黑料历史鈥檚 alumnus, Matthew Lee Anderson (鈥04), 鈥渋s at the head of a class of young Christian intellectuals who sharpen their minds by way of the blogosphere,鈥 wrote in their . Anderson鈥檚 education at Biola contributed to the intellectual and integrative thinker he is being recognized as today.
In Christianity Today鈥檚 recently developed 鈥淲ho鈥檚 Next鈥 feature, the editorial board of the 150,000-plus circulated periodical has been identifying burgeoning evangelical influencers. While Anderson was the third person to be featured, he was the first in their series to be recognized for offering an 鈥渋ntellectual blog feast.鈥
Since 2004, the twenty-eight year old has been furiously cooking-up thoughts, ideas and distinctions at his loyally read blog, , which also showcases contributions from Biola alumni Jeremy Mann (鈥08), Cate McDonald (鈥06), and Gary Hartenburg (鈥01).
At 鈥淢ere-O鈥, readers are served substantial contributions on technology and culture, anthropology, politics and political philosophy, theology, spiritual formation, philosophy of education, along with deep appreciation for Anderson鈥檚 hero, G. K. Chesteron.
While Mere-O is Anderson鈥檚 abode, his thoughtfulness is a winsome read at ConversantLife.com, First Thing鈥檚 blog, and The Evangelical Outpost.
For some time, Senior Managing Editor, , was attracted to what was cooking at Mere-O and also what Anderson had published at , a publication of Houston Baptist University that features leading voices in Christian academia on the critical issues of the times.
鈥淚 am impressed with the consistent thoughtfulness he displays,鈥 Galli observed of Anderson. 鈥淗e comes at issues in a fresh way, and often transcends the left-right divide in evangelicalism. He tries to get at issues that lie beneath the debates we鈥檙e having.鈥
Shortly after the December Christianity Today profile ran on Anderson, the U.S.鈥檚 top-circulated , ran a column by Jonathan Fitzgerald, managing editor of the post-evangelical outlet, , where he as an example of how thinking about the 鈥渆vangelical mind鈥 has been stimulated in recent years. His apparent intellectual, truth-telling commentary and intolerance for false dichotomies has captivated Christian bloggers.
In early 2009, Anderson daringly published an article, 鈥淭he New Evangelical Scandal鈥 (an allusion to Mark Noll鈥檚 landmark book, ) in a Winter 2008 issue of Civitate. In that article, he showed how 20-something, young evangelicals are not substantially different from the previous generation; often ahistorical, individualistic, and avid consumers of culture much like their parent鈥檚 generation, which they routinely protest.
In his development, Anderson recognized that Christianity is a knowledge tradition and not merely a faith tradition, which is a common theme in 鈥檚 writings and highlighted in the talks and writings of Biola professors like , William Lane Craig, Craig Hazen, and J.P. Moreland.
As a knowledge tradition, Christianity can credibly engage the public as a worldview, since its tradition is open for all to test, experience, and recognize as true. And being in the public where Christianity is, is exactly where Anderson has been, whether those publics are the blogosphere, lecturing for Torrey Academy, leading , or working at .
When Anderson was a student at Biola, he came to appreciate the value of thinking historically, the importance of the body to human experience, and how Christian anthropology significantly forms our worldview.
In December 2009, Anderson signed a book contract with Bethany House, a division of Baker Publishing Group, 鈥渢o write a book on the meaning and role of the body in young evangelicalism,鈥 a project which originally grew out of a with Biola鈥檚 professor Moyer Hubbard and other academic papers with professor .
Tentatively titled, , the book will 鈥減rovide, if possible, a plausible theological anthropology that will help evangelicals of all ages navigate embodiment in a distinctly Christian way.鈥
Clearly, Matthew Lee Anderson is an integrative thinker, whose intellectual and moral-spiritual well-being was trained and nurtured at Biola鈥檚 Torrey Honors Institute.
Mark Galli recognized the significance of that educational background when asked how Christian knowledge institutions, like Biola, can contribute toward the leadership of 鈥測oung evangelicals.鈥
鈥淭oo often colleges merely get students to learn the Christian tradition 鈥 that鈥檚 good, but not enough,鈥 said Galli. 鈥淭hat will leave students unprepared to grapple with the issues that their generation will face.鈥
The solution, educationally, is robust training in worldview integration, which would emphasize learning to 鈥渢hink Christianly鈥 about reality, knowledge, ideas, people and life.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 not easy, and it鈥檚 hardly a new idea,鈥 notes Galli, 鈥渂ut my impression is that Biola is doing that better than most.鈥
But being in a 鈥渨orshipping community,鈥 and not merely an educational community, is where learning is best done, according to Anderson.
鈥淢y best days of class were the ones where I went to chapel (which I actually did regularly),鈥 Anderson said.
Moreover, as a worshipping community learning to love and to know what is good, 鈥溾淚 think that truth needs to be oriented around the revelation of Jesus, and so no 鈥榰niversity鈥 can claim to be such without a theology faculty--and without the interaction of that faculty with the rest of the university.鈥
Thus, theology is intertwined with doxology. 鈥淚f we as a Christian university really know the God who is at the center of the universe, then we must inevitably join in worship of him together. And if we're not teaching our students that, then I wonder if we are teaching our students to really know Jesus. After all, he is God, but he is God for us and if we do not know him as that, then I suspect we do not really know him at all.鈥
What can knowledge institutions like the Christian university, seminary or local church do to address the 鈥淣ew Evangelical Scandal鈥?
Anderson says, 鈥渢ry to make the knowledge of Jesus the center of our lives again.鈥
That鈥檚 not a simplistic answer. It is a wise answer, but not because it is religiously correct. It is wise because it recognizes how all human life is meant to be led: knowledgeably and Christianly.
Matthew and his wife Charity (also a Biola alum) currently live in St. Louis, Missouri and are the leaders of their local Biola alumni chapter.
Written by Joseph Gorra, Christian Apologetics.
Jenna Bartlo, Media Relations Coordinator, can be reached at (562) 777-4061 or through email at jenna.l.bartlo@biola.edu.