I have had two experiences during summer vacation so far
that I thought would be worth sharing, particularly on this blog. The first
comes from my summer job, and the second comes from my local library
in-the-middle-of-nowhere, Chester New Hampshire.
During this summer my life takes a very different pace, as I
am on the grounds crew for a local golf course. Instead of shuffling books or
helping patrons with Microsoft Word in a nice air-conditioned library—like
during the semester—my average work day here runs from 6:00AM to 2:00PM in the
cold, rain, and heat, doing all sorts of different landscaping type-jobs. This
year one of my more recent jobs has been teaching a new high school graduate
the ropes.
During my time with this new employee, the commonplace discussion
about school, life, and family ensued. Upon my saying that I attend
“Philadelphia Biblical University” (sorry, I haven’t started saying “Cairn”
yet), the discussion about Christianity came up. As this is my third summer
working there, all the guys on the course know that I’m a Christian and that I
study the Bible at a University. What was different about the discussion this
time was how much this new kid didn’t understand about Christianity—his parents were never
involved in any type of religion, and he was raised in a government school that
never taught him anything about Christianity or the Bible. He was shocked to
hear that Jesus was God. We started talking about the Bible. He had never heard
of Abraham before. He even asked me if Jews thought that Abraham was God the
same way Christians think Jesus was God. Now, I say all this not in any way to
make this fellow look bad—he is simply a product of our culture.
The second event was my looking through the catalog for my
local library. They don’t even have a
copy of Calvin’s Institutes. The closest thing to any sort of “Christian”
material available was Joel Osteen, the man from planet prosperity. I was
definitely disappointed, although not surprised, at the major lack of Christian
materiel available to the public in my area—New England. The land that once was
called home to our friends the Puritans.
I tell both of those stories to remind my fellow students of
what I was reminded of by them: we take for granted what we have, both in our
general understanding AND our library. Not knowing the name of Abraham, if you
were raised in a Christian household as I was, is something that’s hard to
imagine. As a PBU student, not having access to thousands of commentaries and
theological treatise is also something we don’t stop to think about, and often
times, it isn’t something we stop to use. Those things being said, I want to
encourage you to thank God for the resources he has given you—both through the
friends and churches that you have, and also the great collection of writings
available to us in the library. Go ahead, pick up a dead theologian. Read
Calvin’s Institutes. Praise God that you can.
~Zak Fixler
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