Our seminary curricula are largely identical to what they were around the First World War, but the entering seminarian is a profoundly different person than was the seminarian of the early twentieth century. Then, the individual was well-read in poetry, and had studied nearly a decade of classical language (Latin, Greek, or both), learning by reading poetry and ancient languages to read texts carefully. He had written compositions almost weekly in many of his academic classes, and often wrote letters to friends and family. In contrast, the entering seminarian today has the faculties of a sixth- to eighth grader sixty years ago, and the seminary curriculum cannot make this seminarian an adult by the time he graduates (Gordon, Why Johnny Can't Preach, p. 68).
I got this off of Doug Wilson's blog. This was certainly true of me.
2 comments:
No idea what you're talking about. Although I have 3 1/2 years to go before I finally have a decade of Classical Languages.
Us kids (your teachers) will make a man of you yet. Then you can make men of your kids before they get to grad school, or something like that.
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