Fuller Theological Seminary, a leading center for the formation of
evangelical Protestant pastors, will continue to promote positive
relations with the Catholic Church, according to its new president.
“Our reach is global...and at Fuller we want to be a catalyst for
healthy global ecumenism,” Dr. Mark Labberton told CNA March 15.
Labberton is currently a professor of preaching at the Pasadena,
Calif.-based seminary, and will take over as president of the school on
July 1. He succeeds Richard Mouw, who has served as Fuller's president
since 1993.
He said that though there are tensions in Latin America between
Pentecostalism and the Roman Catholic Church, he wants to promote good
relations between the groups.
“One of Rich Mouw's emphases has been evangelical-Catholic dialogue and
conversation, and I'm certainly hopeful that can continue.”
Labberton expressed a “great respect for the Roman Catholic Church” and
said he is moved by its “expression, with all its tensions and
challenges,” and by its “overarching unity.”
“The global response and attention given to the Pope's selection this
week is itself obviously a palpable expression of that, and the fact is
that there's no movement within Protestantism that could galvanize the
global church in such a singular way.”
He is particularly encouraged that Pope Francis brings is bringing
social justice concerns to the forefront of his papacy, while staying
always connected to Christ.
Labberton said that putting aside Protestants' “acute anxieties around
issues of power,” he has “great regard” for the Catholic Church, and
finds it “very inspiring in many different forms.”
He is eager to “grow in and engage” his experiences of Catholic “leadership and worship,” he said.
He finds the prospect of becoming Fuller's president a daunting one,
due both to the changes facing Christianity and education, and the
legacy he has to fulfill.
The Protestant church in America, he said, is facing one of its
“largest sea changes,” with redefinition of denominational structures
and a “deep restructuring of what church means.”
Protestantism is facing “many more experiments” in non-denominational
visions, he said, and so Fuller's graduates are facing a field that is
“in some cases fractured, or being re-defined.”
“The thing that concerns me the most, is how does a seminary like
Fuller contribute in the most meaningful way to the education of the
Protestant church in all its various manifestations, and its impact in
the wider world,” Labberton said.
Because of this, he said, “one of the things I found very moving about
the appointment and call of the new Pope this week has been my sense of
deep gratitude for his social conscience; his sense of the Church and
the reality of the Gospel and needing to live it in real terms,
especially in the lives of the poor and the marginalized.”
Labberton shares this social conscience with Pope Francis, and said
“it's one of the primary concerns I'd also want to bring to the
seminary.”
“I think evangelical churches have often been guilty of over-talk and
under-live, especially when it comes to allowing our faith to lead us
and draw us to engagement with the people who are most unseen and
forgotten, so I'd hope that's one of the main themes that would emerge
from what I hope to do as president.”
He said that Protestants can at times focus on “a caricature of
Reformation days” and a theology of being saved “by grace through faith
in Christ alone.” He said this leads to “almost a divorce between grace
and action,” which he finds troubling.
“That's a false dichotomy. Protestantism at its best will see that as a
false dichotomy. But I think in popular terms it is an evident
dichotomy, and I think it's a false theological division that I would
want to do everything possible to address.”
Under his leadership, he would like to see Fuller “call the Protestant
church into the fact that these are two inextricably bound qualities of
our experience of God.”
The new president hopes that churches affected by Fuller Seminary
“would vividly demonstrate – not just talk about and affirm – but
actually come to more deeply and truly incarnate” the intrinsic link
between God's grace and human action.