{"id":36637,"date":"2014-08-21T17:46:36","date_gmt":"2014-08-22T01:46:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/redeeminggod.com\/?p=36637"},"modified":"2014-08-21T17:46:36","modified_gmt":"2014-08-22T01:46:36","slug":"seminary-and-discipleship","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/redeeminggod.com\/seminary-and-discipleship\/","title":{"rendered":"Do Seminary and discipleship play nicely together?"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>Before I went to seminary, my greatest fear of seminary was that I would freeze to death. Not literally, but spiritually. I tried my hardest in seminary to ward off the frostbite, but to this day, over six years after graduation, I am not sure whether or not I succeeded.<\/p>\n I certainly know a lot more about the Bible and theology than I did before entering seminary, but looking back over my life, the times I felt the closest to God were all before entering seminary. Of course, I tell myself that feelings aren\u2019t everything, but of course, feelings aren\u2019t nothing either. And so there is a part of me that is afraid that despite my best efforts to ward it off, I froze to death in seminary.<\/p>\n I wrote about entering seminary<\/a> several years ago, and also about my post-seminary experience<\/a>. \u00a0Yet I am still struggling with much of the aftermath of seminary and whether it was a help or a hindrance to my life as a follower of Jesus.<\/p>\n So it was with great interest that I recently read Blessed are the Balanced<\/em><\/a> by Paul E. Petit and R. Todd Mangum, which purports to be a book about how seminarians can maintain their passion for Jesus while in seminary and after graduation. Interestingly, they frequently used the \u201cfreezing\u201d and \u201cfrostbite\u201d analogy in the book for what happens to many students while in seminary. I was also interested to see that both authors attended the same seminary I did\u2026<\/p>\nI Was Afraid of Freezing in Seminary<\/h2>\n
A Book about Surviving Seminary that might have helped<\/h2>\n