writing about faith-based issues in an academic venue

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Writing About Faith- Based Issues in an Academic Venue

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Page 1: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Page 2: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Some things to think about…

• Why is this discussion necessary?

• How do these issues affect my studies?

• How do these issues affect the ways in which I want to use my degree?

Page 3: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Does the universe have purpose?

Page 4: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Unlikely. While nothing in biology, chemistry, physics, geology, astronomy, or cosmology

has ever provided direct evidence of purpose in nature, science can never unambiguously prove that there is no such purpose. As Carl Sagan said, in another context: Absence of

evidence is not evidence of absence.-Lawrence Knauss, professor of physics and

astronomy at Case Western Reserve University

Page 5: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Yes. Consider this question: Do the Earth and mankind have a purpose? If so, then the universe does too, ipso facto. If not, the universe might still have some other purpose; but I don’t have to face that contingency, because I believe we do have

one…-David Gelernter, professor of computer science at

Yale University

Page 6: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

No. In the absence of evidence, the only reason to suppose that it does is sentimental wishful thinking and sentimental wishful thinking, which underlies

all religion, is an unreliable tool for the discovery of truth of any kind.

-Peter Atkins, professor of chemistry at Lincoln College, Oxford University

Page 7: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Not sure. Anyone who expresses a more definitive response to the question is

claiming access to knowledge not based on empirical foundations.

-Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist and director of New York City’s Hayden Planetarium

Page 8: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Indeed. But it is not possible to know that by looking at the natural world alone. The question of purpose is closely related to the question of

whether something like the God of Western monotheistic religions can be known to exist by studying the order,

goodness, and grandeur of the universe.

-Nancy Murphy, professor of Christian Philosophy at Fuller Theological Seminary

Page 9: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

I hope so. And if it doesn’t, it’s up to us to give it one. But first, let us

consider these questions: Why the world? Why people? Why did

God consider it useful or even good to introduce them into his

universal plan?-Elie Wiesel, author and professor at Boston University

Page 10: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

The Rules

• I am the moderator• No voice is more important

than another• There are no absolutes• Everyone must be willing to be

wrong

Page 11: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Examples…

• Acceptance and empathy is Greenleaf’s (2002) third talent of the servant leader. The servant leader has learned to accept people and to reject inappropriate characteristics, traits, and behaviors. This is a difficult task because many people find it difficult to separate the person from the behavior. In the religious world, many Christians find it difficult to separate the sin from the sinner.

Page 12: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Examples…

• Although Astor (2004) did not believe that leadership is influence alone, he recognized that the servant leader must be able to persuade followers. The thought of persuasion has the same concept of salvation, which is winning one soul one at a time.

Page 13: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Building a bridge

Page 14: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Personal Faith

Definitions and Barriers

Page 15: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Christian

• The sole basis of our beliefs is the Bible, God's infallible written Word, the 66 books of the Old and New Testaments. We believe that it was uniquely, verbally and fully inspired by the Holy Spirit and that it was written without error (inerrant) in the original manuscripts. It is the supreme and final authority in all matters on which it speaks.

Page 16: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Islam

• "There is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is his messenger."

Page 17: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Judaism

• Shma Yisrael: Hear, oh Israel! The Lord is our God-the Lord alone.

Page 18: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Doctoral Writing

Definitions and Barriers

Page 19: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Zuckerman’s Charge

• Your job is to show that you know what you’re talking about, that what you are writing is true, and that what you’re writing matters with master’s or doctoral-level evidence that will pass the critical read of this audience in the authoritative style and voice of a scholarly writer.

Page 20: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

The Bridge

• Consider your sources

• Chicago Manual of Style 8.97-119

• Social Problem vs. Research Problem

• Sense of the Scholarly Audience

• A willingness to be challenged

Page 21: Writing About Faith-Based Issues in an Academic Venue

Remember

• These principles apply to all types of research

• Issues of faith, race, philosophy, and cultural identity are too big for a single document

• Rational, Objective, Dispassionate