‘Truth fears no light,’ Greenway preaches during fall convocation sermon
Southwesterners must remain faithful in a time when the integrity of Christian ministries is increasingly questioned, preached President Adam W. Greenway during Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary’s convocation service in MacGorman Chapel, August 24. The service officially started a new academic year for Southwestern Seminary and Texas Baptist College, and it was the first fall convocation since 2019 because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Held in person, the ceremony did not include the traditional academic processional and the audience was encouraged to practice social distancing in light of increased COVID cases across the nation.
In welcoming new students to the seminary community, Greenway renewed the tradition begun by Robert E. Naylor, fifth president (1958-1978), in pronouncing them “Southwesterners” and reading from Naylor’s final charge to new students given in 1998, a year before his death.
In reference to the title, “Southwesterners,” Naylor said, “It is an honorable and a wonderful word about which you had nothing to do. … [I]t speaks to why you are here. God brought you. If that is not true, you need not be here. This is a special congregation.”
In his message to the seminary community, Greenway took as his text, 2 Corinthians 4:1-6, focusing on Paul’s exhortation to the church at Corinth to preach Christ and not themselves.
“I come with a particular burden,” Greenway said, “not just for my stewardship as president of Southwestern Seminary and Texas Baptist College, but a broader concern about the witness and work of Southern Baptists, of evangelical Christians, and of a watching world who is looking at us.”
As unbelievers view churches and ministries with suspicion and distrust, Greenway called on students to be men and women who pursue integrity in their theological education and ministries. He emphasized the importance of remaining true to Scripture and to resist the temptation to use and manipulate Scripture for one’s own benefit.
“Truth fears no light,” Greenway said, regarding the tendency to cover up sin. Scripture, he explained, is the only true source of truth and clarity.
Referring to an adage from an older generation of preachers, Greenway said he wondered if the “divine reckoning” currently taking place in the evangelical Christian community is because “sin that has been covered up for too long is finally getting fessed up.”
“One of the most significant experiences that should happen in theological education is the time where the Lord so puts us on the anvil and the altar of the Scriptures to where it strips away every accultured tradition that is built up of man and leaves us purified in terms of our desire to be wholly submitted to the entirety of the counsel of the Word of God rightly divided.”
Greenway, who also is a professor of evangelism and apologetics, noted he is often grieved by his conversations with unbelievers who share that it is their observations of the sinful actions of Christian leaders, churches, and ministries that keep them from believing in Christ. This lack of integrity, he explained, has “veiled” the Gospel, and become a hindrance for people to be able to see and hear the Word of God.
“I’ve said since the earliest days of my presidency that my prayer for our seminary is that we would be the kind of institution that the Lord uses to train God-called men and women who will leave here and go out and neither become a casualty yourself, nor create casualties in your wake,” Greenway said. “There is a world that is perishing, and it may be through you that either the veil will remain, or the veil will be removed that they might be able to see and to comprehend the richness of the Gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.”
As Southwestern Seminary and Texas Baptist College students pursue their theological education and start their ministries, Greenway urged them to resist a self-centered approach to ministry.
“Do not listen to the siren sounds of seduction out there that will inevitably tempt you to say, ‘I’m going to build this ministry around me and my gifts,’” Greenway said. “Don’t do it. God will not honor and bless that.”
Greenway pointed the audience to Southwestern Seminary’s founder and first president, B.H. Carroll, as a model for Christian ministry that did not exalt himself, citing several passages from a recently released book, The B. H. Carroll Pulpit, published by Seminary Hill Press, the institution’s publishing arm.
“You well know what I regard as the crowning mission of my life; what to me is more than life, and that is to see the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary established on such a basis as will insure perpetuity and place it among the greatest training schools for preachers in this world,” said Carroll in his 1908 address to the first graduating class of Southwestern Seminary.
Greenway concluded his message with an exhortation to students to not magnify themselves, but the offices and ministries to which God has called each of them.
“May Southwestern Seminary and Texas Baptist College over the course of this academic year be an institution from which that Gospel sounds forth with crystal clear clarity, not to make our name great, but for the fame of His name,” Greenway said. “May God find us faithful and make us fruitful in all things as He leads us on.”
In addition to his message and welcoming new students, Greenway recognized and introduced nine new members of the seminary and TBC faculty: Ashley L. Allen, assistant professor of women’s ministries; M. Todd Bates, associate dean and professor of philosophy (TBC); Ian B. Buntain, associate professor of missions; Mark R. McClellan, professor of missions; Blake O. McKinney, assistant professor of history and humanities (TBC); Jon K. Okinaga, assistant professor of biblical counseling; Josh M. Philpot, assistant professor of biblical studies (TBC); Travis H. Trawick, assistant professor of theology; and M. Justin Wainscott, assistant professor of Christian ministry (TBC).