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Lottie Moon an example of kingdom-focused, missional living, Dockery says

Union President David S. Dockery speaks during the Aug. 24 convocation. (Photo by Morris Abernathy)
Union President David S. Dockery speaks during the Aug. 24 convocation. (Photo by Morris Abernathy)

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JACKSON, Tenn.Aug. 24, 2012 — God is at work “in amazing ways” among people in the global South thanks in large part to the efforts of people like Lottie Moon, 51 President David S. Dockery said Aug. 24.

“Over the last decades, we have seen the Spirit of God move with new emphasis and new opportunities, taking the gospel, extending and expanding the kingdom,” Dockery said. “We dare not miss this moment as an institution. We dare not miss this moment as Christ followers.”

Dockery addressed the university during its annual fall convocation, using Moon’s life as an example for how Christians should approach their responsibilities to live in a missional and kingdom-focused way. Moon died in 1912, so Dockery said the centennial of her death was a fitting occasion to look back upon her life and work as a missionary in China.

Moon was characterized by a gospel motivation, a scriptural foundation and a kingdom focus that fueled her missional calling, Dockery said. He noted that those foundational beliefs of Moon’s have largely been abandoned in the West but are being increasingly embraced by Christians in the East and the South.

A tiny woman physically at only 4-feet-3-inches tall, Dockery said Moon’s life was a foretaste of what is now happening in China. In 1910, two years before Moon’s death, 3,500 missionaries were living in China, which had about 300,000 believers. In 2010, China was a nation of 65 million Christians and sent out 20,000 missionaries itself.

By 2050, the nation is projected to have 183 million followers of Christ. Other nations – such as Brazil, Nigeria, Uganda, Ethiopia, India, South Korea and the Philippines – are seeing similar explosions in the influence of Christianity.

Moon was a serious student who was intellectually curious, Dockery said, while at the same time she was zealous for Christ and devoted to serving others. He told students that some institutions of higher education will encourage devotion to Christ but will downplay academic inquiry, while most schools will encourage students to pursue academics and to shun the gospel.

“At 51, we do not see that you have to put away one or the other, but bring these two things together in the way Lottie Moon did in her life,” Dockery said.

The gospel – a belief in the divinity of Christ, his death on the cross and his resurrection from the dead – “must be the center of who we are,” Dockery said.

“Are we Christ-centered in a thorough-going way in all that we do in this place?” Dockery asked. “Does the gospel have impact upon our classroom, upon our studies, upon our relationships?”

Moon’s scriptural foundation meant that she held to the Bible’s infallibility and inspiration by God, Dockery said, as well as its truthfulness and authority.

“We can neither reclaim nor advance the Christian intellectual tradition without a firm, foundational commitment to Scripture as God’s word, inspired, infallible, truthful and trustworthy,” Dockery said.

Moon also believed in the promise of God’s kingdom, Dockery said, that while the kingdom of God has come in one sense, in another sense Christians are still waiting for its future consummation.

Dockery said that while the church is central to the work of God’s kingdom, it is not the extent of that kingdom, and Union students, faculty and staff must understand their labors as kingdom-focused work.

As her views about the gospel, Scripture and the kingdom of God fed Moon’s passion to devote her life to the cause of Christ, Dockery encouraged Union students to be similarly motivated. Living a missional life means practicing hospitality, demonstrating the gospel in all areas of life and serving others, whether in the same culture or cross-culturally, he said.

In a higher education institution like Union, Dockery said a missional mindset means not just prayer to begin class or a layer of piety of top of a secular education. It’s not just a community of caring people, or higher education in a Christian context, but education that is focused on God’s kingdom.

“We need a vision for advancing the gospel and extending the kingdom in purposeful and intentional ways thought Christ-centered higher education,” he said.

That vision must be shaped by a scriptural foundation, conviction, kindness, cooperation and collaboration in all fields of study, Dockery said. Such a vision will result in students learning, listening, serving and worshipping in all contexts, whether locally or globally.

Related Photos

8/24/12 - David S. Dockery is joined in his office by Greg A. Thornbury, vice president for spiritual life, Carla Sanderson, executive vice president for strategic initiatives and provost, Gene Fant, executive vice president for academic administration,  Anika Strand, senior class president,  Jimmy H. Davis, Hammons chair of pre-medical studies, Kylie McDonald, SGA president., Hunter Baker, dean of instruction, and Todd Brady, vice president for church relations.
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery is joined in his office by Greg A. Thornbury, vice president for spiritual life, Carla Sanderson, executive vice president for strategic initiatives and provost, Gene Fant, executive vice president for academic administration, Anika Strand, senior class president, Jimmy H. Davis, Hammons chair of pre-medical studies, Kylie McDonald, SGA president., Hunter Baker, dean of instruction, and Todd Brady, vice president for church relations. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - Gavin Richardson, faculty member of the year and bearer of the mace,  watches as faculty members proceed in to the George M. Savage Memorial Chapel for Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - Gavin Richardson, faculty member of the year and bearer of the mace, watches as faculty members proceed in to the George M. Savage Memorial Chapel for Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, and Todd Brady, vice president of spiritual life, watch as the faculty of 51 enter the George M. Savage Memorial Chapel for Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, and Todd Brady, vice president of spiritual life, watch as the faculty of 51 enter the George M. Savage Memorial Chapel for Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - Michael Mann, assistant professor of music, plays the tympani during the Fall Convocation service.
8/24/12 - Michael Mann, assistant professor of music, plays the tympani during the Fall Convocation service. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - Chris Mathews, associate professor of music and department chair, leads music during Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - Chris Mathews, associate professor of music and department chair, leads music during Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - Randy Johnston, professor of chemistry and department chair, and Anika Strand, senior class president, sing during Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - Randy Johnston, professor of chemistry and department chair, and Anika Strand, senior class president, sing during Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, addresses the university during Fall Convocation using Lottie Moon’s life as an example for how Christians should approach their responsibilities to live in a missional and kingdom-focused way. Moon died in 1912, so Dockery said the centennial of her death was a fitting occasion to look back upon her life and work as a missionary in China.
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, addresses the university during Fall Convocation using Lottie Moon’s life as an example for how Christians should approach their responsibilities to live in a missional and kingdom-focused way. Moon died in 1912, so Dockery said the centennial of her death was a fitting occasion to look back upon her life and work as a missionary in China. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, is joined by Jimmy H. Davis newly installed as the Hammons Chair of Pre-Medical Studies.
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, is joined by Jimmy H. Davis newly installed as the Hammons Chair of Pre-Medical Studies. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, installs Hunter Baker as the Dean of Instruction during Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, installs Hunter Baker as the Dean of Instruction during Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, installs Todd Brady as the  new vice president for church relations during Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - David S. Dockery, president of the university, installs Todd Brady as the new vice president for church relations during Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - Greg Thornbury,vice president for spiritual life, leads in the reading of The Apostles Creed following Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - Greg Thornbury,vice president for spiritual life, leads in the reading of The Apostles Creed following Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large
8/24/12 - Chris Mathews, associate professor of music and department chair, leads the University Singers during Fall Convocation.
8/24/12 - Chris Mathews, associate professor of music and department chair, leads the University Singers during Fall Convocation. - Morris Abernathy | Large | X-Large

Media contact: Tim Ellsworth, news@uu.edu, 731-661-5215