W. Kenneth Goodson - "Eruditio et Religio" Baccalaureate Service (May 11, 1980)
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| - | Duke University Baccalaureate Service | 0:03 |
| May 11th, 1980, Duke Chapel. | 0:05 | |
| (organ music playing) | 0:10 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 2:59 | |
| (organ music playing) | 5:08 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 8:06 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 11:05 | |
| (organ music playing) | 12:42 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 15:41 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 18:40 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 21:39 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 24:38 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 28:37 | |
| (organ music playing continues) | 31:36 | |
| (choir singing) | 33:49 | |
| (organ music playing) | 35:08 | |
| (organ music playing and congregation singing) | 35:44 | |
| (organ music playing and congregation singing continues) | 38:43 | |
| - | Be seated. | 39:00 |
| There are a number of people standing, | 39:13 | |
| so as you're getting adjusted | 39:17 | |
| let me invite those of you who can | 39:20 | |
| to move toward the center aisle if you will | 39:24 | |
| so that persons who are standing | 39:28 | |
| may be seated if at all possible. | 39:31 | |
| How lovely is Thy dwelling place, oh Lord of Hosts. | 39:59 | |
| My soul longs, yea faints, for the courts of the Lord, | 40:04 | |
| my heart and flesh sing for joy to the living God. | 40:08 | |
| Blessed are those who dwell in the house of the Lord, | 40:13 | |
| ever singing praise to God. | 40:16 | |
| What a joyful, blessed, beautiful moment this is. | 40:20 | |
| The beauty of new day, the gladness of a time | 40:24 | |
| of worship and celebration. | 40:27 | |
| May grace, mercy and peace | 40:30 | |
| from the Lord our God be with you. | 40:33 | |
| Let us now with one voice confess | 40:37 | |
| our sin to the Lord our God. | 40:40 | |
| Let us pray. | 40:44 | |
| Oh God, in who's mystery we abide | 40:47 | |
| and by who's mercy we are redeemed | 40:50 | |
| we confess our sin against one another and against You. | 40:54 | |
| All our transgressions hidden and open, | 40:58 | |
| the evil done and the goodness left undone. | 41:03 | |
| We have deceived ourselves about our ourselves, | 41:07 | |
| and worn masks, and not trusted in love. | 41:10 | |
| We confess that we have been careful with things, | 41:14 | |
| careless with persons, adept in taking, awkward in giving, | 41:18 | |
| in love with our fears, and in fear of our loves. | 41:24 | |
| We confess before You that we are | 41:29 | |
| more prone to sin than to obedience, | 41:32 | |
| prompt to gratify our bodies, slow to nourish our souls, | 41:36 | |
| attached to the pleasure of sins, | 41:42 | |
| negligent of things spiritual, | 41:45 | |
| wuick in the service of self, | 41:49 | |
| slack in the service of others, | 41:51 | |
| eager to get, reluctant to give, | 41:54 | |
| full of good intentions, hesitant to fulfill them, | 41:58 | |
| severe with our neighbors, indulgent with ourselves, | 42:02 | |
| helpless apart from You, yet unwilling to be bound to You. | 42:07 | |
| Forgive us, lift us up, and heal us this day. | 42:13 | |
| We pray in Your holy name. | 42:19 | |
| Amen. | 42:22 | |
| As we continue in prayer let us offer to God | 42:24 | |
| our personal words of confession. | 42:28 | |
| Surely the Lord is in this place. | 42:51 | |
| How awesome is this place, | 42:55 | |
| for this is none other than the house of God | 42:57 | |
| and this is the gate of Heaven. | 43:01 | |
| Receive now, dear friends, the forgiveness and new life | 43:05 | |
| that the Lord our God offers us. | 43:10 | |
| As forgiven and reconciled people, | 43:14 | |
| let us serve the Lord our God | 43:17 | |
| and love one another as God in Christ loves us. | 43:20 | |
| Amen. | 43:26 | |
| (organ music playing) | 43:37 | |
| (choir singing) | 43:42 | |
| May I welcome you this morning to this place | 46:08 | |
| and to this very special service. | 46:11 | |
| A special word of welcome to those of you who graduate | 46:16 | |
| and I do want to assure all of you mothers and fathers | 46:20 | |
| that this is where they sit every Sunday morning, | 46:24 | |
| it's just that they don't always wear caps and gowns, | 46:27 | |
| and they don't always have Myrtle Beach suntans either. | 46:31 | |
| (congregation laughing) | 46:34 | |
| We are delighted to have those who will be honored, | 46:37 | |
| not only in this service, but who will be honored again | 46:42 | |
| this afternoon by the conferring of degrees. | 46:45 | |
| This is your day, this is your occasion, | 46:48 | |
| and so we welcome you and we welcome all friends and family. | 46:53 | |
| Those of you who have shared in these years with them, | 46:58 | |
| given them your love, and support, | 47:01 | |
| and watched over and stayed with them | 47:03 | |
| through thick and thin, | 47:05 | |
| and come now to celebrate this good, | 47:07 | |
| and glad, and holy time. | 47:10 | |
| We are glad that you are here. | 47:12 | |
| Our preacher for the Baccalaureate Services this weekend, | 47:16 | |
