

I was on after Miroslov Volf talking about his new book Allah. Thankfully, in the history of the church, that’s not an unfamiliar place to find ourselves.Thanks to my pals John & Kathy who call from time to time to do live interviews on Pittsburgh’s WORD FM, a fine Christian radio station. Given the current demographic trends, there don’t need to be many.

Or to put it rather more cautiously, I don’t see an easy way forward. Having spent a lifetime in both the church and the academy, I wish that I could see a way forward. In short, we failed them and we will fail them again. They did this not because they were better prepared, but because they spoke to the deep needs that we all encounter on life’s spiritual journey and because clergy were not prepared to help them.

When people became concerned about their spiritual lives, they looked further afield to cultural influencers. Worse yet, these dynamics will likely recreate the situation that drove people away from mainline churches in the late 20th century. And the demographics of both mainline Protestantism and its seminaries suggest that the financial perils both face will exacerbate the problems that they face. Seminaries continue to close or morph into what administrators hope to sell as the brave new future of theological education. There is little prospect that things will change for the foreseeable future. So, the net result is that the Masters of Divinity no longer serves anyone well and – as one Episcopal bishop recently observed – seminaries don’t even staff their faculties with people who can provide many of the basics of a theological education. On the whole, people outside the church mistrust the religious commitments of people who pursue an MDiv and they are far more likely to hire someone with a degree in public policy or an MBA in non-profit management. And – unsurprisingly – seminaries have sought to address the flagging enrollment in the Masters of Divinity by retooling the degree itself, hoping to make the argument that it is not just a degree for clergy, missionaries, musicians, and church educators but has equal utility for people who work in non-profits or hope to be community organizers. Since then institutions have moved on, cutting and excising those programs in favor of developing Masters programs with more popular appeal. In part, no doubt, because the development of those programs was not grounded in a profound reassessment of theological education, but was a belated response to the rise of people who described themselves as “spiritual but not religious”. Some even discovered that the church had its own rich resources – resources that had been jettisoned by Protestantism as “too Catholic”.īut, sadly, that development was short-lived. In the early 21st century the Lily Foundation pumped money into the development of spiritual formation programs and a handful of Protestant seminaries pursued a variety of approaches to deepening the spiritual lives of seminarians. For a brief time, it looked like things might have changed.
