Seventh dean of the School of Intercultural Studies celebrated
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10/02/12
Dean Scott Sunquist delivers installation address
A special service celebrating the official installation of
Scott W. Sunquist as Dean of the School of Intercultural Studies was held
Tuesday, October 2 at First United Methodist Church of Pasadena.
“We celebrate today a new source of creative, energetic
leadership in the person of Scott Sunquist,” Fuller President Richard J. Mouw
said in his welcome address to an audience of Fuller students, faculty, staff
and family members.
Sunquist’s four children read Scripture passages from
Deuteronomy, the Psalms and Revelation. The church was filled with music as the
audience was led in worship to sing a chorus that proclaimed “Holy, Holy, Holy
is the Lord God Almighty.”
“It is our purpose today on this august gathering to
celebrate your calling to lead the school in the next phase of its mission,”
Provost and former Dean of the School of Intercultural Studies C. Douglas McConnell said.
He charged Sunquist to build on the foundation laid by past leaders
of the school by being faithful to the calling he received from God; rekindle in
Fuller a passion for evangelism and church planting; lead the school in
renewing its commitment to critical missiological reflection through teaching,
publishing and actively participating in the global conversation; and to
embrace the mission to make all the diverse resources of Fuller seminary to all
students.
After a series of questions for Sunquist as candidate for
dean, Fuller Trustee Clifford Penner declared him “duly installed as
dean of the School of Intercultural Studies.” Later, prayers were offered by
the deans of the School of Psychology and Theology and associate dean of the School
of Intercultural Studies.
“In three years we’ll celebrate 50 years of an institution,
which I believe has been more influential in global mission than any other
single institution in the last 50 years,” Sunquist said in his installation
address titled “Christian Existence: Mission as Participation in Christ.”
In his message, which included an endorsement for students
to attend Intercultural Studies classes, Sunquist reaffirmed the school’s purpose to be more
effective in reaching those who have not yet heard the gospel and to plant
churches in un-churched areas, but with new ideas on what it means to reach
others.
“Innovation in mission today will require technical
approaches and statistical studies,” Sunquist said, “But the heart of
innovation will now be the transformation of human hearts. The world needs
little Jesuses more than it needs professional missionaries and technical
scholars…This is not a call for less academics but for more vigor and
consistency.”
Sunquist said that his wish for Intercultural Studies students is that
they will “become embedded in godless communities inhabited by the unloved” and
to not stop “praying and fasting and loving and serving until they see the
total conversion of these cultures or until Jesus returns.”