FALL 2016 NEWSLETTER
CO M MU N ITY
Coming to Redeemer this Fall . . . Dr. Sinclair Ferguson, Keith & Kristyn Getty, Dr. Os Guinness and more - see page 2
REDEEMER SEMINARY
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6060 NORTH CENTRAL EXPRESSWAY, SUITE 700
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DALLAS, TEXAS 75206
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214.528.8600
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INFO@REDEEMER.EDU
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REDEEMER.EDU
NOTE FROM THE PRESIDENT Hi Everyone, Thank you for taking the time to peruse our newsletter and thanks for your prayers and support of Redeemer Seminary. God is so good to us at Redeemer. The Fall has kicked off and we're grateful to see our returning students in Dallas/ Austin and excited about our new students in both campuses. They come from all backgrounds. Several are on pastoral staffs throughout Dallas, Ft Worth, Denton, Austin and even College Station. Others are working in other professions as they begin Seminary. Pray for them as they follow Jesus and seek to discern His call on their lives. We have lots of opportunities for you to participate in the life of Redeemer Seminary this Fall. You're invited to join us for the Lunch and Learn on Friday, September 23 at the Dallas Campus from 12:30-1:15pm. I will be speaking on the mission of God and a complimentary lunch will be served. Please email Rachelle Hast at rhast@redeemer.edu for reservations or more information. The Fall fundraiser for Redeemer Seminary will be on Tuesday, October 18, 2016 as we welcome Keith and Kristyn Getty in concert to Dallas. This dinner and concert is going to be exciting and spiritually nourishing. Join us! Please see the rest of the newsletter for further details. Also, there will be A New Song Eternal Worship Conference on Tuesday, October 18, 2016 from 8:30-4:30pm that will be sponsored by Redeemer Seminary. The keynote speakers will be Keith Getty and Dr. Sinclair Ferguson. Several breakout seminars
will take place throughout the day on art, music, the Gospel of Jesus and culture. You are all invited. Dr. Os Guinness will also be joining us on Thursday, November 3, 2016 from noon thru 1:15pm for a complimentary lunch and program at the Dallas Campus. You are invited! Please contact Rachelle at the email address above for more information.
You will notice that Redeemer Seminary has launched a new logo. The logo is the work of two Redeemer Seminary students (who are now graduates) and a very gifted Dallas visual art developer. The logo has a clean look that exudes a sense of humility and boldness. That is our hope and posture as we serve Jesus. We humbly serve Jesus and boldly speak the Good News of His life, death and resurrection. Lastly, please pray for us and partner with us on North Texas Giving Day on Thursday, September 22nd. Donations of 25.00 or more will be multiplied. At Redeemer Seminary we grow missionary pastors for our secular age and we are grateful for all of you who join us in that endeavor. Much love to you all. Godspeed, Rev. Martin Ban President, Redeemer Seminary Dallas/ Austin
LUNCH
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LEARN
September 23, 2016 featuring
MARTIN BAN
Complimentary Lunch • 12:00 Noon Program and Message 12:30 - 1:15 P.M. • Dallas Campus to RSVP for one or a group contact Rachelle Hast at 214.334.1937 or rhast@redeemer.edu
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PROFESSOR SPOTLIGHT | Dr. Sinclair Ferguson Dr. SinclairSAVE FergusonTHE has been Professor of DATE Systematic Theology at Redeemer Seminary Fundraising Dinner since our start. He has been a faithful pastor benefitting and minister forRedeemer many yearsSeminary both in his home country Scotland, and in the US, and he is Featuring a prolific and gifted writer. Through many veins, Dr. Dr. Ferguson has ministered to countless Sinclair Ferguson individuals. As professor, his wisdom and care Thursday evening, March 20, 2014 have helped Redeemer be aGalleria seminary The Westin Hotel that prepares men and women for gospel ministry. A reluctant professor, Dr. Ferguson first taught consider hosting at WestminsterPlease Seminary, then camea table to Redeemer when it was planted as ancontact extension campus. The decisions to teach,Rachelle and toHast travel to do so, 214.334.1937 were “difficult for a variety of reasons,” shares Ferguson, “In rhast@redeemer.edu God’s goodness...I have had the privilege of combining pastoral ministry and seminary teaching. Seminary faculty are all ‘wired’ differently, but for me this has been the ideal combination.”
