Lincoln Christian University

LCU Keynote Speaker Dr. Mark Scott
“Crawl Up into the Lap of God.”

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[May 06, 2024]   The keynote address at Saturday’s final commencement service at Lincoln Christian University was delivered by Dr. Mark Scott and titled “Crawl Up into the Lap of God.” Dr. Scott felt grateful and humbled to be speaking at the ceremony.

Dr. Wayne Shaw, who Dr. Scott considers his homiletics mentor, taught him a two pronged approach: preach to the believers or preach to the unbelievers. In the church Dr. Scott preaches in, he follows that approach as they sing an invitation hymn each Sunday.

Today, Dr. Scott said he was following another two pronged approach by speaking to both the class of 2024 and the whole LCU family.

The Biblical text Dr. Scott used was from Psalm 131:1-3, which are part of the song of ascents of David. In this passage, King David says, “O Lord, my heart is not lifted up; my eyes are not raised too high; I do not occupy myself with things too great and too marvelous for me. But I have calmed and quieted my soul, like a weaned child with its mother; like a weaned child is my soul within me. O Israel, hope in the Lord from this time forth and forevermore.”

In the Bible, Dr. Scott said the word “heart” is found 857 times. Sometimes the word refers to the heart as the muscle in our chest pumping blood or the figurative heart of the sea. Most of the time the word heart is used in scripture, though, Dr. Scott said it refers to the center of the inner person.

In Psalm 131, David is not trying to occupy himself with things that are too great. Dr. Scott said a weaned child does not go to his mother for nourishment but goes to his mother to be close to her. The waiting and hope are for a future that will be glorious.

Charles Spurgeon once said Psalm 131 is one of the shortest to read but the longest to learn. Spurgeon called it a “pearl.”
The Eugene Peterson says Psalm 131 is “I’m not here to rule the roost, I’m not here to be king of the mountain, I’m not in the grandiose plans.”

On the big occasion, Dr. Scott said many might wonder why he would use this little Psalm seeming to call people to something less. Summing it up in one sentence, Dr. Scott said in humility and in hope, crawl up into the lap of God.

Speaking specifically to the class of 2024, Dr. Scott said in humility and in hope, will you just crawl up into the lap of God? The students have sometimes burned the midnight oil and have been probing the deep things of God. Dr. Scott said that is no small thing and the students are to be honored.

While acknowledging the graduates have worked hard, Dr. Scott then said, “you don’t know what you don’t know, and you probably don’t know what your professors would have liked you to know.” Dr. Scott was sure “you don’t know what you will need to know out there in the future.” What he said the graduates should do is crawl up into the lap of God like a weaned child.

When he came to Lincoln Christian Seminary in 1976, Dr. Scott had been in a five year degree program with extra language and theology classes, but soon felt he was dumber than a box of rocks. He realized there were many things he just did not know.

As a young preacher in Rochester, Illinois, Dr. Scott said people were coming to him for premarital counseling, though he had never taken a counseling class. He decided to enroll in a premarital counseling course so he could learn how to help married couples.

In the church, Dr. Scott had a deacon who drove him crazy. Dr. Bruce Parmenter told him to become a friend to the deacon because it sounded like the man had no friends. Years later, the man would drive a distance to hear Dr. Scott preach.

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One of Dr. Scott’s former students later enrolled in a master’s and then doctoral program in Israel’s Be’er Sheva University. The week before he was to defend his dissertation, the student emailed Dr. Scott asking for any advice Dr. Scott could give him. His advice to the student was, “every week, do something for somebody that doesn’t give a fig about your degree because we don’t know what we need to know.”

In humility and in hope, Dr. Scott said the class of 2024 should crawl up in the lap of God when you don’t know what else to do. Speaking to the broader LCU family, Dr. Scott said, in humility and in hope, let’s just crawl up into the lap of God.

For a couple of weeks after the news of LCU’s closing came, Dr. Scott said he wept. Though Dr. Scott thought it might be hard to get through the graduation ceremony, he decided to assume the posture of trust like a weaned child.

Next, Dr. Scotte commended the courage of the LCU president and the trustees and God because it might have taken an equal amount of courage as it did in 1944 to start the place.

Even as World War II was going on 1944, Dr. Earl Hargrove and others had a vision to open the school, which Dr. Scott said must have taken courage.

Other schools have done what LCU is doing, but Dr. Scott said he has not seen any school with the integrity this school is doing [in working through the school’s transition]. What Dr. Scott sees the school do is pay the bills and pass the baton. He is proud to be a graduate of LCU.

When Dr. Scott and his wife heard the news about the school [and the transition to Ozark Christian College, his wife told him we have to build a building. Though Dr. Scott does not know if or when that will happen, he is glad someday there is something that says Lincoln Seminary so the vision will continue.

The Scotts went to Ukraine in 2012 and visited Taviriski Christian Institute, one of the schools LCU sent books to. He later saw the pictures of how the Russians trashed the campus. Dr. Scott said TCU is inheriting one of the finest libraries of our tribe.

Through Lincoln Christian Institute, the work of LCU will continue and Dr. Scott mentioned several who will be teaching. He said it is not really about credit or non-credit [classes], it is about equipping the saints and serving the church.

Though Dr. Scott is not sure what the right path but feels when we don’t know we should crawl into the lap of God just trusting the vision to live on in God’s ways.

When Dr. Scott graduated from Lincoln Christian Seminary in 1983, he recalls receiving the “servant’s towel,” which he considers a prized possession. Started by Dr. Wayne Shaw, the tradition of giving a towel to seminary graduates lives on. Dr. Scott cares that the vision lives on.

Pat Robinson, one of Dr. Scott’s teachers at Denver Seminary said that for God, sometimes the shortest distance between two points is a zig zag. Dr. Scott said Lincoln is zigging and zagging, but that is okay.

Something else Robinson said is we live in perpetual hope and hope is the music of the future. Faith is the courage to dance to it now.
In closing, Dr. Scott said he is ready to dance all the way into his mother’s arms and in humility and hope, crawl up into the lap of God.

[Angela Reiners]

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