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Neuhaus and the Academy

Part of the reason Richard John Neuhaus will be remembered is for his impact on Christians in higher education.  There is no question that his seminal book The Naked Public Square and then his journal First Things changed the way many of us think about religion and culture.  He also did something I think is nearly impossible with FT.  He created a serious journal that causes many people (a great many of them professors) to do a little dance when they find it in their mailbox. 

First Things is not an academic journal, but it is close and better.  Instead of dividing knowledge up into a million little pieces and then writing ad nauseum about those subcompartments.  First Things invites strong minds to contribute big essays about the intersection of religion, culture, law, politics, art, music, etc.  The result is readable and edifying.  When I was younger, I knew it was above my head, but I pursued it for improvement, just like a gangster listening to a pronounciation soundtrack to improve his speech.  First Things took me places.  Today, when I meet a fellow reader, I meet a friend.

Enough of the unsolicited advertisement.  I saw a snippet of an email exchange about Neuhaus that is worth reproducing here.  I won't include the name in case the person wants that to remain private:

Converted (to Catholicism) about 1990 or 91.  He is one of those Missouri Synod Lutherans who had a tremendous early education in their prep schools and liberal arts college…then a fine seminary education.  It was the old German gymnasium system where young guys went off to prep school at 14 and learned German, Greek, Latin, church history, the confessions even before they got to college.  The college at Fort Wayne gave them a terrific liberal arts education—classics, literature, history, languages—and then off to seminary.  Pelikan, Wilken, Neuhaus, Marty, and many lesser lights came through that system.  Valparaiso’s golden age occurred when these highly educated pastors also went into other fields and got doctorates.   They had dual educations that made faith and learning engagement a natural thing.   M.Divs with a degree in law, economics, literature.  Very erudite types who occupied many positions at Valpo.  But that has all disappeared….a great but probably necessary loss.  How many families would send their boys off to prep school at 14 and what church could afford to run prep schools all over the country for their young men? 

But Richard was one of that group….didn’t really need a doctorate.

No, he didn't really need that doctorate.  Wish we could reproduce that system for young people from families without tremendous means.

View all comments (7) | Leave a comment

Alan Brooks| 1.9.09 @ 8:37PM

Father Neuhaus was a solid conservative. Sadly there are far too many rightwing paranoid christians who think the Pope is the incarnation of Satan, Beelzebub, Lucifer. This sort of theological-conspiracy theorizing kept me from being a christian until last year... being raised a protestant one is eventually exposed to theo-conspiracy.
No, it's Not just fringies.
Or if it is then the fringe is larger than you think.
Sadly there are too many dumb, foolish, uneducated christians. They need the heart of a child, not the mind. When people raise their voices, then something is wrong; if a guy says "the Catholic church is the Church of Mammon", then you know you are in for the theo-equivalent of Oliver Stone's JFK.
"Here we go again", I often think when someone, and not always the sort of person with hair standing up on their neck, launches into another 666 diatribe concerning the Abomination of the Desolation in Jerusalem.
look, conspirisization is everywhere; as you might guess, it is entertainment. Again, it is not as fringie as you might think, or, to be more on-target, it blends in with the woolly thinking of those whom God created with less intelligence and shall we say more viscerality.

The "best" people I ever talk to are Catholic priests, but their flocks? Well it is a very mixed bag.
Now to get to the point, Christian academies are good, necessary however you are going to find all manner of persons rising up from those whose means are not "enormous" as the piece puts int at the end. Just call them poor and middle class. They are a very mixed bag and I want to say this carefully: it is fortunate solid steadfast conservatives know so well-- as the last century told us-- that those from the lower classes are not always motivated by noble sentiments, sometimes not at ALL.
The biggest shock in my life, coming from a radiclib family, was realizing how those from the lower classes do not always learn from the experiences that their lack of buffering exposes them to, there is no shortage of self-deception the farther you examine down towards the bottom of humanity.
One might say humanity is so fallen there is no one to trust except Jesus and some in the clergy.

Jeremiah| 1.10.09 @ 1:43PM

Alan Brooks --

I can't figure out if you're a crazy person or just a jackass.

sidnee| 12.11.09 @ 12:40PM

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More Blog Posts by Hunter Baker

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