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ICETE Manifesto on the Renewal of Evangelical
Theological Education
Contents
Preface
The origins of the Manifesto go back
to meetings of the International Council for Evangelical Theological Education
(ICETE), held at Chongoni, Malawi, in 1981. As a new body linking programmes
of evangelical theological education worldwide, ICETE determined to draw
up for public consideration a "Manifesto on the Renewal of Evangelical
Theological Education." After wide consultation, and several revisions,
the following statement was unanimously adopted by ICETE in 1983, and
was subsequently published in Theological Education Today 16:2 (April-June
1984) 1-6, and in the Evangelical Review of Theology 8:1 (April 1984)
136-43. This second edition (1990) incorporates minor changes in wording
and presentation, together with a revised preface.
ICETE wanted a very specific kind of statement for its Manifesto. It wanted
a statement that would clearly articulate the broad consensus on renewal
which it believed already exists-often unrecognized-among evangelical
theological educators worldwide. And, realizing how far short evangelical
theological education often falls with respect to such renewal, ICETE
also wanted a document which could provide encouragement, guidance and
critical challenge in pursuing renewal.
In using the Manifesto one must therefore carefully recognize both what
it is trying to do, and what it is not trying to do. The Manifesto is
trying to define those aspects of the renewal agenda for evangelical theological
education which appear already to have gained very broad agreement, but
which nevertheless have not yet been attained in large measure in practice.
The Manifesto is not trying to present a comprehensive model for quality
theological education. Rather it is attempting to identify certain specific
gaps in our achievement of such a model. Nor is the Manifesto seeking
to designate every form of renewal which ought to be pursued. Rather it
is attempting to identify those particular aspects on which consensus
now seems to exist. The expectation is that, once we recognize how much
agreement already exists among us in what we have yet to achieve, we will
be able to work together for its implementation in a better climate of
understanding, with more attentiveness, with a greater precision of focus,
and with an increased motivation to explore additional points of agreement.
The Manifesto is intended therefore not as a final step, but as a specific,
practical first step in an ongoing cooperative venture in renewal. Through
republication of this Manifesto in a second edition, ICETE and its constituent
movements seek once again to declare publicly their commitment to the
renewal of evangelical theological education, and to secure for themselves
and for others a continuing sense of common direction in pursuing such
renewal.
Introduction
We who serve within evangelical theological education throughout the world
today, and who find ourselves now linked together in growing international
cooperation, wish to give united voice to our longing and prayer for the
renewal of evangelical theological education today-for a renewal in form
and in substance, a renewal in vision and in power, a renewal in commitment
and in direction.
We rightly seek such renewal in light of the pivotal significance of theological
education in biblical perspective. Insofar as theological education concerns
the formation of leadership for the church of Christ in its mission, to
that extent theological education assumes a critically strategic biblical
importance. Scripture mandates the church, it mandates leadership service
within that church, and it thereby as well mandates a vital concern with
the formation of such leadership. For this reason the quest for effective
renewal in evangelical theological education in our day is a biblically-generated
quest.
We rightly seek such renewal in light also of the crisis of leadership
facing the church of Christ around the world. The times are weighted with
unusual challenge and unusual opportunity, demanding of the church exceptional
preparation of its leadership. In many areas the church is faced with
surging growth, of such proportions that it cannot always cope. In many
areas the church is also faced with open hostility without and hidden
subversion within, distracting and diverting it from its calling. Everywhere
the opportunities and challenges take on new and confusing forms. The
times demand an urgent quest for the renewal of theological educational
patterns, that the church in its leadership may be equipped to fulfil
its high calling under God.
We rightly seek such renewal also in light of the condition of evangelical
theological education in our day. We recognize among ourselves exciting
examples of that renewed vitality in theological education which we desire
to see everywhere put to the service of our Lord. Things are being done
right within traditional patterns and within nontraditional patterns,
which need attention, encouragement and emulation. We also recognize that
there are examples in our midst, usually all too close at hand, where
things are not being done right. We confess this with shame. Traditional
forms are being maintained only because they are traditional, and radical
forms pursued only because they are radical-and the formation of effective
leadership for the church of Christ is seriously hindered. We heartily
welcome the wise critiques of evangelical theological education which
have arisen in recent times, which have forced us to think much more carefully
both about our purposes in theological education and about the best means
for achieving those purposes. We believe that there is now emerging around
the world a wide consensus among evangelical theological educators that
a challenge to renewal is upon us, and upon us from our Lord. We believe
that there is also emerging a broad agreement on the central patterns
that such a renewal should take. New times are upon us, and new opportunities.
We wish to pursue these opportunities, and seize them, in obedience to
the Lord.
Therefore, in order to provide encouragement, guidance and critical challenge
to ourselves and to all others who may look to us for direction, we wish
to assert and endorse the following agenda for the renewal of evangelical
theological education worldwide today, and to pledge ourselves to its
practical energetic implementation. We do not presume that we are here
setting forth either a full or a final word on these matters. But we do
make this expression after extended prayerful reflection, and we wish
to offer the hand of warm friendship to all those who may likewise feel
led to endorse these proposals, and to express to them an invitation to
practical collaboration in this quest, for the sake of Jesus Christ our
Lord, the evangelization of the world, and the establishment and edification
of the church.
