![]() They did not commandeer the microphone to rail at classmates about their sins even single-minded evangelicals can read a room now and then. But at the moment, he and his friends in the campus chapter of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship were trying to decide how to participate in this tense moment, when their peers were angry and probably not interested in talking about God. Keller, a new convert to Christianity and a religion major, ordinarily would have been busy with courses in existential philosophy, Buddhism, and biblical criticism. Students were protesting in the aftermath of the Kent State shootings they crowded onto the quad, half-listening to speakers who vied for the open mic. ![]() One spring day in 1970, a tall, slightly awkward undergraduate named Timothy Keller was standing with friends on the main quadrangle of Bucknell University’s campus in central Pennsylvania. ![]()
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