| The Day That Changed Everything 
 As a Premier Christian
 
University, SPU Brings
 
a Special Expertise
 
to the Project of
 
Engaging the Culture
   On the morning of April 27, President Eaton spoke to 900 business and community leaders at SPU’s Greater Seattle Community Breakfast. His speech was titled “Leading With Vision in a World of Colliding Maps.” Eaton spoke of the need for clear vision in a divided world and of the role Seattle Pacific can play in “lifting up what is true and good.”
  THROUGHOUT THIS YEAR, I have been pondering the question of how we might
 
  increase the influence and impact of ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ. The reason?
 
  So that we might better fulfill our clear and distinctive mission. Remember
 
  that we want to engage the culture and change the world.
 I have been talking
 
  with people all across our campus. I have been listening, reflecting and writing.
 
  We are drawing up a new blueprint for the next chapter of this great university,
 
  and I believe we are on the edge of something very bold. But as we plan for
 
  this bold future, we have to ask some very concrete questions. How does
 
  a university make a difference in its community and in the world? What kind
 
  of influence are we talking about? And most importantly for us, how does a
 
  Christian university make a difference? Really, ultimately, I am asking how
 
  any Christian makes a difference in this troubled world in which we live and
 
  work and find our calling.
 
 On Easter morning, I padded out my front door very
 
  early to pick up my newspapers. The early sun was breaking out over our lawn,
 
  and the flowers and trees were blooming wildly here in Seattle. And I found
 
 
  myself blossoming too, looking forward to this holy day, a day when two billion
 
  Christians all over the globe would shout and sing throughout this very morning
 
  that our Lord is risen, all of us caught up in the greatest of all mysteries,
 
  that startling moment in history when everything changed.
 
 Back inside the house,
 
  I scanned first through The New York Times and realized there was not one word
 
  about Easter. This is the paper that claims to provide for its readers “all the news that’s fit to print.”
 
  I guess Easter is no news to The Times, and if it is no news, it most 
 
            certainly is not perceived to be the Good News for its readers.
 
 No story on Easter in The Seattle Times either. It did run a front-page 
 
            article on that day telling us that a new poll in Washington state reveals the 
 
            startling fact that people pray. But they don’t
 
  go to church, The Seattle Times quickly wanted to remind us. This is 
 
            that endless mantra we have to endure in our region — that people don’t go to 
 
            church. But they do pray, even if it is to some vague notion of a deity. Well, 
 
            I guess all of this was supposed to be a kind of glancing reference
 
to Easter from our regional paper.
 
 Fifty million Americans have gone to see “The Passion of The Christ”; predictions 
 
are that 100 million will eventually see this movie. There are 2 billion Christians 
 
in the world. For 2 billion people, the resurrection of Jesus Christ changed everything, 
 
all of history and each one of us as individuals. And yet there I was on Easter 
 
morning pushed to the margins by some mandate of our culture that wants to airbrush
 
Easter out of existence.
 
 With breathtaking speed, it seems the opinion-shapers of our world have declared 
 
the Christian experience irrelevant to the news of the day. We seem to have this 
 
strong desire to enjoy the benefits of good Judeo-Christian values — human 
 
dignity, freedom, liberty, rule of law, even separation of church and state, 
 
compassion for those who suffer, a strong work ethic, prosperity and opportunity 
 
for all, equal access to education — while at the same time we want to cut 
 
out the roots of faith from which these values come. It is people of faith who 
 
have articulated over centuries a tradition, a culture, that tips our society 
 
toward decency. Such a culture emerged because these people were nourished and 
 
renewed and transformed in mind and heart by Easter.
 
 I think we must recognize the great danger when we try to cut
 
culture free from the deep religious roots that create and sustain our values. 
 
In a recent issue of First
 
Things, George Weigel makes the
 
case that Poland survived, or better yet prevailed, against the crushing occupation 
 
of both Nazism and Communism precisely because of its enduring “conviction that 
 
the deepest currents of history are spiritual and cultural, rather than political 
 
and economic. 
 History is driven, over the long haul, by culture — by 
 
what men and women honor, cherish and worship; by what societies deem to be true 
 
and good, and by the expressions they give to those convictions in language, 
 
literature and the arts; by what individuals and societies are willing to stake 
 
their lives on. 
”
 
 Ah, here is the key for a premier Christian
 
university. This is our distinctive territory. This is precisely the strong and 
 
compelling reason that we seek to influence and impact the culture. If we are 
 
going to make a difference, we must continue to mine “the deepest currents of 
 
history,” down there where we might grasp better all the time “what men and women 
 
honor, cherish and worship,” understanding and articulating “what societies deem 
 
to be true and good.”
 
 And the source for what is true and good? At the root of it all is Easter. If we 
 
refuse to airbrush Easter out of the picture, then we bring to the culture-making 
 
project a special expertise, a special framework. We bring deep, nourishing and 
 
sustaining roots. We bring confidence and hope. This is why we seek influence and impact. We have something
 
to say. We have some good news indeed. Good News that makes a difference.
 
 
 
 
— BY PHILIP W. EATON, PRESIDENT
 
 
 
 
 
             — PHOTO BY MIKE SIEGEL
 
 Back to the top
 Back to Home
 
  
 |  |  
  
  
 “This Is Our Campaign” Creativity and commitment are the hallmarks of faculty contributions, including finding precision science equipment and seeking grants. [Campaign]
   Acting on AIDSA student-led campaign encouraging a Christian response to a world pandemic had the campus seeing orange.
 
  [Campus]
 When Disaster StrikesAs senior development officer for Northwest Medical Teams, alumnus Dick Frederick ’63 helps deliver care to those who need it most. [Alumni]
 Fact or Fiction?A new Response department reviews the best-seller The Da
 
 Vinci Code. Why is this page-turner disturbing so many Christians? [Books & Film]
               Looking AheadFalcon women keep their sights on a national championship after
 
              a perfect season ends too soon at the Elite Eight. [Athletics]
 
 My Response
 Nicaraguan native Maria Antonia Caldera Hunter ’89 tells of an SPU study tour to her homeland that showed her the presence of Christ in unlikely places.
 
 
 
  |  |