| Truth that Transforms SPU Faculty
Member
Contributes
to the New
Renovaré
Spiritual
Formation
Bible Associate Professor of Theology Kerry Dearborn’s name 
                    is in the Bible — literally. A contributor of introductions 
                    and study notes for John’s three epistles in the newly 
                    released Renovaré Spiritual Formation Bible, 
                    her writing appears with that of such notable theologians 
                    and authors as Richard J. Foster, Dallas Willard, Walter Brueggemann, 
                    and ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ alumnus Eugene Peterson ’54. “The average American owns nine Bibles,” says 
                    Dearborn. “Yet to what extent do we allow Scripture 
                    to transform our lives? If we take the Bible seriously, we 
                    will look and be different.” Rather than making only 
                    “surface changes” to our lives, she explains, 
                    “God wants to use Scripture to enter and radiate from 
                    the core of our being.” That message is at the heart of the Renovaré Bible, 
                    geared toward educated laypeople. “It’s not about 
                    merely adding one more Bible to our shelves,” says Dearborn. 
                    “It’s about bridging the gap between the devotional 
                    and the academic and giving people new tools for application.” 
                    After all, she adds, “Truth is something that transforms 
                    us rather than something we master. We should have a dynamic 
                    response to the truth of Jesus Christ as revealed in Scripture.” When asked to write for the Renovaré Bible, 
                    Dearborn says she felt honored and challenged: “I prayed 
                    a lot about it. I was sensing God’s call to do this 
                    — and I knew I wouldn’t be doing it alone.” In approaching her writing, Dearborn took seriously the project’s 
                    focus on God’s transforming
                    power through Scripture, a subject that is highlighted in 
                    1 John, 2 John, and
                    3 John. It’s also a topic that’s been on Dearborn’s 
                    mind. Every summer, she and her husband,
                    World Vision International Associate Director for Faith and 
                    Development Tim Dearborn, pick a guiding question — 
                    something
                    they discuss and ponder together for months. Last summer’s 
                    question was: “If we
                    as Christians are reborn in Christ, why do we not live more 
                    distinctive lives?” That question comes out of the very texts about which Dearborn 
                    was writing. In the introduction for 1 John, she writes: “Through 
                    Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection, we have become 
                    God’s own children, those who are ‘born of God.’ 
                    As God’s children, our lives will reflect the light 
                    and love of God’s character.”
                    She continues that thought in her writing about 2 John: “… 
                    truth is identified with the eternal Father and Son and is 
                    thus a powerful shaping force that takes hold of us through 
                    the Spirit.”  Dearborn says she sees such transformation in students at 
                    SPU, from the time they arrive on campus until their graduation. 
                    “It’s definitely happening,” she says, noting 
                    students’ affinity with the University’s vision 
                    to engage the culture
                    and change the world. “It’s a seed that’s 
                    planted in students’ lives, and I think it makes a difference. 
                    There is certainly a growing momentum
                    here on campus for transformation and radical discipleship.”  — BY Sarah Jio Back to the topBack to Home
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