| for all three of the Baccalaureate Services we are having, | 47:20 | |
| is the Reverend Dr. W. Kenneth Goodson, | 47:25 | |
| presiding bishop of the Richmond area | 47:28 | |
| of the United Methodist Church. | 47:31 | |
| Bishop Goodson is a native of North Carolina, | 47:35 | |
| he graduated from Catawba College | 47:39 | |
| and from the Divinity School of Duke University. | 47:42 | |
| He is a man whose life and ministry over the years | 47:47 | |
| has shown the significance of the place | 47:49 | |
| of the Church in higher education, | 47:53 | |
| and of higher education in the life of the Church. | 47:56 | |
| A man who has had the highest honors | 48:00 | |
| and has held the highest offices | 48:05 | |
| that the Church can confer upon anyone, | 48:07 | |
| at least can confer upon anyone in this life. | 48:11 | |
| He has been a bishop in | 48:15 | |
| the United Methodist Church for 20 years, | 48:16 | |
| served one term as the president of the Council of Bishops, | 48:19 | |
| as president of the Board of Global Ministries, | 48:24 | |
| and as president of the Board of Discipleship. | 48:26 | |
| He holds honorary degrees from a number | 48:31 | |
| of colleges and universities, including Duke University. | 48:33 | |
| I believe all of this has happened | 48:38 | |
| because one of our own has been | 48:42 | |
| a true preacher of the Word through the years | 48:45 | |
| and a genuine, caring, loving pastor, | 48:49 | |
| as he has related to lay people and clergy in his ministry. | 48:53 | |
| He loves Duke University and has given many hours | 48:59 | |
| of support and care to the Divinity School | 49:04 | |
| and to the University as a member | 49:07 | |
| of the Board of Trustees and in other ways. | 49:09 | |
| He serves now as a member of | 49:11 | |
| the Board of Trustees of the Duke Endowment. | 49:13 | |
| He has preached twice already, | 49:18 | |
| and will preach for us for this very special occasion. | 49:21 | |
| We welcome his wife, Martha Goodson, | 49:24 | |
| to this service and back to Duke. | 49:27 | |
| We welcome both of you, Bishop Goodson, | 49:30 | |
| and we look forward to the Word of God | 49:32 | |
| as you will bring it to us for this day. | 49:34 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 49:45 |
| Prepare our hearts, oh Lord, to accept Your Word. | 49:49 | |
| Silence in us any voice but Your own, | 49:53 | |
| that hearing we may also obey Your will | 49:56 | |
| through Jesus Christ our Lord. | 49:59 | |
| Amen. | 50:01 | |
| The Old Testament lesson is the first Psalm. | 50:04 | |
| "Blessed is the man who walks not | 50:09 | |
| "in the counsel of the wicked, | 50:11 | |
| "nor stands in the way of sinners, | 50:13 | |
| "nor sits in the seat of the scoffers. | 50:16 | |
| "But his delight is in the law of the Lord, | 50:19 | |
| "and on His law doth he meditates day and night. | 50:22 | |
| "He is like a tree planted by the streams of water | 50:26 | |
| "that yields its fruit in its season | 50:29 | |
| "and its leaf does not wither, | 50:32 | |
| "in all that he does, he prospers. | 50:35 | |
| "The wicked are not so, | 50:38 | |
| "but alike the chaff which the wind drives away. | 50:40 | |
| "Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment, | 50:44 | |
| "nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous | 50:48 | |
| "for the Lord knows the way of the righteous, | 50:51 | |
| "but the way of the wicked will perish." | 50:54 | |
| Will the congregation please stand | 50:58 | |
| for the reading of the Gospel. | 51:00 | |
| The Gospel lesson is from John, chapter eight, | 51:14 | |
| verses 30 though 32. | 51:17 | |
| "As he spoke thus many believed in him. | 51:20 | |
| "Jesus then said, 'If you continue in my Word, | 51:24 | |
| "you are truly my disciples and you will know the truth, | 51:28 | |
| "and the truth will make you free.'" | 51:33 | |
| Here endeth the Gospel lesson. | 51:36 | |
| Amen. | 51:39 | |
| (organ music playing) | 51:41 | |
| (choir and congregation singing) | 51:50 | |
| Be seated. | 52:27 | |
| President Sanford has given to me an unforgettable | 52:37 | |
| weekend, | 52:41 | |
| one that so long as I shall live | 52:44 | |
| I will remember and carry in the deep recesses | 52:47 | |
| of my own heart and of my own spirit. | 52:50 | |
| It not only has been an unforgettable weekend, | 52:55 | |
| for me it has been a frightening weekend, | 52:57 | |
| for anyone who has been a student, | 53:02 | |
| particularly in a theological seminary on this campus | 53:04 | |
| for as long as a single semester, | 53:07 | |
| immediately sets apart in his own mind | 53:11 | |
| and in his own heart the Duke Chapel | 53:14 | |
| and believes for the rest of his life, | 53:17 | |
| and in my case, for the rest of my ministry | 53:19 | |
| that there is no place anywhere on Earth quite like this. | 53:22 | |
| It was here that we sat as students. | 53:28 | |
| It was here that we brought some of | 53:32 | |
| the perplexing ideas of our own mind, | 53:33 | |
| and our own heart, and our own spirit, | 53:36 | |
| and listened to the quiet refrains of an organ | 53:37 | |
| more than 40 years ago as we tried to wrestle out | 53:40 | |
| in our minds and in our own spirits | 53:45 | |
