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At California Lutheran University, where I
teach religion and history, there has been much conversation among faculty
and administrators over the last few years about questions of vocation and
identity. Like many of our partner ELCA-affiliated colleges and
universities, we have been asking ourselves two major questions: "What does
it mean to be a Lutheran university in this place and time?" and "How do we
educate our students in such a way as to nurture in them a sense of their
vocation in the world?"
School's Identity
On the first of these questions we
have had a rich and productive dialogue at Cal Lutheran. Part of the answer
to this question lies embedded in each aspect of what we are as an
institution — a relatively small, private, church-affiliated, and liberal
arts-based university. In light of these four characteristics, we have
freedoms and opportunities for service and teaching that would be impossible
to imagine in, for example, the large, public, secular, and research- or
technology-driven campuses of the University of California and Cal State
systems that are the dominant educational force in our region.
With about 1,850 undergraduate and another
1,000 graduate students, Cal Lutheran is a very good size for developing
strong relationships. As we live out the Lutheran ideal of mutual
responsibility, our interaction with our students as mentors, and with our
colleagues as partners, and the students' relationships with each other can
all be informed by an institutional ethos of neighbor-love.
As a private university, we can develop our
identity and mission in a way that can — if necessary — challenge and
critique the society in which we live and can focus on what we see as the
"big picture," not trimming our sails to every political wind.
As a university of the ELCA, we take
seriously the idea that higher education is a form of ministry and service
and as such, an element of the church's work in the world.
Finally, as a liberal arts institution, we
stress the idea that a university is a community of learning in which the
professors, students, and administrative staff are all engaged in a
collective activity, not just producing a product or providing a paid
service but enriching each other and the world in which we all live.
What do all four of these features have in
common? First, they all have community at their heart, rooted in the
fundamental belief that education is both a collective and cooperative
activity. Second, they are all centered on service, reflecting our
conviction that we serve both by our own teaching and by teaching others to
serve.
No part of this fourfold self-understanding
is unique to Lutheranism or Lutheran colleges, of course — many other
church-related colleges could (and do) say many of these same things. But I
believe that this particular combination of community and responsibility, of
freedom and obligation to service, is uniquely well-expressed both in the
Lutheran tradition and in the distinctive ethos of our ELCA colleges and
universities.
We understand ourselves at Cal Lutheran thus
to be living out Luther's dictum that we are at the same time both free
persons in God and servants of all around us.
Vocational Ideal
And that is where "vocation" comes
in, for our special Lutheran understanding of this word as a combination of
dedication to God, mutual responsibility, and service to others expresses
precisely the combination of joyfulness and purpose that we strive to foster
among teachers and learners alike. Our understanding of vocation is a broad
one, encompassing every discipline and career path and every student's whole
thinking about her or his place in society.
As a Lutheran college, we are concerned for
the identification and nurturing of young women and men as future pastors
and lay leaders in our churches. But, even more, we aspire to prepare
students for service in every aspect and walk of life. At the same time, we
constantly try to raise awareness of the vocational aspect of our common
educational enterprise in this place: to live out our common call to being
students and teachers and to create a community of learning.
There are a number of ways in which we strive
to communicate this vocational ideal, some explicit and programmatic but
many of them subtle and informal. Among the programmatic emphases is an
intentional cultivation of the idea of service, explicitly in activities
such as the "Invitation to Service" program, which brings young people of
high school age to our campus to sing, pray, play, and reflect on what the
vocational future might hold for them.
On the one hand, this is a clear opportunity
to raise the subject of church vocations. On the other, it lifts up and
dignifies all their future vocational choices as reflections of their
commitment to their faith. Here, both the broader and the narrower purposes
are served. We hold up the church as a place of service, and we show off Cal
Lutheran (and college generally) as a place brimming with purpose- and
service-driven students.
Another area in which the call to
responsibility and action is articulated formally is in the
community-service and service-learning aspects of the curriculum. Though we
do not yet have a formal "community service" requirement as part of our core
curriculum, our first-semester seminar for entering students includes a
significant service-learning component.
Many of our students come to us already old
hands at community service, through the excellent programs of service at
many of our high schools. What Cal Lutheran tries to add is the reflective
component necessary to turn "good works" into a mature understanding of the
responsibilities of our common life. We are developing ways to return to
this emphasis in the senior year, to underscore the fact that, though the
area and type of service may be different, graduating and moving on to a
career is itself an invitation and a challenge to serve.
Increasingly, individual Cal Lutheran faculty
members are looking for ways to add service-learning components to their
existing classes; in the exploration of these opportunities, professors
often find themselves teaching each other. There is strong institutional
support for innovative and integrative teaching at Cal Lutheran, and the
emphasis on service is contagious.
The activities of our Lord of Life student
congregation and the other campus ministry programs and student-driven
organizations all revolve around service principles. Even if their main
articulated goal is to provide a space for a particular activity or
interest, student clubs and organizations at Cal Lutheran are all expected
by its Student Senate to be able to serve the common good. Some do this
explicitly, like the multicultural clubs or leadership organizations. Others
do so by including service opportunities among their social and cultural
activities.
Cal Lutheran's campus ministry sets the tone
for student life, as it takes as the core of its mission the call of Jesus
to make disciples, showing that to live out that primary call means to love
by serving.
Today's college student faces a much less
certain economic climate and employment picture than existed even only a few
years ago. This tempts them to make important educational decisions on the
basis of the perceived future usefulness of those courses rather than on
either their coherence within a broad program of study or out of pure
personal interest. As a liberal arts university, we thus face a challenge to
our more indirect methods of teaching, which focus on reflection and
critical thinking as much as on marketable forms of concrete knowledge.
Like all our peer institutions, we strive at
Cal Lutheran to balance the strongly utilitarian concerns provoked by the
tight job market with a curricular program that encourages vocational
clarity, intellectual growth, and the cultivation of a broad curiosity about
the world and our society. The success of this, of course, depends much on
our effectiveness as teachers and mentors. Cal Lutheran is very clear in its
expectation that its faculty be dedicated and skillful teachers and
themselves people of well-articulated vocation. This expectation is
reflected in its recruitment and hiring practices.
If this all sounds too good to be true, it
is. As is the case with many of our sister institutions, Cal Lutheran is
underendowed and operates on a very tight budget. Our university is young
(founded in 1959 as the only Lutheran four-year institution begun in the
20th century), indeed still in its infancy by the standards of Lutheran
colleges in the United States, and lacks the accumulated affection (and
dollars) of generations of alumni that many older institutions have long
enjoyed.
To do all that we do here requires us to have
developed great skill at making much of small things, of existing personnel,
and of scarce resources. Perhaps that is why this intentional reflection on
the "two big questions" is so valuable and important to us: We cannot afford
to do anything that does not represent movement toward our mission.
The clarity that our conversation on our own
vocation as a university brings to our efforts to live it out makes the
process highly worthwhile at every level. For only in full consciousness of
our calling to teach and to serve can we live out our Cal Lutheran mission
statement: "to educate leaders for a global society who are strong in
character and judgment, confident in their identity and vocation, and
committed to service and justice."
R. Guy Erwin, a faculty member in
religion and philosophy, has the Belgum Endowed Chair of Lutheran
Confessional Theology at California Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks,
California.
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