When asked about ministry, and what he sees as necessary for seminary as a time for ministry preparation, Ferguson responds, “we need to be saturated with Scripture.” As one would expect a doctor to understand human anatomy, so ministers of the Gospel need to be steeped and studied in theological, Biblical studies, to the point of understanding. This understanding “should in turn produce in us three characteristics: the first is doxology—praise of God for his amazing grace to us (Ephesians 1:314); the second is humility—so that we are humbled under his mighty hand (1 Peter 5:6); and the third is a desire for ministry (John 13:1215). These are all fruits of the word of God in our lives, and so our seminary curriculum is very word saturated in the conviction that this is the chief need for shaping ministry.” As that word saturated curriculum is worked out in reality, Dr. Ferguson’s role is in teaching systematic theology, which can be difficult to define in brevity, but we asked him to try anyways: “Systematic theology depends on and feeds into all the other disciplines in the seminary curriculum,” Ferguson explains. The mouthful sentence explanation is this: the goal of having Systematic courses in seminary curriculum “is to expound the Christian faith in an orderly and topical way (hence “systematic”) on the foundation of the teaching of the whole of Scripture (hence employing the fruits of biblical exegesis set within the context of biblical theology), in a way that takes into account how the church has done this in the past (historical theology), is conscious of the intellectual and philosophical the church faces today (Apologetics
and ethics), and in a manner that will feed preaching, (homiletics), and pastoral theology (congregational ministry and counseling). and enable the church to communicate the gospel to the world (mission and evangelism).” Dr. Ferguson explains that studying systematic theology can be likened to an architect’s office, “but the church is a building site, and the two should never be confused…Unless we go to the building site with a clear sense of the design and architecture of the gospel we will be poor servants of Christ.” This foundation, and this uniting of the Redeemer Seminary shaped 6060 North Central Expy.Suite 700 rest of the seminary curriculum all Dallas, TX 75206 toward the same purposearound and through a saturation of www.redeemer.edu 214.528.8600 scripture, is what prepares students to handle the gospel and bring it to others, to “[deal] with people’s eternal salvation” in ministry. Dr. Ferguson states, “whatever the inconvenience transatlantic visits may be…coming to Redeemer has provided both the opportunity and the privilege of investing part of my life in future ministry.” As an author, Dr. Ferguson cherishes the unique gift that ministry gives. “One thing that continues to encourage me to write,” he says, “is the amazing opportunity it provides to minister to people I will never meet in this world, and then through translations, to serve people whose language I cannot speak.” His most recent book, The Whole Christ, is the product of thirty-six years of work and processes of addresses and speeches being shaped into “a 250 page book on the subject of the grace of God in the gospel and on issues like legalism, antinomianism, and assurance.” Soon we will see his next book, Devoted to God, which he wrote on sanctification. Dr. Ferguson states, “authors are like professors and pastors, always preparing yet another lecture or sermon. So writing books simply becomes one of the things they do.” We look forward to reading his continued works, and having him back in our classroom with students this fall.
Fall Newsletter 2016 | Page 3
NOW TRENDING | #redeemerseminary
WHERE’S MARTIN?
Martin Ban preaches to the Highland Park Presbyterian Church congregation with recent graduate, Dr. Hao Wu.
I will be presenting a paper at the Annual Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature in November, meeting this year in San Antonio. The paper is entitled, "Mark's Son of Man in Roman Imperial Context". Also, I recently had an article published in the Spring 2016 issue of the Criswell Theological Review entitled, "From Marginal to Mainstream: The Adamic Son of Man and the Potential of Psalm 80". Dr. Michael Goheen concludes that over the past half century, it has become clear that mission is a central theme in the Bible's narrative and, moreover, is central to the very identity of the church. This book significantly widens and deepens the emerging conversation on missional hermeneutics. Essays from top biblical and missiological scholars discuss reading the Scriptures missionally, using mission as a key interpretive lens. Rev. Dr. Gregory Wagenfuhr, MDiv ‘09, is the Transitional Pastor at United Presbyterian Church in Canon City, Colorado. Gregory has recently published a major academic monograph entitled Plundering Egypt: A Subversive Christian Ethic of Economy. For more information on his work visit his website www.gpwagenfuhr.com
The 44th General Assembly met in Mobile, AL. Many Redeemer staff and friends attended this year’s assembly.