| and the manner of our own lives | 53:47 | |
| and the manner of our own ministries, | 53:49 | |
| and all this comes fresh to me again | 53:50 | |
| as I come to what has almost come | 53:53 | |
| to be my home on a weekend. | 53:55 | |
| There will be many who will do far more excellent | 54:01 | |
| than I will do in the next 20 to 25 minutes, | 54:05 | |
| but there are none who would come to a higher privilege | 54:08 | |
| to be here and who would love Duke University more. | 54:11 | |
| For more than 40 years of my life, | 54:15 | |
| for almost 50 years of my life, | 54:19 | |
| I have yelled myself hoarse | 54:21 | |
| at the victories of the Blue Devils, | 54:25 | |
| and every now and again have gone off alone | 54:29 | |
| to cry at their misfortunes. | 54:33 | |
| But it's a real joy, and it's a great thrill, | 54:37 | |
| and it's a great honor to come. | 54:40 | |
| Let me read the text for the morning you would find it | 54:43 | |
| as President Sanford read it a minute ago | 54:45 | |
| in the 32nd verse of the eight chapter | 54:47 | |
| of the Gospel according to Saint John. | 54:50 | |
| Jesus said to those who were listening to him, | 54:53 | |
| if you continue in my Word then are ye my disciples | 54:56 | |
| and you shall know the truth, | 55:02 | |
| and the truth will set you free. | 55:04 | |
| When Edward Gibbon had completed his famous work, | 55:08 | |
| "The Decline and the Fall of the Roman Empire," | 55:10 | |
| he laid down his pen and he went for a walk in his garden. | 55:13 | |
| At first, his emotions were of elation | 55:18 | |
| now that the task is over. | 55:21 | |
| "But my pride soon humbled," he wrote in his memoirs, | 55:24 | |
| "and a sober melancholy was spread over my mind, | 55:27 | |
| "by the idea that I had taken an everlasting leave | 55:31 | |
| "of an old and agreeable companion." | 55:35 | |
| Most of us, I believe, come to Commencements | 55:39 | |
| with mixed emotions like these. | 55:41 | |
| Happy and exalted, examinations are over, | 55:43 | |
| you don't have an eight o'clock in the morning, | 55:46 | |
| and there are no more examinations to be done. | 55:49 | |
| Hallelujah, 'tis done, that great transaction's done. | 55:52 | |
| You're through. | 55:56 | |
| (congregation laughing) | 55:57 | |
| And you can lay down your pens, | 56:01 | |
| and you can go for a walk across the campus, | 56:02 | |
| and like Edward Gibbon, you can be | 56:05 | |
| delighted and elated that the task is over. | 56:07 | |
| But you refuse to take an everlasting leave. | 56:11 | |
| You will come again, as I have come again, | 56:15 | |
| as others before you and before me have come again, | 56:17 | |
| in memory and in person to visit the campus again | 56:20 | |
| with our old and agreeable companion. | 56:25 | |
| In preparation of a Baccalaureate Address, | 56:30 | |
| the temptation is great for one to slip into | 56:33 | |
| the role of a teacher and try to make | 56:36 | |
| a scholastic approach to the subject. | 56:38 | |
| That would be all right for me, | 56:41 | |
| for whatever else religion must be, | 56:42 | |
| it must always be intellectually respectable. | 56:44 | |
| Or I might assume the role of a statesman | 56:49 | |
| and it would, I assure you, be a mere assumption, | 56:51 | |
| and talk about problems and panaceas of our time, | 56:54 | |
| and this would be proper and permissible | 56:58 | |
| for I do not know a moment in human history | 57:00 | |
| when which there have been more problems | 57:02 | |
| and there have been more panaceas, | 57:04 | |
| and the human family is crying out, | 57:07 | |
| is there any balm in Gilead. | 57:09 | |
| But I want you to know that I am | 57:13 | |
| thoroughly impressed with the thought | 57:15 | |
| that there is no time in my life | 57:17 | |
| when I should speak more as a minister of the Gospel | 57:21 | |
| than I speak to you now. | 57:25 | |
| I did not come to you, I have too much respect for that, | 57:28 | |
| and for you, I did not come to you today | 57:32 | |
| with a collection of pious platitudes | 57:34 | |
| to remind you that you're standing at the crossroads. | 57:37 | |
| I do not believe that your generation is standing anyplace. | 57:41 | |
| You're a generation constantly on the move. | 57:46 | |
| I didn't come to tell you that this is | 57:48 | |
| a momentous crossroads event in your own life. | 57:51 | |
| If you do not know that now, | 57:54 | |
| there is no need in my reminding you of it. | 57:56 | |
| I did not come to tell you that these are troublesome days. | 58:00 | |
| If you did not know that by now, | 58:03 | |
| there is no way that I can explain it. | 58:05 | |
| I did not come to remind you that moral values are on trial | 58:09 | |
| and that we're once more living | 58:13 | |
| in old arena of a new sophistication. | 58:14 | |
| If you did not know that, | 58:17 | |
| there is no way that I can explain it. | 58:19 | |
| I did come to talk to you a bit | 58:23 | |
| about your education and about you, | 58:25 | |
| and about the human equation in the world | 58:28 | |
| where the human equation is not always | 58:30 | |
| as important as we would want it to me. | 58:32 | |
| I came to talk to you about your life | 58:34 | |
