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Meet A Graduate: David Holmlund

David Holmlund (M.Div., ’02) is currently a doctoral student of historical theology at Calvin Theological Seminary as well as a church-planting pastor for an Orthodox Presbyterian Church in southeast New Hampshire. He is married to WSC alumna, Elizabeth Kao Holmlund (M.A. in Biblical Studies, ’02) whom he met during his studies at WSC.
As I think back to my seminary days in
Escondido and the decisions which eventually brought me
there right out of my undergraduate program, I am very
thankful for God’s providence in allowing me to study at
Westminster Seminary California. As a son of a broadly
evangelical minister, I was very new to Reformed theology
back then. I had done only a little bit of reading in the
Reformed tradition, but it was already challenging many of
my life-long assumptions. What really “sold” me on
Westminster Seminary California during my seminary search
was the unashamedly confessional approach to theological
study at WSC. While other schools offered various strengths,
I was increasingly convinced that I needed a theological
education which reflected the breadth and convictions of the
historic Reformed confessions (Westminster Confession of
Faith, Heidelberg Catechism, etc.). I was tired of
superficialities and fads, and I knew that WSC would offer a
corrective. Happily, it offered not only a corrective to my
personal lack of a solid theological foundation; it also
offered a time of fruitful preparation for pastoral ministry
because each course in the curriculum reflected a commitment
to biblical Christianity and the belief that doctrine and
Scripture are directly applicable in the life of the church.
Has Westminster Seminary California prepared me for my work
now as a pastor in a Presbyterian congregation? Well, I’m
not sure I always saw WSC as doing this to the exclusion of
preparing me for other things. For example, I spent several
years in campus ministry in southern California, and I was
quite amazed at how useful my WSC studies were in equipping
me for the secular university campus. For several years now,
I have been working on a graduate degree in historical
theology, and here again I can say that my understanding of
historic Reformed theology was an invaluable help in
navigating through the challenges of theological and
historical study at the graduate level. In recent months, I
have had the opportunity to do regular counseling with some
of the members of my church, and again I can say that the
WSC course of study was vitally important in giving me the
categories and knowledge that I found useful for Christian
counseling. These days, I do a lot of preaching and teaching
and preparing of worship services. There is not a day that
goes by when I do not pull from my training at Westminster
Seminary California.
Out here in New England, it is just amazing how hungry
believers are for historic Christianity—the solid doctrine
of the Gospel, God-honoring worship, and biblically faithful
churches. I am thankful for how one relatively small
seminary in San Diego County effectively prepared me to
serve in the capacity of a Presbyterian pastor, and I trust
that WSC will continue to equip others for Christian service
of different kinds in many different places.
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Iwan Baamann
(MDiv student)
Sunny Chung
(MA '07)
Paul Ekk (MA '03)
Brannan Ellis (MA '07)
David Holmlund
(MDiv '02)
Daniel Kok
(MDiv '02)
Shane Lems
(MDiv '07)
Brad Lenzner (MDiv '07)
Marcus
MacArthur (MA '04)
Mark Vander Pol
(MDiv student)
Katie Wagenmaker
(MATS student)
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