Therefore, we now unitedly affirm that, to fulfil its God-given mandate,
evangelical theological education today worldwide must vigorously seek
to introduce and reinforce . . .
- Contextualization
Our programmes of theological education must be designed with deliberate
reference to the contexts in which they serve. We are at fault that
our curricula so often appear either to have been imported whole from
abroad, or to have been handed down unaltered from the past. The selection
of courses for the curriculum, and the content of every course in the
curriculum, must be specifically suited to the context of service. To
become familiar with the context in which the biblical message is to
be lived and preached is no less vital to a well-rounded programme than
to become familiar with the content of that biblical message. Indeed,
not only in what is taught, but also in structure and operation our
theological programmes must demonstrate that they exist in and for their
specific context, in governance and administration, in staffing and
finance, in teaching styles and class assignments, in library resources
and student services. This we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Churchward
orientation
Our programmes of theological education must orient themselves pervasively
in terms of the Christian community being served. We are at fault when
our programmes operate merely in terms of some traditional or personal
notion of theological education. At every level of design and operation
our programmes must be visibly determined by a close attentiveness to
the needs and expectations of the Christian community we serve. To this
end we must establish multiple modes of ongoing interaction between
programme and church, both at official and at grassroots levels, and
regularly adjust and develop the programme in the light of these contacts.
Our theological programmes must become manifestly of the church, through
the church and for the church. This we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Strategic
flexibility
Our programmes of theological education must nurture a much greater
strategic flexibility in carrying out their task. Too long we have been
content to serve the formation of only one type of leader for the church,
at only one level of need, by only one educational approach. If we are
to serve fully the leadership needs of the body of Christ, then our
programmes singly and in combination must begin to demonstrate much
greater flexibility in at least three respects. Firstly, we must attune
ourselves to the full range of leadership roles required, and not attend
only to the most familiar or most basic. To provide for pastoral formation,
for example, is not enough. We must also respond creatively, in cooperation
with other programmes, to the church's leadership needs in areas such
as Christian education, youth work, evangelism, journalism and communications,
TEE, counselling, denominational and parachurch administration, seminary
and Bible school staffing, community development, and social outreach.
Secondly, our programmes must learn to take account of all academic
levels of need, and not become frozen in serving only one level. We
must not presume that the highest level of training is the only strategic
need, nor conversely that the lowest level is the only strategic need.
We must deliberately participate in multi-level approaches to leadership
training, worked out on the basis of an assessment of the church's leadership
needs as a whole at all levels. Thirdly, we must embrace a greater flexibility
in the educational modes by which we touch the various levels of leadership
need, and not limit our approach to a single traditional or radical
pattern. We must learn to employ, in practical combination with others,
both residential and extension systems, both formal and nonformal styles,
as well, for example, as short-term courses, workshops, evening classes,
holiday institutes, in-service training, travelling seminars, refresher
courses, and continuing education programmes. Only by such flexibility
in our programmes can the church's full spectrum of leadership needs
begin to be met, and we ourselves become true to our full mandate. This
we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Theological
grounding
Evangelical theological education as a whole today needs earnestly to
pursue and recover a thorough-going theology of theological education.
We are at fault that we so readily allow our bearings to be set for
us by the latest enthusiasms, or by secular rationales, or by sterile
traditions. It is not sufficient that we attend to the context of our
service and to the Christian community being served. We must come to
perceive our task, and even these basic points of reference, within
the larger setting of God's total truth and God's total plan. Such a
shared theological perception of our calling is largely absent from
our midst. We must together take immediate and urgent steps to seek,
elaborate and possess a biblically-informed theological basis for our
calling in theological education, and to allow every aspect of our service
to become rooted and nurtured in this soil. This we must accomplish,
by God's grace.
- Continuous
assessment
Our programmes of theological education must be dominated by a rigorous
practice of identifying objectives, assessing outcomes, and adjusting
programmes accordingly. We have been too easily satisfied with educational
intentions that are unexpressed, or only superficially examined, or
too general to be of directional use. We have been too ready to assume
our achievements on the basis of vague impressions, chance reports,
or crisis-generated inquiries. We have been culpably content with evaluating
our programmes only irregularly, or haphazardly, or under stress. We
hear our Lord's stern word about the faithful stewardship He requires
in His servants, but we have largely failed to apply this to the way
we conduct our programmes of theological education. Firstly, we must
let our programmes become governed by objectives carefully chosen, clearly
defined, and continuously reviewed. Secondly, we must accept it as a
duty, and not merely as beneficial, to discern and evaluate the results
of our programmes, so that there may be a valid basis for judging the
degree to which intentions are being achieved. This requires that we
institute means for reviewing the actual performance of our graduates
in relation to our stated objectives. Thirdly, we must build into the
normal operational patterns of our programmes a regular review and continual
modification and adjustment of all aspects of governance, staffing,
educational programme, facilities, and student services, so that actual
achievements might be brought to approximate more and more closely our
stated objectives. Only by such provisions for continuous assessment
can we be true to the rigorous demands of biblical stewardship. This
we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Community
life
Our programmes of theological education must demonstrate the Christian
pattern of community. We are at fault that our programmes so often seem
little more than Christian academic factories, efficiently producing
graduates. It is biblically incumbent on us that our programmes function
as deliberately nurtured Christian educational communities, sustained
by those modes of community that are biblically commended and culturally
appropriate. To this end it is not merely decorative but biblically
essential that the whole educational body-staff and students-not only
learns together, but plays and eats and cares and worships and works
together. This we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Integrated
programme
Our programmes of theological education must combine spiritual and practical
with academic objectives in one holistic integrated educational approach.
