Christian higher education (CHE) is increasingly a transnational and global endeavor, with over one-sixth of the almost two hundred institutional members of the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities (CCCU) located in nineteen countries outside the United States. Much of this is related to the shift of the Christian center of gravity to the global South over the last half century, and in particular to the explosion of pentecostal and charismatic forms of churches across Asia, Africa, and Latin America, all of which also feeds back via migration to the so-called ‘browning’ of the churches of North America.
Networks like the CCCU have sought to bridge faith and learning through a certain form of Christ-centeredness and biblical orientation. While these theological priorities of the evangelical Protestant tradition have gained wide currency, the pneumatic spirituality of the pentecostal and charismatic movements is rarely considered when thinking about a distinctively Christian vision of higher education.
When even God is showing up at secular universities, one wonders what difference considerations of the Holy Spirit might make to complement and perhaps revitalize the christocentrism renowned across CHE. The Holy Spirit and Higher Education responds along two interrelated lines: by reconsidering historic Christian education itself from this pentecostal perspective, and by formulating an approach to CHE around the charismatic, sanctifying, and missional dimensions of the Spirit’s activity. Yong and Coulter show that CHE should be both Christ centered and Pentecost inspired, both biblically faithful and pneumatically empowered, both faith committed and charismatically propelled.
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Preface
1 Introduction: World Christianity and the Future of Christian Higher Education
Part One: What Difference Has the Holy Spirit Made? Historical Lessons
2 Revisiting Ancient Didaskalia: Patristic Foundations, Medieval Renewal, and Renaissance and Reform
3 (Re)constructing the University: Modernity and the Quest for Alternative Paradigms
4 Reimagining Christian Higher Education: Populism and the Transformation of Folk Culture
Part Two: What Difference Can the Holy Spirit Make? Constructive Proposals
5 Renewing the Mind: Scholarship and Pneumatological Imagination
6 Reordering the Heart: Teaching, Learning, and the School of the Spirit
7 Revitalizing the Hands: The Spirit’s Mission in and through Christian Higher Education
8 Conclusion: The Spirit Says Come! Renewing the Christian University
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Amos Yong is Professor of Theology & Mission and Dean of the School of Mission & Theology at Fuller Theological Seminary.
Dale M. Coulter is Professor of Historical Theology at Pentecostal Theological Seminary.