9/8/2023 0 Comments Robert webber gravesite"They're scholarly, but you don't have to have a master's degree from Notre Dame in liturgical history to get through them." "These books have just been excellent," he said. Kenyon, who serves as a deacon in an Anglican church, says he often uses Webber's works, such as Worship as a Verb and Worship Old and New, in book studies. Witvliet called Webber "an inspiration" and "a real pioneer." "In many ways, Robert Webber paved the way for many Protestants, especially evangelical Protestants, to take worship seriously as a primary occupation both in the church and in the academy," said John Witvliet, director of the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship at Calvin College and Calvin Seminary. Webber wrote more than 40 books on the topic of worship, focusing on how the worship practices of the ancient church have value for the church today. In 2006, he organized and edited the "Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future," a document intended "to restore the priority of the divinely inspired biblical story of God's acts in history."Įdith Blumhofer, director of the Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals at Wheaton College and affiliate professor of church history at Northern Seminary, says of Webber, "If you stand back and look at his life, he represents one of the ways that evangelicalism has changed and unfolded, if you think about from Bob Jones University to the Episcopal Church to all of this focus on remembering the ancient as we move into the contemporary."ĭuring the latter half of his life, Webber took a special interest in Christian worship practices. His more recent books include Ancient-Future Faith, Ancient-Future Time, Ancient-Future Evangelism, The Younger Evangelicals, and The Divine Embrace. In recent years, Webber sought to show the increasing relevance of patristic thought in a postmodern age. Nevertheless, Webber's work was highly influential, and his ideas grew in popularity in evangelical circles. He definitely went against the stream of current evangelical thought," Kenyon said. Phil Kenyon, Webber's colleague at Northern Seminary, says Webber faced an enormous amount of criticism in response to that book. He had also written Evangelicals on the Canterbury Trail: Why Evangelicals Are Attracted to the Liturgical Church, a 1985 book in which he described the reasons behind his own gradual shift away from his fundamentalist/evangelical background toward the Anglican tradition. At that point, Webber had written Common Roots (1978), a book that examined the impact of second-century Christianity on the modern church's life, worship, witness, and spirituality. He says Webber remained a "great lecturerthe best lecturer that Wheaton had in our department," but by then, Webber's focus had shifted from existentialism to the early church. Okholm returned to Wheaton in 1988 as a member of the faculty. "Unlike all the other professors, he had long hair, wore an ascot, which was the trend then, had us sitting on the floor, and instead of reading Augustine's City of God (he never did like Augustine) had us reading Dooyeweerd and Schaeffer and the existentialists." Dennis Okholm, a student of his in 1970, remembers Webber as avant garde. Webber began teaching theology at Wheaton College in 1968. Eight years later, he received his doctoral degree in theology from Concordia Theological Seminary. Webber, the son of a Baptist minister, received his bachelor's degree from Bob Jones University in 1956 and went on to earn a divinity degree from the Reformed Episcopal Seminary in 1959 and a masters degree in theology from Covenant Theological Seminary in 1960.
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