| and about your relationship to your generation. | 58:37 | |
| Christian education is what Duke proposes to do, | 58:42 | |
| at its best must be an impulse, | 58:45 | |
| an impulse that shall determine the new | 58:48 | |
| and the better world than which we have, | 58:50 | |
| and where you have a stake, and where I have a stake, | 58:52 | |
| and where I have put out a claim. | 58:55 | |
| We fall into the error every now and again | 58:58 | |
| of thinking that education is merely | 59:00 | |
| the accumulation of facts. | 59:02 | |
| This is part of education to be sure, | 59:06 | |
| and no rationally-minded man would deny it, | 59:08 | |
| but it is only a half truth. | 59:11 | |
| Brilliance could be our salvation, | 59:15 | |
| but brilliance without morality and dedication | 59:19 | |
| could also be our doom. | 59:22 | |
| In popular current thought, there are really | 59:26 | |
| three ideas of education. | 59:29 | |
| One is that it's ornamental, | 59:32 | |
| it's the in thing to have a diploma. | 59:33 | |
| When I was in school, it was the in thing | 59:38 | |
| to have a fraternity pin. | 59:41 | |
| And when I came to this university I came out | 59:43 | |
| of a small, liberal arts, church-related college | 59:46 | |
| that had less than 400 students | 59:50 | |
| and there were no fraternities, | 59:52 | |
| and all my life I wanted to be in one, | 59:54 | |
| and I pledged when I was in theological school, | 59:57 | |
| and preachers don't pledge much to fraternities. | 1:00:02 | |
| But I did and had a perfectly delightful time. | 1:00:07 | |
| And then the time came for initiation and graduation, | 1:00:10 | |
| for initiation into the lodge itself, | 1:00:13 | |
| and I remember well the initiation fee was $90. | 1:00:16 | |
| $90 in 1935. | 1:00:21 | |
| $90 would have put a new roof on the chapel. | 1:00:26 | |
| It represented a fourth of what my little church | 1:00:30 | |
| paid me annually, so I couldn't do it. | 1:00:33 | |
| And I set a record, | 1:00:38 | |
| I was a pledge for 35 years. | 1:00:40 | |
| (congregation laughing) | 1:00:45 | |
| Which is a bit abnormal, | 1:00:46 | |
| and yet I never was allowed to do it | 1:00:48 | |
| because I didn't have the $90. | 1:00:51 | |
| And then in due season, when I was the bishop of the Church | 1:00:53 | |
| in Birmingham, Alabama 36 years later | 1:00:56 | |
| the officers of the Order of Kappa Alpha | 1:01:01 | |
| came to me and said, "We would like to have | 1:01:04 | |
| "a special initiation and initiate you | 1:01:06 | |
| "at long last into the Order, | 1:01:09 | |
| "and the National Chapter has given us | 1:01:12 | |
| "the privilege of doing it, | 1:01:14 | |
| "and your credentials are in order." | 1:01:15 | |
| And I was initiated a member of the Lodge. | 1:01:18 | |
| And immediately, though long since had I passed its glamor, | 1:01:21 | |
| bought myself a fraternity pin | 1:01:26 | |
| with all the jewels and all the diamonds. | 1:01:28 | |
| You needed one, you should have one, it was necessary to me, | 1:01:33 | |
| it was the ornamental part of education | 1:01:38 | |
| not entirely to be despised. | 1:01:41 | |
| It gave me a status. | 1:01:44 | |
| And then there is the feeling that education | 1:01:45 | |
| is not only ornamental, it's good to have a college diploma, | 1:01:47 | |
| and one that you can hang on the wall and show. | 1:01:52 | |
| It is also commercial. | 1:01:54 | |
| Every now and again, I get a bit weary | 1:01:57 | |
| of the rotary speakers who've been to our club | 1:01:59 | |
| to remind us of the advantages of college. | 1:02:02 | |
| You can get a better salary than if you did not go. | 1:02:06 | |
| I would not underestimate | 1:02:10 | |
| the meaning of the importance of it, | 1:02:12 | |
| I simply would remind you that education | 1:02:16 | |
| is infinitely more than this. | 1:02:19 | |
| But there is another idea of education traced back to Plato. | 1:02:23 | |
| Education is to create a craving for the good, | 1:02:27 | |
| and the true, and the beautiful. | 1:02:31 | |
| It is then, it appears to me, part of your task | 1:02:34 | |
| to recapture this ideal of education and life, | 1:02:37 | |
| and purify it by religious faith | 1:02:41 | |
| until it is built into our modern life. | 1:02:44 | |
| It is still a sad commentary on American life, | 1:02:49 | |
| with all of its towering cathedrals like this | 1:02:52 | |
| and with its great halls of learning, | 1:02:55 | |
| that we are thrilled and amused | 1:02:57 | |
| by the cheap, and the vulgar, and the unclean. | 1:02:59 | |
| Cannot fill the movie house unless it's X. | 1:03:05 | |
| Your generation would do well to remember | 1:03:13 | |
| what my generations seems to have forgotten. | 1:03:16 | |
| Woodrow Wilson put it in unusual terms, | 1:03:21 | |
| that civilization cannot be saved materially | 1:03:25 | |
| until it has been redeemed spiritually. | 1:03:29 | |
| The Baccalaureate Service is a unique service in our lives. | 1:03:37 | |
| The very fact that a representative of religion | 1:03:41 | |
| is invited to have one of the last words with you | 1:03:44 | |
| before you graduate symbolizes the truth | 1:03:47 | |
| that while religion does not dictate the curricular, | 1:03:50 | |
