HCU: One More Year

HCU: One More Year

This year begins my last year as a full-time professor at Houston Christian University! When I came on board in 2012, the goal was to create a flourishing apologetics degree alongside some great colleagues. Over the years, the program exceeded our expectations! Our HCU apologetics students and graduates are engaging in the public sphere, going onto PhD’s, ministering in the local church, and so much more.

HCU: One More Year

Our original vision included an emphasis on how to combine the arts and apologetics. We perceived that apologetics–the task of making a case for the existence of God–had been well explored in rhetoric, such as debates, as well as through  lecture-style argument presentation. However, the arts, which have much persuasive power, needed more attention. So, we first focused on the development of a cultural apologetics program. As this part of our endeavor began to flourish with graduate students from all types of backgrounds and interests, we turned some attention towards creating a philosophical track. We now have the two tracks going strong at the university: cultural and philosophical. Often times, students take electives from the track of which they are not in…they just want that philosophical boost on the problem of evil…or, perhaps, they couldn’t resist trying out Dr. Tallon’s apologetics and film course. (I still want to take it myself!)

Twelve Years a Professor

Now, here I am, twelve years into my professorship. Funny, I never intended to be an apologetics professor. Isn’t that how things go sometimes? And while it wasn’t my intention, I have desired to be an educator since my early high school years. I began in public school music education and I ended up in university apologetics, an important field that brings together theology and philosophy in a 1 Peter 3:15 way.  I am sometimes amazed that God brought together my longtime interest in education with the study of my beliefs…and that I was entrusted to teach others to do the same.

Oh, I would be remiss not to mention how much the students have enriched my life! I have met and engaged some amazing people, doing all sorts of ministry work: from a Screamo band lead singer to a local church pastor; from a tabletop role-playing game developer to an international public speaker. These students have encouraged me with their visions for ministry, their eagerness to learn, and genuine commitment to God. I had the privilege of helping most of our students form an apologetics presentation during one of my courses.  Over many years of working on and grading these projects, I have watched them develop into podcasts, blogs, books, journals, speaking platforms, professorships, and even PhD confirmations. Plus, my students have reciprocated and helped me along the way. They’ve read chapters of books I wrote, helped research topics I’ve debated, and engaged me in looking at the toughest questions of life through different angles.

Further, there are my colleagues…whom I lovingly call the “merry band of misfit apologists.” Don’t hold this title against any of them…this one’s all on me. (I sometimes leave out the “misfits,” just in case.) I cannot imagine a life without having known these folks. They have been an encouragement to me, embracing me for where I am skilled, and yet not looking down on me for things I have yet to learn. Ever resourceful and always surprising, I will miss my merry band of colleagues.

So, in summing up…to say this has been a rewarding experience doesn’t quite capture the depth of that reward.

Looking Ahead

As I enter this final full-time year, I can fondly look back at the enriching experience at HCU while also looking forward to the opportunities that lie ahead. At this point, I don’t know what God has in store for me next, but He has taught me at least one thing over the years: whatever it is, it’s never boring!

“Further up and further in!”

Professor Mary Jo Sharp

Defend The Faith

Defend The Faith

You Are Invited!  Join fellow HBU Professor Nancy Pearcey and me along with Gary Habermas, Doug Groothuis, Sean McDowell, Greg Koukl, Bob Stewart, James Walker, David Calhoun, Rob Bowman, Rhyne Putman, Steve Lemke, Steve Cowan, Mike Edens, Mark Rathel, Jeffrey Riley, Tawa Anderson, Ray Stewart, Page Brooks, Ben Arbour, and Mike Miller.

Defend the Faith
A five-day, five-night conference in Christian Apologetics training
that includes outstanding worship. This event, held on the campus of New
Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary on January 5-10, 2014, will
feature many top speakers in the area
of Christian Apologetics.

Conference Costs

Starting at $120 /

  • Registration: $120 – Includes Complete Conference MP3 Access
  • Full Conference + Lodging and Meals: $310 – Includes 5 nights lodging, 4 full days meals, Full program w/ Complete MP3 Access

MJ

HBU Announces Newest Faculty Member: Lee Strobel

HBU Announces Newest Faculty Member: Lee Strobel

Today, Houston Baptist University officially announced Lee Strobel as the newest member of our faculty in the School of Christian Thought! I am very excited. It is hard for me to wrap my head around the the thought that I will be working with Lee Strobel. Only about a decade ago, I began to read Lee’s book, The Case for Christ, as part of my own investigation into the evidence for the existence of God. His work was instrumental in finding scholars who could answer my questions. I began listening to lectures and debates by the people Lee had interviewed in his books. Plus, I began to read the works by these authors: Reasonable Faith by William Lane Craig, Love God With All Your Mind by J.P. Moreland, True for You, But Not for Me by Paul Copan and many   more. It will be such an honor to serve alongside a man whose work has already been so influential in my life!  