Martin Ban Keith Getty
Isaac Banegas Matthew O’Hearn
Please keep our faculty members in your prayers as they not only work to care for and educate our students, but to serve the good of the church and the community at large. Page 4 | Fall Newsletter, 2016
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LOOKING BACK . . . Everyone has a story of how they were brought to Redeemer. Some follow longer roads than others and travel at different paces. Yet, everyone shares the experience of hearing, in someone else's words, why they should go to seminary. Maybe it happened in a coffee shop, over dinner, walking past a table at a conference. In the same fashion, my journey from home in New Mexico was prompted by those who have gone before me. Not until an Italian food dinner at a restaurant across the street from the NMSU campus, had I considered seminary. The honest conversation and laughs of that meal stuck with me through the years of finishing college and getting married. So when it came time for me to mail applications, Redeemer was on the top of my list. After graduating in May 2016, I'm grateful and excited to be working as the Admissions Advisor. Redeemer has taught me much theology and still more about our Savior. I understand the impact of my task because I know from experience how God uses people to draw others into what He desires for them. My wife Ashley and I both have roots in New Mexico and now feel at home in Dallas. The sense of welcome is due in large part to the hospitality of our church PCPC. We also love our neighborhood in East Dallas, cycling around White Rock Lake, and hunting for the best tacos.
ISAAC BANEGAS
Meet Sheri Crandall, Executive Assistant at Redeemer Seminary. By phone or by doorway, Sheri is the first of the Redeemer family to greet newcomers. Sheri grew up in Dallas, and attended Texas Tech where she earned a degree in Art History. She has a ministry background, serving as Associate Minister for children and families at Church of the Incarnation, serving on numerous medical mission trips, and teaching special needs 4th and 5th graders. “My purpose and passion is to serve others, particularly those who don’t have a voice,” she shares. Most recently, she spent time in Africa teaching by day, and removing parasites for local children by night. Next year she hopes to continue her mission work with another trip. Sheri came to Redeemer at the invitation of two good friends: our President, Martin Ban, and Director of Operations and Finance, Tami Fowler. “They needed someone at the front desk to love on people as they come through the door, and to be supportive of the team here: the faculty, the administration, and the students. That is my role: to be supportive and loving.” We are blessed to have Sheri in the family-- to support the staff and students, and as she says, just to be “here for all the people.”
SHERI CRANDALL
New Student Orientation and our first Chapel service
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L♥VING FORWARD Meet Judy Cimo, Redeemer’s new Assistant Registrar. Judy was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and has been in Texas now for about 30 years. She attended the University of North Texas where she studied Vocational Rehabilitation and Psychology. Judy has worked in the registrar’s offices of institutions such as Art Institute of Dallas (where she worked with our Registrar,Mary Chris Sayre!), Baylor University, and University of Texas Dallas. Now, she says “I came to Redeemer excited to be in a different environment that would be more purposeful, and more peaceful.” Redeemer is thankful to have Judy in the family, sharing her talents and using her experience to help our students navigate the process of planning out their path through seminary. Judy shares, “I enjoy the faculty and students. Everyone is very nice and really dedicated. I’m looking forward to the Fall semester beginning, seeing everyone here. It is great to work for a place with a purpose I am passionate about!”