| it does gather up the threads of all the subjects | 1:03:56 | |
| and gives them unity, and purpose, | 1:04:01 | |
| and meaning for life. | 1:04:06 | |
| Now that you're about to receive the long-awaited diploma | 1:04:10 | |
| I think there's some obligations on your part | 1:04:13 | |
| and I come now to talk to you about your obligations | 1:04:15 | |
| rather than our gifts to you. | 1:04:19 | |
| I think there are some obligations on your part | 1:04:21 | |
| as a result of the education | 1:04:24 | |
| that you have received at Duke University. | 1:04:26 | |
| I wanted to say four things to you and then we shall go. | 1:04:29 | |
| First is the obligation to see clearly. | 1:04:33 | |
| Certainly the age in which we live | 1:04:38 | |
| calls for men of vision, people of vision, | 1:04:40 | |
| for as Daniel reminded us a good many years ago | 1:04:44 | |
| that where there is no vision, the people perish. | 1:04:47 | |
| While a later prophet reminded us | 1:04:52 | |
| that your old men shall dream dreams, | 1:04:54 | |
| and your young men shall see visions. | 1:04:58 | |
| A nonsense about the feeling that no person | 1:05:03 | |
| has a right to a diploma whose soul is locked up | 1:05:06 | |
| to all of the magnificent opportunities | 1:05:10 | |
| that await him or her when he or she | 1:05:12 | |
| walks across the college stage and onto life's stage. | 1:05:14 | |
| There is a line which Saint Paul writes, | 1:05:21 | |
| which Dr. Moffet translates, | 1:05:23 | |
| "The spiritual man is alive to all true values." | 1:05:26 | |
| After all, it isn't what you see with the physical eye, | 1:05:32 | |
| but that which flashes upon the inward eye | 1:05:35 | |
| that inspires our attitudes and gives us | 1:05:38 | |
| a wholesome outlook upon life. | 1:05:41 | |
| Educated, sure. | 1:05:46 | |
| You are now obligated to see clearly. | 1:05:49 | |
| I wish every now and again that education and religion | 1:05:52 | |
| both could appeal more to young people | 1:05:57 | |
| on the grounds of what they're missing, | 1:06:00 | |
| rather than on the grounds of what they mustn't. | 1:06:03 | |
| Young people have an idea that religion is a straitjacket | 1:06:09 | |
| put over them by their elders in order to make them behave. | 1:06:12 | |
| Religion and education go together. | 1:06:16 | |
| When the University called and asked me | 1:06:20 | |
| for a subject for today's message, | 1:06:22 | |
| over and over again in my own mind | 1:06:24 | |
| I've been wrestling with the seal of Duke University. | 1:06:27 | |
| I looked at it again this morning | 1:06:32 | |
| as I looked at it again on yesterday. | 1:06:34 | |
| A round circle and over the top of the circle two words: | 1:06:36 | |
| Eruditio et Religio. | 1:06:39 | |
| In the center of it a cross. | 1:06:46 | |
| Eruditio. | 1:06:53 | |
| How cold facts would be unless appropriated by a warm heart. | 1:06:56 | |
| How cold and unreasonable religion can get | 1:07:00 | |
| when it becomes unfounded on reality. | 1:07:03 | |
| Eruditio, all that you've learned, and all that you know, | 1:07:07 | |
| and all that you've accumulated, | 1:07:12 | |
| and all that you've brought together. | 1:07:13 | |
| As I came down the aisle, even this morning, | 1:07:16 | |
| as well as yesterday, I saw the disciplines | 1:07:18 | |
| out of which you have come, now to face your graduation. | 1:07:21 | |
| Among you there are engineers, and there are scientists, | 1:07:27 | |
| and there are physicians, and there are nurses, | 1:07:31 | |
| and there are theologians, and there are ministers | 1:07:35 | |
| and there are undergraduates | 1:07:38 | |
| getting their Baccalaureate degree. | 1:07:39 | |
| All of us are here together. | 1:07:41 | |
| Eruditio, what do you know? | 1:07:45 | |
| Well that is an inadequate question | 1:07:51 | |
| that can only bring an inadequate answer. | 1:07:53 | |
| Eruditio et Religio, not only what do you know, | 1:07:58 | |
| but who are you, | 1:08:01 | |
| and what is the faith that motivates and propels your life. | 1:08:05 | |
| What are the ideals | 1:08:11 | |
| that you would bet your life on? | 1:08:15 | |
| You see, the right and the wrong use of knowledge | 1:08:22 | |
| is strikingly illustrated in the life of Aaron Burr. | 1:08:25 | |
| Two well-known American characters, | 1:08:29 | |
| one would be Aaron Burr, and one would be Abraham Lincoln. | 1:08:31 | |
| Aaron Burr, one of the most brilliant minds | 1:08:35 | |
| that America has ever produced, | 1:08:38 | |
| still stands as one of Princeton University's | 1:08:41 | |
| highest academic accomplishments. | 1:08:43 | |
| But Aaron Burr was morally bankrupt. | 1:08:46 | |
| Abraham Lincoln, educated by the light of a pine knot, | 1:08:51 | |
| using borrowed books in a leaky cabin, | 1:08:57 | |
| broadened his spirit and deepened his sympathies | 1:08:59 | |
| that he became one of our best-educated men. | 1:09:02 | |
| I only came to remind you | 1:09:07 | |
| that there is no education without character. | 1:09:10 | |
| That's the message of the seal of your university. | 1:09:16 | |
| That not only is the obligation to see clearly, | 1:09:23 | |
| there is the obligation on the part | 1:09:26 | |
| of the intelligent man to think. | 1:09:28 | |
