The pros:
CONS:
- Lack of applicability. The ones where your project is "Teaching youth through small cell groups off campus of XYZ Baptist Church" is nice and all, but how is it reproducible? Some of the D.Min projects I've seen are almost laughable.
- Lack of theological focus. You can get so practical that the theology behind the practice of ministry is lost.
This is spot on!
Years ago I was at Southwestern Seminary and decided to look up the doctoral dissertations of people who had been influential in my life.
One of those persons was a former pastor who is now a mega-church pastor and a very well-known figure in the SBC. When I was employed at my home church on the building maintenance staff, he instructed us to call him “Dr. XXXXX” because he had worked very hard for his degree and it was appropriate that as my employer, I address him formally in church settings instead of casually.
I accepted that without any issues because I thought it was impressive that he had earned his Ph.D before he had turned 30.
When I went looking for his dissertation about five years later, I discovered he didn’t actually have a Ph.D, it was a D.Min. To be fair, I don’t think he every represented it as a Ph.D, but people around the church seemed to have that impression. I’m not diminishing D.Min degrees at all, but it is a different kind of degree.
Anyway, I found his doctoral project and spent about an hour reading it. His project was on motivating a church to increase their giving to various church ministries through a coordinated series of sermons and commitments. The project consisted of outlines for eight to ten sermons (don’t recall exactly how many 20 years later) as well as the psychological rationale for the various commitments he would ask the congregation to make through the course of the sermon series… a steady and incremental increase in commitment each time. (The pastor has a B.A. in Psychology.) The success of the effort was measured by the size of the offerings each week.
The places where actual theology was integrated into the project/sermons was potentially troubling. Quite a bit of sermon time was given to the idea that God blesses those who are faithful in giving to their local church (the local “storehouse”). While I certainly affirm that biblical truth, I believe he gave far too much emphasis to God providing material wealth in return for faithful giving. I do believe that God
does bless many people who are faithful givers with material wealth, I do not believe it always happens or that material wealth is the primary blessing of being a faithful giver. So as a result, his sermons read more like some of the health and wealth stuff you hear from television evangelists than balanced biblical exposition. The most troubling theological assertion he made though was toward the end of the sermon series where he was “drawing the net” for the maximum commitment.
He stated that just as parents tend to love their obedient children more than their disobedient children, God loves His faithful and obedient children (apparently in terms of giving) more than those who are disobedient.
So essentially, if you want to
really be loved of God, you better crack open your wallet and give to your local church.
While I think we please God with our obedience, I would hesitate to say that God loves His obedient children more than the disobedient ones. The Bible is full of the life stories of often disobedient people whom God loved (and blessed) passionately. Certainly our life goal should be to please God, but we shouldn’t ever need to doubt His level of love and commitment to us. I think that sets a very unhealthy standard.
After reading his D.Min project, I saw his ministry in a completely different light. In my opinion, he’s a theological lightweight who knows how to motivate and influence people. Unfortunately, his lack of theological depth and perspective makes him less likely to be able to lead his congregation into effective and transformative discipleship with Christ. In my opinion, he is very gifted in many ways, but he has theological feet of clay and his D.Min degree allowed him to get a certain level of prestige without forcing him to deepen his theological roots.
And I think that’s a tragedy for him and for all of the people he is influencing each day.