HBU faculty Licona, Sharp, and Strobel with Mark Mittelberg at EPS 2012

I hope you will considering joining us at HBU for your degree. We have a lot of “awesome” going on here! Check out our master’s degree in apologetics. Through our program you have the opportunity to study with top notch scholars! Michael Ward is heading up the C.S. Lewis Center,
through which HBU apologetics students have the opportunity to study in
Oxford. Plus, Nancy Pearcey, the founder and director of the Francis Schaeffer Center for Worldview and Culture and The Pearcey Report, is additionally offering two-track apologetics courses with a graduate track alongside the undergraduate track! It’s very exciting here in Houston! 

For more information about our apologetics degree: http://www.hbu.edu/maa
You can keep up with us on our Facebook page, HBU Apologetics.

MJ

HBU Faculty: What is Apologetics?

HBU Faculty: What is Apologetics?

What makes our apologetics program at HBU great? Check out our faculty discussing apologetics and the team assembled at HBU.

Introducing our newest faculty member, author of “Planet Narnia” and C.S. Lewis expert, Dr. Michael Ward!

Also, Dr. Holly Ordway is the chair of our apologetics department. Listen to her explain cultural apologetics.

I hope you can join us at Houston Baptist University!

For more information about our program, courses, and apologetics degree, visit: http://www.hbu.edu/maa

*These last two videos were filmed with a FlipVideo device. Thank you in advance for your understanding on sound and video quality. 🙂

Addressing the Emotional Problem of Evil

Addressing the Emotional Problem of Evil

C.S. Lewis: “No one ever told me that grief felt so much like fear.  I am not afraid but the sensation is like being afraid.”

William Lane Craig: “Undoubtedly the greatest intellectual obstacle to belief in God – for both the Christian and non-Christian – is the so-called problem of evil.”

Dallas Willard: “Feelings live on the front row of our lives like unruly children clamoring for attention.”

Augustine: “There can be no evil where there is no good.”

Kenneth Samples: “The atheist, in effect, depends on the objective moral system of Christianity in order to raise moral objections against the Christian God.”

In the most recent Christian Research Journal, my article: “Addressing the Emotional Problem of Evil: Why Christians Hope” looks at how we can respond when this topic arises.  I encourage you to pick up a copy or become a subscriber of the journal at www.equip.org

MJ 

*All quotes referenced in this blog are properly attributed in the journal article

The 25 Best Colleges For Homeschool Graduates

The 25 Best Colleges For Homeschool Graduates

I found this article on www.thebestschools.org and am excited to share it with you!  HBU is #7 and climbing quickly!

“The homeschooling movement is growing in America, and it’s no
surprise. The home is a natural, rich soil for student learning. Even
with public and private school students, parents remain a powerful force
in the education of their children.

For most of history, children received vocational or advanced
training in small, community settings such as apprenticeships or with
home tutors. While regular teachers possess college and university
degrees in specialized fields, evidence confirms that homeschool
curricula, with the freedom of the homeschool environment along with the
security and care of parent-teachers, consistently outperform
classrooms taught by degreed professionals.
In short, the passion and dedication of parents seems to
significantly outscore specialization. And of course, the disarray of
public schools and the added expense of private schools only add to
homeschooling’s appeal.
But what about after high school? The working world still presses job
candidates for college degrees. College remains crucial for many
Americans. But for homeschoolers, some colleges fit far better than
others. Below is TheBestSchools.org’s ranking of the 25 top
homeschool-friendly colleges.
Like anyone else in the college-hunt, homeschoolers want academic
excellence and rigor at a fair price—but in a healthy setting without
the decadence prevalent in so much of American higher education. In
their search for the right college, homeschoolers have unique needs.
It is not enough to find a college that actively recruits
homeschoolers; those schools might still fail to address the needs and
interests of their homeschool applicants. All of the following schools
have a history of accepting homeschool applicants. But we’ve gone
farther in identifying three key features that commend these schools as
“homeschool-friendly”:” Click to read the entire article and view the rankings.

Houston Baptist University is making a huge impact!

MJ