| Henry van Dyke was right when he said, | 1:09:31 | |
| "To think without confusion clearly should be | 1:09:33 | |
| "one of the prime goals of life." | 1:09:36 | |
| Man, with his mind has mastered the forces of nature | 1:09:40 | |
| and has made them his slaves. | 1:09:44 | |
| He touches the soil and makes it | 1:09:48 | |
| provide him food and nourishment. | 1:09:50 | |
| He speaks to the hills and they give up | 1:09:54 | |
| their ore and their precious gold. | 1:09:56 | |
| He commands the winds and the clippers | 1:10:01 | |
| carry him to the end of the Earth. | 1:10:04 | |
| He speaks to the lightning | 1:10:08 | |
| and his voice is heard in a hundred places. | 1:10:11 | |
| Ah, men, | 1:10:17 | |
| what potential thou hast. | 1:10:23 | |
| We lived once in Birmingham, Alabama | 1:10:36 | |
| and the department stores of that lovely city | 1:10:40 | |
| have an annual sale day, | 1:10:43 | |
| and they make you think they're reducing | 1:10:47 | |
| everything they have to a bare nothing, | 1:10:48 | |
| and maybe they are, | 1:10:51 | |
| and on that day annually I took | 1:10:54 | |
| my teenage high school daughter shopping. | 1:10:57 | |
| We'd gone over to the department store | 1:11:04 | |
| and had accumulated all the bargains | 1:11:06 | |
| that the Visa and the Master charge allow you to have. | 1:11:13 | |
| (congregation chuckling) | 1:11:17 | |
| And then we started out the door and there was a counter, | 1:11:19 | |
| a counter full of miscellaneous things. | 1:11:25 | |
| And then there was a counter | 1:11:32 | |
| that had a beautifully printed sign on it. | 1:11:35 | |
| I leave it with you. | 1:11:41 | |
| The sign said, | 1:11:44 | |
| "If dreams were for sale, | 1:11:47 | |
| what would you buy today?" | 1:11:57 | |
| A dream of a world at peace, | 1:12:06 | |
| a dream of a world of order, | 1:12:10 | |
| a dream of a world of moral decency, | 1:12:14 | |
| a dream of a world when men shall beat their swords, | 1:12:20 | |
| and the plow shears, and their spears, | 1:12:22 | |
| and their pruning hooks. | 1:12:25 | |
| I dream of a world when the nasty word of disease | 1:12:28 | |
| shall no longer frighten our people. | 1:12:32 | |
| I only wanted to ask this class, | 1:12:40 | |
| if dreams were for sale, | 1:12:43 | |
| what would you buy? | 1:12:47 | |
| Mere intellect is never enough, | 1:12:56 | |
| for another obligation of education | 1:13:00 | |
| is nobility of character. | 1:13:02 | |
| Brilliant intellect may be just as cold as an icicle | 1:13:06 | |
| and quite as useless. | 1:13:09 | |
| The greatest danger we face in the world today | 1:13:11 | |
| is that our minds may outrun our spirits. | 1:13:14 | |
| Look in the field on atomic research. | 1:13:19 | |
| We're thrilled to think of its possibilities for mankind, | 1:13:22 | |
| we shudder to think of its possibilities for history. | 1:13:25 | |
| I climbed the narrow, little steps in houses of Parliament | 1:13:33 | |
| more than a dozen years ago to hear Mr. Winston Churchill | 1:13:37 | |
| address the English government on England's preparation | 1:13:40 | |
| against the atomic bomb. | 1:13:44 | |
| The little man who so deeply mastered the English language | 1:13:49 | |
| and around whom the hopes of the free world | 1:13:54 | |
| were written for a while, | 1:13:57 | |
| looked out at his colleagues in Parliament and said to them, | 1:13:59 | |
| "We are gathered here to discuss ways of | 1:14:04 | |
| "protecting ourselves against atomic annihilation. | 1:14:09 | |
| "May I say to you that the only guarantee | 1:14:14 | |
| "against atomic annihilation | 1:14:18 | |
| "is in the character of the people who have the bomb." | 1:14:23 | |
| Just as sure as I can be, | 1:14:32 | |
| as I stand here with you this moment, | 1:14:35 | |
| that character and knowledge together are our only hope. | 1:14:37 | |
| As I am that knowledge without character | 1:14:42 | |
| can seal our doom and bring the end | 1:14:44 | |
| of decent civilization as we understand it. | 1:14:47 | |
| Eruditio et Religio. | 1:14:49 | |
| What do you know? | 1:14:55 | |
| What manner of person are you? | 1:15:00 | |
| What do you believe? | 1:15:06 | |
| In the middle of it there is a cross | 1:15:09 | |
| reminding us of the only solvent personality | 1:15:13 | |
| in the history of the world's bankruptcy. | 1:15:19 | |
| Education also imposes upon you, and I say it only briefly, | 1:15:27 | |
| education imposes upon you | 1:15:32 | |
| the obligation to serve sacrificially. | 1:15:34 | |
| You have been trained in one of America's great universities | 1:15:40 | |
| by one of America's great faculties, | 1:15:47 | |
| what are you going to do with it? | 1:15:55 | |
| Day before yesterday as we were riding here | 1:16:06 | |
| I was quietly in my own mind celebrating | 1:16:11 | |
| the 114th anniversary | 1:16:16 | |
| of my father's birth. | 1:16:21 | |
| Long since has he gone to what Dr. Paul Green | 1:16:26 | |
| referred to last night as the Celestial City. | 1:16:28 | |
| He grew up out on the mud banks | 1:16:35 | |
| of a little river in North Carolina | 1:16:37 | |
| known as the Catawba River | 1:16:38 | |
| where the opportunities for advancement were not much | 1:16:40 | |