JUDY CIMO
Martin Ban speaking at the first Chapel of Fall 2016 semester
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DALLAS STUDENT SPOTLIGHT | Hamidreza Hatamikasavand Redeemer student Hamidreza Hatamikasavand was born in Iran. He grew up in a moderately religious Muslim family, and as a teen began asking questions. Why Muhammad? Why attack others? “I wasn’t satisfied with the answers, but others told me to stop asking and trust God.” At the age of 19, Hamid went to university, and worked at an internet cafe. One day he came across a chat room named ‘God is love.’ “I did not see any love in Islam or in Allah, so I was intrigued,” shares Hamid. “I started talking about Christianity and the Gospel and Christ and I came to see the difference between the Quran and the Gospel. I joined that chat room every day to ask questions.” Hamid says the Christians kept talking about people being sinners, which baffled him, so they started there, and worked their way to Christ being Savior, not just prophet. “After about three months, I felt confused. I didn’t believe in Islam, but I didn’t believe Christianity yet either. I prayed to Christ: ‘If you are really alive, give me a sign.’” Shortly after this, Hamid passed by an old Presbyterian church that had been closed. It had a sign that said “I am the way, the truth, and the life…” and Hamid remembers, “I was confused, I prayed, I saw this sign, and I believed.” Hamid immediately went on a hunt for a Bible. “All I could find was the Gospel of Barnabas,” he laughs, “and as I started to read I could tell this was not a Gospel I’d been looking for.” Finally he was able to find a copy of the Bible, and he slowly went chapter by chapter beginning in Genesis, learning the differences in stories and the prophets, between Islam and Christianity. Sadly, his family was not supportive. “They asked me, ‘Have you found answers? Have you stopped questioning?’ and when I said I followed Jesus, they kicked me out.” In 2005, because of law requiring service, Hamid was forced into the military. Just before, he had
joined an underground Presbyterian church. In the military, they ask your religion: Muslim, Christian, or Jewish. Hamid says he was asked many questions. ‘How can you be Christian with your name? Who gave you a Christian Identity? Why would you claim this? Why not even lie?’ Hamid’s beautiful response was, “If God has saved my life, it belongs to God. How could I reject Jesus when I know he exists, and he is Lord, and he rose from the dead?” Through his faithfulness as witness, one of his commanders came to faith as well. During his last month of military services, his pastor and many members of the church were captured and tortured, demanding to know, ‘who is responsible for the software?’ Hamid had created a Bible software for Farsi speakers. It was so difficult to find copies of the Bible, much less in Farsi, but by having it online to be downloaded, the Bible was made available. Hamid says they quickly got to 60,000 downloads. The pastor was released, without giving them Hamid’s name, and was able to warn Hamid to get away. Over the next few years, Hamid served at a Presbyterian church in Tehran, continued to share the Gospel, and fell in love with his now wife, Ellie. They traveled to Turkey, and then to the states as Christian refugees. Hamid serves with Imad Aubrey as Pastor of Presbyterian Fellowship, a Farsi fellowship at Town North Presbyterian Church. They are reaching out to Turks and Muslims in the community, sharing the Gospel. Pray for Hamid as he continues this ministry work during seminary. Pray for elders to be raised up within the Farsi Fellowship. Pray for his software to continue to spread, that the Gospel will spread and the Bible be accessible to Christians in the Middle East.
AUDIT A CLASS THIS FALL! Fall classes start Monday, August 29, 2016 Visit the Redeemer website for more information on classes and application materials. www.redeemer.edu
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ALUMNI SPOTLIGHT | Thomas Kunkel
Thomas Kunkel is pastor of Christ Redeemer Church in Guadalajara, Mexico, and a Redeemer alumnus. When asked how seminary helped in his ministry, he says, “Redeemer does real things.” Thomas and his wife Sandra have lived in Guadalajara for 5 years now. The city and its surrounding areas is an unusual place in that less than 1% of the population is Christian. Thomas says most people will claim to be Catholic, but have probably only gone to church a handful of times. “The Bible is almost completely unknown here,” he says. “Culturally, people are discouraged from reading it. As we share, many people really are hearing for the first time.” Christ Redeemer Church has been working to equip its own members to be studiers of the Word, discipling members to evangelize in their city and bring people into the church, and raise up leaders for other church plants. Christ Redeemer Church is only 16 years old, but has planted three local churches-one of which has planted two others-and has two more in the works for the
coming year. Thomas knows he is able to train because of his own training in seminary. He teaches intro counseling and apologetics classes, and classes on how to approach the scriptures. “Basically, I teach lay-person-friendly seminary classes,” he shares. Many locals come to the church because, though they are mostly uninterested in being a Christian, they think Christians know something they don’t. In troubled times, they wonder if a Christian could help them. Thomas took many counseling classes during his time at Redeemer that have enabled him to help them. He counsels many people-church members and not-who are wrestling with addictions, OCD, depression, and marital conflict. The church also works closely with an orphanage that is home to many children who have been abused. That Thomas offers real help in listening, in counseling, in sharing the Gospel and applying it to daily life, and discerning when there is a need for someone else to offer medicinal help, is a great blessing to the community. One member shared with him that when he had approached a local priest with a burden, seeking counsel, the priest simply asked, “Did you kill anyone? Steal anything? No? Well, you’re okay then.” There is a great distance from Scripture in the whole community. Before attending Redeemer, Thomas was working abroad teaching Bible. “I wanted more tools,” he says, “so I came back to the states for more education.” Thomas says professors like Dr. Ferguson, Dr. Gropp, and others, gave him the tools to understand Scripture, a respect for the tradition of the church, and the apologetics and counseling tools to minister to an increasingly post-Christian world. “Many people here are philosophically lost, and much of the counseling I do is helping people find and maintain a structure.” Please pray for Thomas, his wife Sandra, their son Calvin, and the body at Christ Redeemer Church in Guadalajara, Mexico. Pray that God would continue to be faithful to work through them for the good of their city, for the spreading of the gospel, to the glory of God.
