A Reflection On The Nashville Statement -- By: Samuel W. “Dub” Oliver

Journal: Eikon
Volume: EIKON 04:2 (Fall 2022)
Article: A Reflection On The Nashville Statement
Author: Samuel W. “Dub” Oliver


A Reflection On The Nashville Statement

Samuel W. “Dub” Oliver

Samuel W. “Dub” Oliver (Ph.D.) is President of Union University.

At Union University, we seek to establish all aspects of life and learning on the Word of God. This is who we are, it is who we have been, it is who we are committed to be in the future. Generations of students and their families have trusted Union because of this commitment. And we are unwavering in this promise as we celebrate our Bicentennial, having been founded in 1823.

Institutions shape people. As an institution, Union has common convictions and core values that guide all of us as we grow and develop. However, even this basic idea that institutions are designed to shape individuals is contested today. As expressive individualism has become dominant in the culture, Carl Trueman has observed, “institutions cease to be places for the formation of individuals via their schooling in various practices and disciplines that allow them to take their place in society. Instead, they become platforms for performance, where individuals are allowed to be their authentic selves.”1

As a Christ-centered university, we see things differently. At Union we want to conform

ourselves to Christ. Our Statement of Faith proclaims, “the Bible itself, as the inspired and infallible Word of God that speaks with final authority concerning truth, morality, and the proper conduct of mankind, is the sole and final source of all that we believe.” So we reject the idea of institutions as platforms and instead see our aim as shaping and molding our students. Thus, believing that institutions are intended to shape people, I was grateful to participate in the convening group to discuss and consider the Nashville Statement. And, I was glad to be one of the initial signatories of the Statement. I should add that I was encouraged that three others from Union were part of that initial group to sign. Further, the Union University Board of Trustees unanimously adopted a resolution of agreement with the Statement and expressed appreciation for the biblical clarity of it.

A quick review of surveys that Lifeway Research and others put out each year demonstrates the need for clarity on essential doctrines of the Christian faith as well as the moral issues of the moment. Put another way, there is a lot of bad theology and confusion out there. Churches, and the institutions connected to them, need clear, unambiguous articulation about what Scripture teaches concerning the most important and contested questions of the day. For us, living in the first quarter of the twenty-first century, these ques...

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