Old wisdom shapes new reality
Dr. George Braswell, renowned Middle East scholar and Senior Professor of World
Religions at the Campbell University Divinity School, gave graduates the benefit
of 50 years of religious study and cultural understanding as he delivered
Campbell’s Commencement Sermon on Sunday, May 14.
Advising the graduates to be “wise,” “gentle,”
“curious,” “civil” and “charitable,” Braswell also asked that they adapt these
age-old virtues to the world of religious pluralism and rapid change in which
they live today.
“In my generation, we liked Chevy Bellaire’s and mama’s
fried chicken. China was just emerging as a communist power to be and India was
just beginning to become a democracy. John Kennedy inspired us, and the Peace
Corps sent young men and women around the globe to help people in developing
countries have a better way of life,” he said.
Today, religious pluralism doesn’t just mean
Protestant, Catholic or Jew, Braswell noted, but a whole cafeteria of faiths
many impinging on our own neighborhoods . One of the country’s largest mosques
is located in North Carolina and Hindus have purchased thousands of acres of
land near Boone and established their own community, he pointed out.
“As you think about your religious neighbors, have
curiosity, civility, charity, wisdom, and understanding,” he said.
Curiosity led Braswell to become the first missionary
appointed to Iran through the Southern Baptist Convention’s Foreign Mission
Board and to serve as a professor of English and Comparative Religions at the
University of Teheran and associate director of the Armaghan Institute.
During his tenure in Iran, the aforementioned virtues
served Braswell well when he was invited to an Ayatollah’s home who had just
lost a child and a Muslim prayer meeting attend only by women.
“To debate their belief in Mohammed, jihad and the
denial that Jesus Christ is Savior and Lord would have kept the Ayatollah from
asking me to pray for his family,” Braswell said. “Nor would I have been able to
gain a unique perception of what was on the hearts of the Muslim women. Let me
urge you to go under-girded by the Word of God,” he added, “to be wise and
gentle with curiosity and understanding.”
Braswell is a 1958 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Wake
Forest University who earned a Bachelor of Divinity with majors in Church
History and Missions from Yale University Divinity School. Returning to North
Carolina, Braswell earned the Doctor of Ministry from Southeastern Baptist
Theological Seminary, then Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in
Cultural Anthropology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He
joined the faculty of the Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in 1974. In
1998, he was named Distinguished Professor of Missions and World Religions, a
prestigious chair he held until his retirement in 2004. Braswell joined the
Campbell University Divinity School faculty as Senior Professor of World
Religions in 2005.
Photo Copy: Dr. George Braswell, Senior Professor of World Religions at the
Campbell Divinity School, delivers Campbell’s Commencement Sermon on Sunday, May
14. (Photo by Scott Capell).
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