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Robert Webber (1933-2007)

Posted May 1, 07:39 AM | 4 comments | by Editor | Link

While we do celebrate Bob Webber’s life and thank God for his influence on so many of us, our thoughts and prayers are with the Webber family as they mourn his passing.


Noted theologian and author Dr. Robert E. Webber died Friday, April 27 in his home in Sawyer, Michigan, after an eight-month struggle with pancreatic cancer. He was 73 years old.

Dr. Webber was born in Congo of missionary parents, and was raised in the Philadelphia area. He earned the Th.D. from Concordia Theological Seminary. From 1968 to 2000 he served as Professor of Theology at Wheaton College, and was named Professor Emeritus upon his retirement in 2000. He was appointed William R. and Geraldine D. Myers Professor of Ministry and Director of the M.A. in Worship and Spirituality at Northern Baptist Theological Seminary in the fall of 2000.

Bob Webber founded The Institute for Worship Studies (now the Robert E. Webber Institute for Worship Studies) in 1998. The Institute for Worship Studies is a Masters and Doctorate level graduate school focused on the study of the theological, Biblical, historical, sociological and missiological foundations of Christian worship. The school is hosted by Grace Episcopal Church of Orange Park, Florida and combines distance learning with one-week on-campus intensive courses involving students, faculty and alumni from around the globe.

IWS Provost and President-Elect Dr. James R. Hart commented, “Bob Webber significantly influenced many in our generation with the understanding that worship is the key to the renewal of the church. We mourn the loss of our friend and mentor, but rejoice with him in worshiping the risen Christ.”

Webber was noted for his numerous writings and workshops in worship and worship renewal. His books include such titles as Evangelicals on the Canterbury Trail, Worship Is a Verb, Worship Old and New, Ancient-Future Faith, Ancient-Future Time, Ancient-Future Evangelism, Journey to Jesus, The Younger Evangelicals, and The Divine Embrace. He served as editor of the seven-volume The Complete Library of Christian Worship (Hendrickson, 1993) and was a regular columnist in Worship Leader magazine.

Webber leaves behind a wife, Joanne, four children, John (Isabel), Alexandra (Jack), Stefany (Tom), and Jeremy (Susie), seven grandchildren, and a rich legacy of friends, colleagues and students.

Memorial services will be held at or near Northern Seminary (please visit www.seminary.edu for date, time and location) and at Grace Episcopal Church in Orange Park, FL on Friday, June 15 at 7 PM, during the June session of the Institute for Worship Studies. In lieu of flowers the family has requested that donations be made to the Robert E. Webber Endowment Fund at the Institute for Worship Studies, 151 Kingsley Ave., Orange Park, FL 32073, or the Robert E. Webber Center for an Ancient Evangelical Future, c/o Northern Seminary, 660 E. Butterfield Rd., Lombard, IL 60148.

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Welcome to the Reader's Forum

1David Faulkner 05/01/2007 03:58 PM

I was saddened to read this. Webber’s writings have meant a lot to me. I have blogged briefly about him here: http://davefaulkner.typepad.com/dave_faulkner_life_spirit/2007/05/robert_webber.html

2Paul Soupiset 05/03/2007 12:36 AM

My favorite emerging voice from the evangelical world is silent. Webber’s deep understanding and “long view” of church history—and the way it informed his ecclesiology, worship, spiritual formation and missional perspective—will be missed. I had the privilege of hearing him speak in person in California and in Kentucky, where he bought my lunch once (when I only had plastic in a cash-only joint). He embodied the McLarenesque adjective “winsome” and was a uniter. He understood discipleship and rejected cheap soteriology. Bob, you will be missed. I hope to continue conversations with you in the beyond.

3T. C. Moore 05/06/2007 08:20 AM

I only recently discovered Webber’s work, but it has had a profound impact on me. His is certainly a life to celebrate.

4Deborah ruppert 06/26/2007 08:05 PM

Deeply will be missed. touched my Life unknownly! Late much late
to know.

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