South Asia - Does the World need another Higher Degree?
09-Jul-2018
Talk to Havilah Dharamraj and she’ll tell you that South Asia certainly does. Of course she’d say that – she’s the Academic Dean of India’s leading evangelical Theological institution for post-graduate study! But Havilah’s not just toeing the party line; she has some very good reasons for believing that higher degrees are not simply academic notches on a belt, but significant door-openers for changing society.
Havilah’s first career was teaching biochemistry at high school. But in the 1990’s a love of the Old Testament drew her back to study, so putting teenagers behind her, she did a Masters degree at South Asia Institute for Advanced Christian Studies (SAIACS) in Bangalore. That led to a PhD which was done at Durham University, and funded initially by Langham Partnership International.
Across the region, qualified biblical leaders who can listen to the world and build contextual bridges to the Word are in short supply - from village churches to urban seminaries.
Their investment has extended their vision, and it has had great impact.
Training other leaders
Since Havilah completed her PhD in 2006 and started teaching on the two main Masters Programmes at SAIACS, she has directly taught and influenced nearly 400 Christian leaders. That might not sound like very many over 12 years, but it’s important to understand who these leaders are, and what they do.
There are three types of students at SAIACS, from all around India, and several other countries in the region:
• Pastors and Ministers from churches throughout the region come to learn how to lead; and
• Faculty and lecturers from other Bible colleges and Christian tertiary training centres come to learn how to teach the Word of God.
Havilah says that whatever students might come for, they go away with a new set of skills – both explicit and implicit. Explicit skills include homiletics, teaching, critical thinking (essential for students coming from a rote learning experience), education and pedagogy, leadership, and working on the interface between contextual issues and the Bible.
“As Indians, the caste system is in our DNA. But at SAIACS we are totally egalitarian – we all eat at the same table, and have the choice to call each other by name regardless of our role or rank. This is in the classroom as well as within the SAIACS community. It’s this implicit value that is so central to the Gospel, that Christian leaders who study here, take away with them. And many of them are implementing this same value at their training colleges and organisations because they picked it up here, recognising it’s inherent within the Gospel.”
In the Asia-Pacific context higher degrees are not just CV boosters – they’re door openers for Christian leaders to have influence.
So, does the world need another higher degree? Absolutely! As Havilah puts it:
