Friday, 1 November 2024

Prayer Letter: November 2024

As we enter November, we find ourselves at a meaningful time for reflection and preparation. With the term in full swing, our students are considering the themes they’ve engaged with so far, discerning how these ideas might inspire their final papers and projects. We ask you to join us in prayer that these moments of reflection would bring about creativity and insight as students look forward to sharing their work with others.


Monday, November 4 - Friday, November 8

This week marks the launch of regrowth, a series of monthly reflections by President Ron Kuipers, now available at medium.com/regrowth. In regrowth, Ron searches for healing and renewal in all things. One of the neat things about Medium is that users that have a free account (you can still read the articles without one) can publicly highlight their favourite passages and comment on them, allowing productive discussion and community-building. We hope that regrowth allows the ICS community to celebrate the insights that Ron has offered to us over the years and spark important conversations among ICS folk and beyondYou can sign up for free and follow regrowth here.

Additionally, on November 4, we will gather for our Fall Scripture of Faith and Scholarship symposium (zoom link). Entitled “What is ‘Christian’ about Christian Education? Formation and Learning,” Dr. Edith van der Boom, will present a vision of Christian education as concerning the whole person. According to van der Boom, Christian education necessarily emphasizes the importance of love, knowledge, and embodied learning spaces. These spaces nurture a deep connection with Christ, personal growth, and formation. Please join us in praying that Edith’s presentation offers educators of all stripes an opportunity to come together and discuss practices that enrich their shared learning journeys.

On November 5, from 6-9PM, Dr. Jim Olthuis will open The Radical Theopoetics of John D. Caputo to guests (RSVP). We hope this unique event will inspire reflection on the intersections between theology, philosophy, and poetry, and the work of John Caputo. Please pray for Jim and all who attend.


Monday, November 11 - Friday, November 15

This week we begin distributing the Advent Appeal, ICS’s annual financial appeal. We invite you to pray with us that our community of supporters will come together generously, enabling our students and faculty to continue the meaningful work of spreading the good news of God’s renewal. It’s a time of great need, and we are profoundly grateful for the faithful support that allows us to carry out our mission.

Also, we begin ramping up our promotional efforts for courses in our upcoming winter term. These include:

  • Material Spirituality: Rethinking Religion (with Dr. Neal DeRoo) - Explore how religion shapes our experience of the world, rather than being just one type of experience among others. Using insights from religious studies, phenomenology, secularism, and Continental philosophy, examine how religion is influenced by historical and material contexts while also shaping them. 
  • Rhetoric as Philosophy from Isocrates to the Age of Abelard and Heloise (with Dr. Bob Sweetman) - Explore the ancient and medieval study of rhetoric, focusing on its claim to be a philosophical discourse, via texts by Isocrates, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Augustine, Abelard, and Heloise. In the process, consider whether historical philosophies should be viewed as speculative sciences, arts of living, or something else entirely.
  • God in Flesh and Blood: Revolutions in Christology (with Dr. Nik Ansell) - Examine Christology from the perspective of biblical theology, focusing on how the New Testament relates to themes from the Hebrew Bible. While traditional theologians often explore systematic questions about Christ’s nature and atonement, this course will emphasize how Old Testament concepts like exile and return inform our understanding of Jesus’ birth and crucifixion. Explore questions such as: How do early followers’ worship of Jesus before the Resurrection shape our view of his humanity and divinity? What implications arise from Mary’s encounter with Gabriel? How does Elizabeth’s greeting to Mary connect to figures like Jael and Judith? Guiding this exploration of contemporary Christological issues will be works by James Dunn, Jane Schaberg, and NT Wright.

On November 13, from 6-8PM, Dr. Nik Ansell welcomes guests into Biblical Foundations (RSVP). Please pray that students and visitors alike will find new perspectives and encouragement as they explore how, after so many years, Scripture still speaks anew.

Finally, we invite you to join us in prayer for those attending the Board meeting on November 15. May God grant them wisdom and discernment as they make important decisions for ICS.

Monday, November 18 - Friday, November 22

This week, we relaunch Ground Motive, a dialogue forum that features opinions from the larger ICS community. It concerns the crossroads of philosophy, religion, and social ethics (medium.com/ground-motive). We pray that Ground Motive will foster vital conversations on topics that matter deeply to our community and beyond.

On November 21 at 7PM, prospective students are invited to join us for an information night on Art in Orvieto, our summer program with Dr. Rebekah Smick in Orvieto, Italy (RSVP). This three-week residency invites participants to explore the intersection of art, religion, and theology. Please pray that prospective students find the inspiration and direction they need as they consider this transformative opportunity.

On November 19, from 2-5PM, Dr. Neal DeRoo welcomes guests into Religion, Life, and Society (RSVP). Consider attending to get a taste of our Newest Senior Member’s take on the Reformational tradition. Please keep him and those attending in your prayers as they dive into questions of reformational philosophy in the context of today’s social landscape.


Monday, November 25 - Friday, November 29

As we enter the last week of November, we invite you to pray with us for our American friends celebrating Thanksgiving. Many of our new cohort of students come from the United States, and we pray that this holiday offers a time of fellowship, gratitude, and respite as they head into the final weeks of their semester.

We also look forward to sharing the fall issue of Perspective, which will be available in a new digital format at medium.com/perspective-ics. This issue, titled Building Up in Love, introduces our new students and invites readers to reflect and discuss what it means to “Build Up in Love” in today’s world. We pray that this message spreads widely, encouraging all who read it.

On November 28, from 2-5PM, Dr. Ron Kuipers welcomes guests into his class Philosophy at the Limit: Richard Kearney (RSVP). This session will explore the boundaries of philosophical inquiry, asking us to consider how our understanding shifts at the edge of intellectual knowledge. Please consider attending and pray for Ron, along with all those participating.

As we close the month and look towards the start of Advent on December 1, we pray for new life and direction in our world and hearts. May this season of anticipation bring renewed hope, guiding each of us to deeper purpose and commitment.


Thank you for your prayers and ongoing support. It is through your faithfulness that we’re to continue our work with strength and hope.

Take the Help

For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who in every respect has been tested as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore approach the throne of grace with boldness, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need. 

—Hebrews 4:15-16

What kind of season are we living in, friends? In a time when our society is fracturing along growing fissures of frozen identity, in a time when anxious people of all political stripes are retreating into the presumed safety of their echo chambers, in a time when otherwise democratic nations are openly flirting with fascism, well, such time is, to say the least, eukairon—a time of need.

What we need more than ever in these times, I submit, are imaginations inspired by our Redeemer’s shalom way, revealed to us in scripture. Cultivating such an imagination will encourage us to build fellowship and solidarity with those people we are all too often tempted to write off, enabling us to peer into any and every human face and see there disclosed our Maker’s very image.

For almost six decades now, ICS has striven to help people from all walks of life answer God’s invitation to enter the promised kingdom of shalom, where everyone and everything is enfolded in the loving embrace of God’s justice and peace, divine arms that reach out to us in this very moment to—as the inspiring hymn goes— “gather us in”:

Not in the dark of buildings confining
Not in some heaven light years away
But here in this place the new light is shining
Now is the kingdom, now is the day

What an alter call this is! Jesus our Redeemer has been where we are, knows how we suffer, and has withstood the test. He is eager for us to bathe ourselves in his Father’s grace, just as he did. “Approach the throne with boldness!,” proclaims the writer of Hebrews, or in The Message’s translation: “So let’s walk right up to him and get what he is so ready to give. Take the mercy, accept the help.”

Thank you, friends, for the role you play in helping ICS impart this hopeful and empowering message to everyone we serve. I believe God created ICS precisely for such a time as this—a time of need, yes, but also a time to be rescued and retrieved, liberated to serve God’s healing and renewing work.

Shalom!

Ron Kuipers

(you can find this article, as well as others, at medium.com/regrowth)