| and his education consisted of an occasional day | 1:16:44 | |
| in a one-room building where an itinerant teacher | 1:16:48 | |
| would come by and stake out his claim. | 1:16:52 | |
| I grew up in a town in the state that had the first, | 1:17:01 | |
| we thought it was, the first million-dollar high school. | 1:17:05 | |
| Our high school had a short-wave radio station, | 1:17:13 | |
| it had the makings of elevator shafts | 1:17:17 | |
| at each end of the hall, | 1:17:19 | |
| we had private lockers and revolving cafeterias, | 1:17:21 | |
| and everything that 50 years ago a modern high school had. | 1:17:25 | |
| People came from far and wide to see it | 1:17:32 | |
| and one day I took my father to see it. | 1:17:38 | |
| We rode in front of its yellow brick structure, | 1:17:43 | |
| and I parked the family car, and said, "There it is." | 1:17:47 | |
| Then I looked at my dad and said to him, | 1:17:54 | |
| "Old fella, what would you have given | 1:17:59 | |
| "to have gone to a school like that?" | 1:18:05 | |
| And I could tell that I'd hurt him, | 1:18:10 | |
| and all the regret of his life flashed to the surface. | 1:18:14 | |
| But he was too much the man to reply. | 1:18:21 | |
| So after a while we rode on | 1:18:24 | |
| and in a few moments he laid his hand | 1:18:29 | |
| upon my knee as I drove, | 1:18:32 | |
| and he said, "Son, | 1:18:36 | |
| "may I remind you, and you never forget, | 1:18:40 | |
| "that to whom much has been given, | 1:18:46 | |
| Duke University has given you itself, | 1:19:01 | |
| blue and white will ever be yours, | 1:19:09 | |
| the Blue Devils will ever be yours, | 1:19:13 | |
| the brains and the intellect | 1:19:17 | |
| of the faculty and the administration will ever be yours. | 1:19:20 | |
| I only wanted to remind you | 1:19:27 | |
| that to whom much is given, | 1:19:31 | |
| much shall be required. | 1:19:37 | |
| Would you bow your heads for a moment? | 1:19:44 | |
| In the beauty and in the quietness | 1:19:51 | |
| of this lovely place | 1:19:55 | |
| we commit ourselves to all that is good, | 1:20:03 | |
| fine, | 1:20:07 | |
| decent, | 1:20:09 | |
| and whatsoever things that of good report | 1:20:13 | |
| enable us to think upon those things. | 1:20:17 | |
| may we never forget | 1:20:29 | |
| that in the midst of them is a cross | 1:20:34 | |
| and he who hangs upon that cross is in the midst of history. | 1:20:38 | |
| Hear our prayers through Jesus Christ our Lord. | 1:20:44 | |
| Amen. | 1:20:51 | |
| - | Will you stand please? | 1:21:00 |
| With one voice let us affirm what we believe. | 1:21:14 | |
| We believe in God, who has created and is creating, | 1:21:19 | |
| who has come in the truly human Jesus | 1:21:24 | |
| to reconcile and make new. | 1:21:27 | |
| We trust God who calls us to be the Church, | 1:21:30 | |
| to celebrate life and its fullness, | 1:21:35 | |
| to love and serve others, | 1:21:38 | |
| to seek justice and resist evil, | 1:21:41 | |
| to proclaim Jesus, crucified and risen, | 1:21:44 | |
| our judge and our hope. | 1:21:48 | |
| In life, in death, in life beyond death, God is with us. | 1:21:51 | |
| We are not alone. | 1:21:58 | |
| Thanks be to God. | 1:21:59 | |
| The Lord be with you. | 1:22:02 | |
| - | And with your spirit. | 1:22:04 |
| - | Let us pray. | 1:22:06 |
| Be seated please. | 1:22:07 | |
| Oh Lord, our God, | 1:22:18 | |
| it is good to come to a moment such as this, | 1:22:22 | |
| a moment of recognition, of accomplishment, | 1:22:27 | |
| of joy and celebration. | 1:22:31 | |
| We give thanks to You, oh Lord, for all that has been good, | 1:22:34 | |
| enlightening, maturing, and enriching in this place. | 1:22:39 | |
| These have been times and days filled with change, | 1:22:45 | |
| with questions, with unease, with good times, and sad times, | 1:22:48 | |
| with work and rest, with action and reflection, | 1:22:54 | |
| with movement and with calm. | 1:22:59 | |
| Times, oh God, that have bound us to one another | 1:23:02 | |
| in friendships that will last forever, | 1:23:06 | |
| that have stirred us and stretched us in such helpful ways | 1:23:10 | |
| that we dare not go back to our old selves, | 1:23:15 | |
| old thoughts, and old ways. | 1:23:18 | |
| Times filled with long days, | 1:23:21 | |
| difficult and yet rewarding hours of study, | 1:23:24 | |
| and struggles that have brought | 1:23:28 | |
| deep and lasting satisfaction. | 1:23:29 | |
| Times spent searching, oh God, for self, | 1:23:33 | |
| for others, for truth, and justice, and right. | 1:23:37 | |
| Times, oh God, for those who graduate | 1:23:42 | |
| that have reshaped, remolded and remade life. | 1:23:45 | |
| Help us all now to know that Commencement | 1:23:50 | |
| is not end, but beginning. | 1:23:53 | |
| That the end of this experience | 1:23:56 | |
| is where we being all over again. | 1:23:58 | |
| We give thanks for the efforts of all teachers | 1:24:03 | |
| who's lives have influenced these who graduate, | 1:24:06 | |
| for a staff of deans, counselors, president, and others | 1:24:10 | |
| who really do care about each one, | 1:24:14 | |
| for the support that has come from family, and friends, | 1:24:18 | |
| and often even from strangers unaware, | 1:24:21 | |
| for the commitment each graduate has had | 1:24:25 | |
