Church History as Family History (part 2)

Gladness, Need, and Calling: Frederick Buechner on Vocation

Last night my family hosted the students in Bethel’s capstone course for History majors. They turned in their research papers, shared a meal, tolerated my two-year old twins showing off all their tricks, and had one last seminar discussion together: on vocation. Since this course is almost entirely composed of students about to graduate, there’s … More Gladness, Need, and Calling: Frederick Buechner on Vocation

H-Pietism

5/7/12 – There’s a new discussion group on the interdisciplinary site H-Net: H-Pietism! Edited by Jared Burkholder (who blogs at The Hermeneutic Circle, where he shared this announcement) and Kate Carté Engel, H-Pietism “promotes the academic study of pietism, broadly defined” and welcomes “all interested scholars studying Pietism as an early modern religious movement in … More H-Pietism