Ee FEATURES
LEAN INTO LIFE
Strengthening faith through Christian Studies Program a journey of growth and development
by Todd Bacon, Christian Studies Department Chair
W
e shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time. Toward the end of his poem “Little Gidding,” T.S. Eliot eloquently penned an insight into the nature of understanding – often it’s the path that takes us away from the familiar which ultimately circles back and leads us to a deeper understanding. I am particularly reminded of this truth whenever traveling abroad. Returning home after encountering new lands, culture, language, and friends, inevitably brings appreciation of the familiar in a richer, more profound way. Development comes through exploration and a
the Israelite’s wandering in the wilderness, to apostles, saints, mystics, missionaries and theologians, the story of faith with God has always been an ongoing encounter – a process experienced and told through the lens of a journey and often in the midst of doubts and questions. Frederick Buechner, with characteristic perceptiveness, articulates this beautifully, “Faith is better understood as a verb than as a noun, as a process than as a possession. It is on-again-off again rather than once-and-for-all. Faith is not being sure where you’re going, but going anyway. A journey without maps . . . doubt isn’t the opposite of faith; it is an element of faith.”1
Left Christian Studies Chair Todd Bacon with students at Martha S. Lindner High School. Right Renowned Bible teacher Ray Vander Laan spent a full day on CHCA’s campus teaching four Christian Studies classes at Martha S. Lindner High School and then engaging with Armleder in their classrooms and chapel service. Vander Laan’s visit culminated with an evening speaking engagement which was open to the public.
journey which necessarily stretches the imagination, encounters new terrain, and willingly wrestles with challenging questions. Leaving the familiar can be disconcerting and yet only by encountering the unfamiliar does growth occur. The themes of exploration and journey in Eliot’s poem are fitting metaphors for the process we hope students engage during their four years of Christian Studies at the high school. Reflecting on the Christian faith as a “journey” or “pilgrimage” has deep and ancient roots within Christianity. Scripture and the history of the Church over the last two thousand years are replete with stories of faith as a journey through doubts, fears, questions, and tension with the familiar. From Abraham and Sarah to 12
EAGLE’SEYE
Students at CHCA attend over 160 churches within the greater Cincinnati area and represent a wide range of traditions and denominations within Christianity. Although the primary focus of the Christian Studies curriculum is academic in nature, our passion and desire is to walk along side each student, not only as teachers but as fellow travelers, and encourage our mutual ongoing spiritual growth and development. Toward this end, we do our very best “to create an environment in which we listen to God speak to us through the words of Scripture, encourage a love of learning and the exercise of reason, gain wisdom from the historic voices and traditions of the Church, and seek to understand our own human experience within this world.”2 Precisely because we value the student’s continuing growth and development,