| to reach this point in life, | 1:24:27 | |
| for their long hours of work and study, | 1:24:30 | |
| for determination and perseverance, | 1:24:33 | |
| and now for the much inner satisfaction which they know. | 1:24:35 | |
| Oh God, for each one make of learning a lifelong experience, | 1:24:41 | |
| make of serving a lifelong action, | 1:24:48 | |
| make of sharing a lifelong desire, | 1:24:52 | |
| make of being obedient to You a lifelong commitment. | 1:24:55 | |
| With gratitude that You have brought us this far | 1:25:01 | |
| we pray for Your help in the time to come | 1:25:05 | |
| that all our lives may add to the fullness, | 1:25:08 | |
| the goodness, and the wholeness of this world | 1:25:12 | |
| and of all we meet along the way. | 1:25:16 | |
| We pray, oh God, in the name of him who came | 1:25:20 | |
| teaching, learning, serving and loving, | 1:25:24 | |
| and hear us now as we pray together. | 1:25:29 | |
| Our Father, who art in Heaven, | 1:25:32 | |
| hallowed be Thy name. | 1:25:36 | |
| Thy kingdom come, | 1:25:38 | |
| Thy will be done, | 1:25:39 | |
| on earth as it is in Heaven. | 1:25:41 | |
| Give us this day our daily bread | 1:25:44 | |
| and forgive us our trespasses, | 1:25:47 | |
| as we forgive those who trespass against us, | 1:25:49 | |
| and lead us not into temptation, | 1:25:53 | |
| but deliver us from evil. | 1:25:56 | |
| For thine is the Kingdom, and the power, | 1:25:58 | |
| and the glory forever. | 1:26:02 | |
| Amen. | 1:26:04 | |
| (organ music playing) | 1:26:17 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:26:22 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:26:28 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:26:33 | |
| (choir singing continues) | 1:26:39 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:26:47 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:26:53 | |
| (choir singing continues) | 1:26:59 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:27:22 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:27:28 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:27:33 | |
| (choir continues singing) | 1:27:39 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:27:46 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:27:53 | |
| (choir continues singing) | 1:27:58 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:28:21 | |
| ♪ Alleluia, amen, amen, alleluia, amen ♪ | 1:28:38 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 1:28:44 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 1:28:47 | |
| ♪ Alleluia ♪ | 1:28:50 | |
| ♪ Amen ♪ | 1:28:54 | |
| Will you join with me now as we offer to God | 1:29:10 | |
| a unison prayer of gratitude and of hope. | 1:29:13 | |
| Let us pray. | 1:29:18 | |
| Almighty God, who has granted us place | 1:29:20 | |
| and part in this university, | 1:29:23 | |
| hallow to us now this day when we dedicate ourselves | 1:29:26 | |
| to the life and work to which You have hear called us. | 1:29:31 | |
| That we may remember with gratitude | 1:29:36 | |
| the families and friends who have cared for us. | 1:29:39 | |
| We ask Your presence, oh God, that in the life ahead of us | 1:29:42 | |
| we may keep faith with those | 1:29:48 | |
| who have love us, and trusted us, | 1:29:50 | |
| and whose hopes follow us. | 1:29:53 | |
| We ask Your presence, oh God, | 1:29:55 | |
| that we may enter with good courage and constant purpose | 1:29:58 | |
| upon the tasks which await us. | 1:30:03 | |
| We ask Your presence, oh God, | 1:30:06 | |
| from all sense of strangeness, and loneliness, | 1:30:09 | |
| and from the fear that we may fail | 1:30:13 | |
| and may find no friends. | 1:30:15 | |
| Good Lord, deliver us | 1:30:18 | |
| from neglect of the opportunities which are all about us, | 1:30:21 | |
| and from distrust of our ability to meet | 1:30:25 | |
| the duties of each dawning day. | 1:30:28 | |
| Good Lord, deliver us, that the example | 1:30:31 | |
| of wise and generous people who have gone before us | 1:30:34 | |
| here at this university may save us | 1:30:38 | |
| from folly and self-indulgence. | 1:30:42 | |
| We ask Your presence, oh God, most especially | 1:30:45 | |
| that You would show to us and to all people | 1:30:50 | |
| the way of love in a time desperately in need | 1:30:54 | |
| of persons who care. | 1:30:57 | |
| We ask Your presence, oh God, | 1:31:00 | |
| these things and whatever else | 1:31:03 | |
| You see needful and right for us, | 1:31:05 | |
| we ask in Your holy name. | 1:31:09 | |
| Amen. | 1:31:11 | |
| (organ music playing) | 1:31:14 |
| (organ music) | 0:04 | |
| (background singing) | 1:22 | |
| - | And now, without bowing heads or closing eyes, | 2:21 |
| May I offer you, in the name of the Lord, our God, | 2:24 | |
| this word of blessing. | 2:27 | |
| Go now, in peace, my friend | 2:31 | |
| and as you go may you find fulfillment in serving, | 2:35 | |
| joy in loving, satisfaction in giving | 2:42 | |
| and peace in believing. And may the love, peace, and joy | 2:48 | |
| of God be with you and with those whom you love | 2:55 | |
| this day and forever. | 3:01 | |
| [Choir Singing Amen] | 3:06 | |
| [Organ Music] | 4:20 |
Item Info
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