Author
Information:
Dr.
Wayne E. Oates
(1917-1999) |
|
Wayne
E. Oates was born June 24, 1917, in the poverty stricken rural
county of Greenville, South Carolina. Left by his father at
birth, and with a mother who spent her long hard days at the
cotton mill, he was raised by his grandmother and sister. As
a young boy it seemed that destiny was repeating itself as
he too faced work in the cotton mill. However, providence intervened
when he was selected at age 14 on the basis of his intellect
and poverty, to become a paige in the United States Senate.
Wayne
understood education to be his way out of poverty and away
from feelings of inferiority. At a young age he began his "struggle
to be free," as expressed in his autobiography. In Struggle
To Be Free, Wayne wrote:
Any
effort to be free of poverty calls for a stubborn, gutsy
struggle. It is uphill all the way……Education
became my God-given path to freedom. God does not intend
that human intelligence be snuffed out by hunger, grinding
poverty, and a squalid lack of care and discipline. I know
this: that once we have won the struggle to be free of
poverty, God intends that we have a burning sense of social
justice that is dedicated to the enabling of others in
that same struggle.
The
passion born of his own childhood pain began to weave in Wayne
a powerful combination of knowledge and compassion. As one
wounded by deprivation, the abandonment of his father, the
resentment of his brothers, and later by chronic back pain,
Wayne developed a tremendous capacity to empathize with others.
Continuing
the struggle, Oates graduated from Mars Hill Junior College,
and Wake Forest University. He served as a pastor of churches
in North Carolina and Kentucky, and after combining the best
of the behavioral sciences with Biblical and theological perspective,
Wayne received his Ph.D. in the field of Psychology of Religion
from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. In 1947, he began
his full time career on the faculty of Southern Seminary in
Louisville, Kentucky.
In those
days, the field of Psychology of Religion was new and seminary
faculty wanted to put it under Religious Education. However,
Wayne Oates fought hard to get it in the theology department
as part of the Master of Divinity program.
Noted
for pioneering an academic body of literature in the fields
of pastoral care and pastoral counseling, his books have been
translated into more than three languages. The first of the
57 books Wayne Oates would author, would not bear the name
of his dissertation, The Significance of the Work of Sigmund
Freud for the Christian Faith. It would be called, The
Christian Pastor, a title chosen intentionally after being
advised, "a person's first book tends to tell people who the
author thinks he or she is."
Born
out of the freedom to create, and with his capacity to empathize,
Wayne Oates coined the term workaholic,
while counseling a man who was trying to accept his own alcoholism.
The term workaholic spread like wildfire and found its way
to the dictionary soon after Wayne published his book, Confessions
of a Workaholic.
Even
as a young man, Wayne Oates was considered old and wise. He
had a great sense of "pastoral identity." While fully human,
he extended his compassion and empathy to hear the pain and
fear of others. Out of his own painful experiences he knew
how to be fully "present" to others in the midst of their depression,
anxiety, or anger. For Wayne, the incarnation of Jesus Christ
was the central theological theme of God's Presence.To be a
Christian pastor to another was to embody God's presence.
Wayne
Oates gave us the term trialogue,
in his book, The Presence of God in Pastoral Counseling,
in order to describe the experience when the pastor or counselor
in conversation with another, allows enough silence to be aware
or hear the insight and presence of God.
Several
years ago in an editorial for the Kentucky Baptist paper, Mark
Wingfield, the then editor, wrote:
If
a minister in your Baptist church excels at pastoral care,
you probably have Wayne Oates to thank. If you've been
touched by the ministry of a Christian chaplain in the
hospital, in the military or in a business setting, you
probably have Wayne Oates to thank. Oates may never have
stepped foot in the church, hospital or military base where
you received ministry, but his writings and teachings over
the past 50 years probably have been influential in the
life of the minister or chaplain you encountered.
Wayne
Oates worked to find freedom as he described his healing process
and then turned to share that freedom with others.
Dialogue
between Pastoral Care and Health Care
As early
as 1947, Wayne E. Oates was teaching theology students at Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary. In addition, he was writing,
speaking nationally, supervising students in Clinical Pastoral
Education, and providing pastoral care in hospital settings.
His ministry grew out of his clear understanding of himself
as a pastor.
Also
in 1947, Dr. Oates was invited by Dr. Spafford Ackerly, Chairman
of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Louisville
School of Medicine, to serve in a unique role as a theological
consultant in the medical community. In that day it was unusual
for medicine to value theology or pastoral care as having an
important role or perspective when caring for patients. With
Dr. Ackerly's invitation the door was opened for Wayne Oates
to teach and embody collaborative, compassionate care to professionals
outside his own field while still teaching at Southern Seminary.
In 1974
Dr. Oates left Southern Seminary and formally joined the University
of Louisville Medical School faculty. There he had an even
greater opportunity to combine his knowledge of Christian theology
with his psychiatric insights. At the Medical School the new
chair of the Psychiatric Department, Dr. John Schwab, reminded
Wayne that they had psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers,
and nurses already, and he was the only pastor and theologian.
Schwab insisted, "Be who you are and don't dare place your
light under a bushel!" Wayne worked at defining religion as
a behavioral science in order to make medical students more
aware of the spiritual needs they would encounter in their
patients. He taught and mentored numerous caregivers in the
understanding that treatment requires collaboration, compassion,
and integration among all of the healing disciplines. In 1984
the American Psychiatric Association conferred on him the Oskar
Pfister Award for his contributions to the relationship between
psychiatry and religion.
Wayne
Oates died on October 21, 1999. His influence, however, continues
in countless ways through his writing, through the lives of
individuals, and through the Wayne E. Oates Institute.
Conclusion
Out of
a long term relationship with Wayne Oates and as a profession
in the field of pastoral counseling that has led a non-profit
organization through many changes, Roy Woodruff, Executive
Director of the American Association of Pastoral Counselors
said of Oates, "He put together the practice of pastoral ministry,
with the wisdom and resources of psychiatry and psychology,
in a masterful way. He became bilingual, in theology and psychiatry,
and could move back and forth with amazing agility." In forging
this integration of theology and psychiatry, Wayne Oates was
well ahead of the times. In his tribute to Dr. Oates, Woodruff
wrote, "He was a faithful father who pioneered a ministry and
who taught and nurtured those of us who have chosen his path.
Now it is up to us to keep it going and to pass it on."
Regarding
the Institute that bears Oates' name, Woodruff wrote:
Those
of us who had the special opportunity to study under, learn
from, and work alongside one of the world's truly great
teachers know what it means to have the Wayne E. Oates
Institute. It is an ongoing center of learning that honors
the past, activates the present, and shapes the future
in the tradition of the enormous contributions Wayne Oates
has made to theological education, clinical pastoral work,
and the eloquent integration of psychology and theology
in the focus on the living human document. In the spirit
of this great pioneer, and by honoring the conviction that
the relationship between the mind, body, and spirit work
together for health and healing, the Wayne E. Oates Institute
advances the spirituality, health, and healing dialogue
among the medical, religious, social work, and therapeutic
professionals.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS 
The
Wayne E. Oates Library Collection is made possible in
part by contributions from Eleanor and Rowland Miller
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