| In God Alone Theologian Miroslav Volf Challenges Graduates to Lives
     of Trusting
 and Loving God
  On June 7, the ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ Class
              of 2003, and nearly 5,000 family members and well-wishers, converged
              on the Washington State Convention and Trade Center to celebrate
              a great achievement. They also gathered to hear a Commencement
              challenge by Miroslav Volf, author and professor of systematic
              theology at Yale Divinity School. 
 
 
 
 
 
              Considered one of the world's most insightful theologians, Volf
              spoke to the graduates on "Crisis of Faith  Crisis of Love." He
              said that at the heart of our many cultural problems lies a crisis
              of misplaced faith and misplaced love. "The core content of the Christian
              calling," explained Volf, "is to make God the object of our faith
              and love" and "to order our lives around trusting and loving God,
              rather than power and possessions," He urged the graduates to find
              "the motivation and strength to prefer losing power by doing what
              is right to possessing power by doing wrong." 
 
 
 
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                | "We were made to trust,
                    and we were made to love, but our trust and our love must
                    find the proper object. Our true hope comes from placing
                    our faith and love where they belong, in God alone."                  Miroslav
                    Volf, SPU Commencement, June 7, 2003 
 
 |  |  
 Volf was born in Croatia and came of age in communist Yugoslavia.
              After the 1991 fall of communism in Eastern Europe, he witnessed
              ethnic tensions between Croats and Serbs escalate into a bloody
              war. His entire seminary had to escape and live in exile, crammed
              together as many as seven to a room. "We could see on TV the destruction
              of our own homes in a war that was raging some 100 miles away,"
              he remembers. When asked whether he could embrace a cetnik, one
              of the notorious Serbian fighters who were destroying his country
              and his people, he responded, "No, I cannot  but as a follower
              of Christ I think I should be able to."
 
 Though he went on to earn a master's degree from Fuller Theological
              Seminary and two doctorates with highest honors from Germany's
              University of Turbigen, Volf continues a commitment to his homeland
              by lecturing for several months of every year at the Evangelical
              Theological Seminary in Osijek, Croatia. He writes extensively
              on church in the world and its relationship to culture, economics,
              democratization, totalitarianism, human enmity, justice and liberation
              theology.
 
 
 —PHOTOS BY DANIEL SHEEHAN
             
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