Home

On the Dangers of Seminary (Pt. 2): The Danger of Losing Your First Love for God (and Your Love for the Lost)

May 19th, 2009 by Bruce Ashford Print This Post

Revelation 2:4: “Nevertheless I have this against you, that you have left your first love. Remember therefore from where you have fallen.”

Romans 10:15: “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the gospel of peace, who bring glad tidings of good things!”

____________________

In the summer of 2000, I returned home from having spent two years in a predominantly Muslim context in Central Asia, where I found opportunities to share the gospel nearly every day. It was my experience in Central Asia, just as it had been during my college years, that contact with lost people was good for my soul. My love for God poured out naturally into a love for the lost around me. But the reverse was true also: my encounters and relationships with the lost spurred on my love for God. There is something beautiful and indeed powerful about seeing a lost man cry out to God, be saved by God’s grace, and walk in newness of life. Our love for God and his gospel results in a love for man (one does not commend that which he does not cherish), but also our love for God’s image-bearers results in a yet deeper love for God and his gospel (the more we proclaim and embody God’s love, the more we love Him and recognize his unsurpassed worth).

Upon returning home from Central Asia, I threw myself into Ph. D. studies. I preached the gospel, especially during the summer breaks, but for the most part I studied. As the months and years passed, I found that I rarely had conversations with unbelievers. I lived on campus, taught on campus, and worshiped with believers on Sundays. Rare was the day that I had a meaningful conversation with someone who was not a believer. Even worse, I felt like I was slowly losing the impulse to share the gospel. As a result, not only was I was withholding life from men and women who are dead in their trespasses, without hope and without God in this world, but also I was losing one of the very things that inflamed my passion for God.

Ironically, I was attending a seminary that confessed absolute confidence in God and his gospel and encouraged evangelistic zeal at every turn. For over a decade now, under two different presidents, this has remained the same. And yet retaining my affection for God and a love for the lost remains a struggle for me. I suspect that I am not alone, and I offer some advice for those those who may find themselves in this situation-seminary students and employees, pastors, employees of SBC entities, etc.: Do whatever it takes to break out of the Christian bubble within which you live, and take the gospel of life to those who are dead. In an attempt to do this myself, I have designated a few days each month during which I do my work (research, writing, email, whatever) at a coffee shop or student center at UNC, Duke, or one of the other college campuses in our area. Here is another idea: Try coming home from work or from the library before 10:00 p.m., and in so doing you might actually meet some of your neighbors who are lost. A final idea: Instead of listening to that next Tim Keller sermon, put down the i-Pod and actually do what it is that Keller is talking about-share the gospel.

In conclusion, don’t resent your time “in the bubble.” Don’t reject the great opportunity God has given you to lay the foundation for a lifetime of ministry. Don’t feel guilty that you are here. Seminary is your calling at this time in your life. Take advantage of your classes, your professors, your fellow students. Make the most of your studies in church history, theology, or missions. But while you are at it, don’t allow yourself to lose your first love for God and your love for the lost.

Bookmark and Share

Tags: dangers of seminary, Evangelism

3 Comments »

  1. Again, much needed advice. Thanks!

    Comment by Deek Dubberly — May 19, 2009 @ 3:08 pm

  2. Great Word! I have recently come to Southeastern after being overseas for two years, and I needed to hear this. I enjoy my time here at seminary, where God has called me in order to preparing me for the future, but I often find myself in the dilemma of not sharing as much here as I did when I was overseas. I appreciate the honesty as well as the practical ways at having more opportunities to share.

    Comment by Brandon Chancler — May 19, 2009 @ 4:03 pm

  3. Deek and Brandon, thanks and I hope you enjoy the rest of the series. In addition to providing a serious warning about allowing seminary to replace college, the next post will have a pretty funny story about J. D. Greear and me when we were in college.

    Comment by Bruce Ashford — May 19, 2009 @ 5:24 pm

Leave a comment

Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
Recent Posts
  • Taking God to the Movies (5): What Ocean’s 11, The Incredibles, The Notebook, Cast Away, Hannibal, The Gladiator, The Green Mile, and Other Movies Have to Say about God, the Gospel, & Life
  • They’ll Know We Are Christians by Our Love: Some Thoughts on the GCR
  • Taking God to the Movies (4): Deep Thoughts by Braveheart & Tommy Boy
  • Taking God to the Movies (3): Nine Elements of a Hollywood Storyline
  • Our Best Is Yet To Be
Categories
  • Books
  • Culture
  • Current Affairs
  • Family
  • Global Affairs
  • History
  • Humor
  • Ministry
  • Mission
  • Public Square
  • SBC
  • Theology
  • Uncategorized
Archives
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
Today's Scripture

1 Samuel 4-6

view complete list

Bookshelf
trevin wax book deepchurch_lg_170w_tn

© 2008 - 2010. Between The Times. All rights reserved. Web Design by FullThrottle Development.