SAVE THE DATE Dr. Os Guinness Thursday, November 3, 2016
12:00-12:30 Complimentary Lunch 12:30- 1:15 Program and Message
Os Guinness is an author and social critic. Great-great-great grandson of Arthur Guinness, the Dublin brewer, he was born in China in World War II where his parents were medical missionaries. A witness to the climax of the Chinese revolution in 1949, he was expelled with many other foreigners in 1951 and returned to Europe where he was educated in England. Os has written or edited more than thirty books. His latest is Impossible People – Christian courage and the struggle for civilization, which was published in June, 2016. He is currently a senior fellow at the Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics in Oxford.
For more information contact: Rachelle Hast 214.334.1937 or rhast@redeemer.edu Fall Newsletter 2016 | Page 9
SOUTH ASIA SUMMER MISSION | Isaac Banegas A group of pastors stood under the shade of a young tree to escape the heat of the church with the sheet-metal roof. We had been in India for nearly a week. A team of three that included Bogdan and me, had raised support, prepared a seminar, and spent some time on a plane. Now we were in a city of about twelve million people, teaching a group of pastors the book of Revelation in an adobe building baked by the sun. In some ways the experience was surprising and in others it was oddly familiar. The heat during those seminar sessions, with only ceiling fans to move the air, felt familiar. Whether Dallas heat or New Mexico, I've worked outside enough in both places to feel at home sweating through my clothes. The odd familiarity of the heat turned the volume down on everything else. I felt at home in the toasty conditions. Consequently, the skill-stretching task of teaching for long stretches--something I had never done--worked the way some of my other jobs have. Because God's Spirit abides continually with us, I understood my greatest tasks to be obedient to God the Father. The conditions of that sun-soaked city reassured me that God had gone before me, was with me in the moment, and would abide after I had gone. In South Asia, I had to learn anew to surrender myself and my work to the one who fills all in all. As one who is careful with words and works to be understood clearly, I was challenged to relinquish control of my content by teaching through a translator. Yet, the particulars of translation were just another way I learned that I am accountable to God
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alone and He desired those pastors to know more about Him. That would imply that my enlightened lessons and creative metaphors, are only helpful insofar as they teach others the truth of Jesus. Implicitly, the whole trip with its host of new friends taught me the dogged diligence required in being a witness to Christ Jesus. South Asia is not a region of entitlement. They start from where they are and do the best with what they got. Scaffolding is timber bound with rope, stacked twenty stories high. Kids fly kites from rooftops because there is little room on ground level. The church sound system was a guitar amp and microphone. A day of ministry may be pastoring one young man who intends to marry and the pastor has to meet both families in separate villages. I was taught faithfulness on all fronts. From a position of poverty, the folks I met taught me gratitude and generosity. They taught me that extraordinary moments in ministry and rich moments of experience are God's to give. Therefore it is our job each day to wake up, work, and be content. That day in the heat, when my stomach turned with doubt, worried that what I was saying made sense or was compelling to those pastors, was a day that the Lord had made. All were content to rejoice and be glad in the shade, confident that God was at work in all that took place. They could be generous and invite me under the tree to come talk in the shade because they knew they had received grace and wanted to give it away. Isaac Banegas
Now Accepting Sponsorships Facing a Task Unfinished Dinner & Concert October 18, 2016 Be one of the first sponsors and receive a complimentary CD of their newly released album!
For more information contact: Rachelle Hast 214.334.1937 or rhast@redeemer.edu
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Redeemer Theological Seminary 6060 N. Central Expressway, Suite 700 Dallas, Texas 75206
For more information, please contact us at one of our two campus locations: Dallas Campus 6060 N. Central Expressway, Suite 700 Dallas, Texas 75206 214.528.8600 Austin Campus 2111 Alexander Avenue Austin, Texas 78702 512.600.6481
info@redeemer.edu redeemer.edu
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Page 12 | Fall Newsletter 2016