We are at fault that we so often focus educational requirements narrowly
on cognitive attainments, while we hope for student growth in other
dimensions but leave it largely to chance. Our programmes must be designed
to attend to the growth and equipping of the whole man of God. This
means, firstly, that our educational programmes must deliberately foster
the spiritual formation of the student. We must look for a spiritual
development centred in total commitment to the lordship of Christ, progressively
worked outward by the power of the Spirit into every department of life.
We must devote as much time and care and structural designing to facilitate
this type of growth as we readily and rightly provide for cognitive
growth. This also means, secondly, that our programmes must foster achievement
in the practical skills of Christian leadership. We must no longer introduce
these skills only within a classroom setting. We must incorporate into
our educational arrangements and requirements a guided practical field
experience in precisely those skills which the student will need to
employ in service after completion of the programme. We must provide
adequately supervised and monitored opportunities for practical vocational
field experience. We must blend practical and spiritual with academic
in our educational programmes, and thus equip the whole man of God for
service. This we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Servant
moulding
Through our programmes of theological education students must be moulded
to styles of leadership appropriate to their intended biblical role
within the body of Christ. We are at fault that our programmes so readily
produce the characteristics of elitism and so rarely produce the characteristics
of servanthood. We must not merely hope that the true marks of Christian
servanthood will appear. We must actively promote biblically approved
styles of leadership through modelling by the staff and through active
encouragement, practical exposition, and deliberate reinforcement. This
we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Instructional
variety
Our programmes of theological education must vigorously pursue the use
of a variety of educational teaching methodologies, evaluated and promoted
in terms of their demonstrated effectiveness, especially with respect
to the particular cultural context. It is not right to become fixed
in one method merely because it is traditional, or familiar, or even
avant-garde. Lecturing is by no means the only appropriate teaching
method, and frequently not the best. Presumably the same may be said
of programmed instruction. Our programmes need to take practical steps
to introduce and train their staff in new methods of instruction, in
a spirit of innovative flexibility and experimentation, always governed
by the standards of effectiveness. This we must accomplish, by God's
grace.
- A
Christian mind
Our programmes of theological education need much more effectively to
model and inculcate a pattern of holistic thought that is openly and
wholesomely centred around biblical truth as the integrating core of
reality. It is not enough merely to teach an accumulation of theological
truths. Insofar as every human culture is governed at its core by an
integrating world view, our programmes must see that the rule of the
Lord is planted effectively at that point in the life of the student.
This vision of the theologically integrated life needs to be so lived
and taught in our programmes that we may say and show in a winsomely
biblical manner that theology does indeed matter, and students may go
forth experiencing this centring focus in all its biblical richness
and depth. This we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Equipping
for growth
Our programmes of theological education need urgently to refocus their
patterns of training towards encouraging and facilitating self-directed
learning. It is not enough that through our programmes we bring a student
to a state of preparedness for ministry. We need to design academic
requirements so that we are equipping the student not only to complete
the course but also for a lifetime of ongoing learning and development
and growth. To this end we must also assume a much greater role in the
placement of our students, as part of our proper duty, and experiment
in ways of maintaining ongoing supportive links and services with them
after graduation, especially in the early years of ministry. By these
means each student should come to experience through the programme not
the completion of a development but the launching of an ongoing development.
This we must accomplish, by God's grace.
- Cooperation
Our programmes of theological education must pursue contact and collaboration
among themselves for mutual support, encouragement, edification and
cross-fertilization. We are at fault that so often in evangelical theological
education we attend merely to our own assignments under God. Others
in the same calling need us, and we need them. The biblical notion of
mutuality needs to be much more visibly expressed and pragmatically
pursued among our theological programmes. Too long we have acquiesced
in an isolation of effort that denies the larger body of Christ, thus
failing both ourselves and Christ's body. The times in which we serve,
no less than biblical expectations, demand of each of us active ongoing
initiatives in cooperation. This we must accomplish, by God's grace.
May God help us to be faithful to these affirmations
and commitments, to the glory of God and for the fulfilment of His purposes.
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