
(Photo by ambery)
Before I begin, I need to say that I’ve never been a fan of any schooling system I’ve ever been a part of.
- In high school, I was a 90s student but on academic probation for missing too many classes.
- I scraped by university, passionless for my engineering degree, and was probably in the bottom five of my graduating class.
- I wasn’t at the very bottom of the barrel because after my third year I had decided to go to seminary, and realized they didn’t just let you in by grace. I had to work my butt off in my final year just to raise my overall mark to a C+
So here’s the bottom line now that I’m done seminary
- 27 classes – not all of my choosing
- over a thousand hours in class
- at least two thousand hours spent reading and writing papers
- 440 hours of supervised ministry experience for the internship requirements
- $30,000 on tuition and books
- I left a corporate job I loved – Where I worked from home most of the time, had opportunities to travel, and interacted with people every single day.
- I made 60-70k+ a year depending on bonuses/commission – it’s been two years now so that’s $140,000… gone. I don’t even want to think about what might have been over the course of a lifetime.
So was it worth it?
Is each lecture really worth $80 to (for the most part) passively listen to? Is it worth the drive and the time away from family? Is it worth the stress and uncertainty placed upon loved ones?
Could over a hundred thousand dollars be given elsewhere, that could have produced far greater kingdom impact? Could I have used all that time to better engage the world rather than other seminarians?
There was a lot of assigned reading, but I probably read more and learned more from personal readings than class readings. Could I have learned and grown to where I am today, without seminary?
I guess the other question is, would I have?
I really don’t know if I would have done something nobler with my time or money. If you’re at a stage where you’re deeply engaging God, the Scriptures, His people, His mission, and His calling in your life, my goodness, don’t go to seminary.
At least I wouldn’t. Not with where I am today.
Note that I am indebted and incredibly thankful that I had the opportunity to be in a seminary. Who on earth has the luxury to sit around and contemplate the things of God?
I still feel like a noobie follower of Jesus, but I got an idea of where I’m going and where to go for help and what I need to get there. But seminary, at least in its traditional sense, is definitely not a requirement on the journey going forward.
Seminary’s will always have their place. Go if you feel God’s calling you in that direction (but realize it’s only a structure/form/place of learning, and typically God calls us to deeper things than that).
When I get some time I’ll probably compile a list of books, articles, experiences, resources that I think could just about replace the traditional seminary.
With all that being said, a price just cannot be placed upon time and space to grow, friendship, an environment that fosters learning, divine encounters, and wisdom from local prophets.
Virtual relationships…
by Lon on December 15, 2007
There are so many more people around the world who read my blog than people I connect with regularly in person.
I’m guessing part of this is because if you’re in my regular circles, well, we can catch up just about anytime we want in person. Another part might be due to the anonymity of the internet and how you can peek into someone’s life without them ever knowing about it. And then there’s those of you who’ve contributed to the thousand plus comments here.
Either way, I’m thankful for those of you who might actually think I have something of value to say or share. I’m amazed by the number of you who subscribe to the SolarCrash feed because as much as I’ve tried to narrow the scope of the blogging, you really never know what you’re going to get. So thanks for sticking around.
I’ve also especially appreciate the interaction. The networking has been fantastic, and your comments have been both encouraging and insightful.
I’ll be removing the plugoo instant chat widget I have on the sidebar (just so it doesn’t become a let down when I’m not around), but it’s awesome how with technology today I’ve been able to interact with so many church planters, leaders, and strangers around the world. Just yesterday I chatted with a teen who had been a cutter and was wondering what god had to do with life at all.
You can continue connecting with me further via comments, the contact page, or even via facebook if you’re into that sort of thing.
So again, thank you for reading, thank you for sticking around, thank you for commenting, thank you for clicking the ads, thank you for allowing me to be a part of your day, and although the relationships might primarily be virtual, thank you for the friendships. I’m looking forward to the journey ahead together.
My name is Lon, and I thank God for blogs.
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