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Dr. G. & Friends  |  

Intelligent People

I met a rare kind of person last week.

He was what I’ll describe as a genuinely intelligent person.

There are plenty of smart or knowledgeable people around, and given that I spend a lot of time around “academic types” I run into a lot of them from all fields.

But there’s a difference between being merely smart, and being truly intelligent. And often it takes meeting a genuinely intelligent person to learn the difference.

 

The question of what constitutes intelligence has been around for a good while now.

From the work of the statistically cold and psychometric-driven Binet and Thorndike to the nuance of Gardner’s multiple intelligences, to Goleman’s “emotional” intelligence we’ve sought to both identify and enhance intelligence, however defined.

Long before Alfred Binet took out his proverbial ruler to measure I.Q. St. Anthony the Great (c. 251–356) spoke about intelligence in the way I experienced it last week. Anthony wrote:

People are generally called intelligent through a wrong use of this word. The intelligent are not those who have studied the sayings and writings of the wise men of old, but those whose soul is intelligent, who can judge what is good and what evil; they avoid what is evil and harms the soul and intelligently care for and practice what is good and profits the world, greatly thanking God.

Honestly, I don’t recall as elegant a definition of what constitutes intelligence. Sometimes you just can’t improve on “old school.” Are you cultivating your intelligence?


Israel Galindo is Associate Dean for Lifelong Learning at the Columbia Theological Seminary. He directs the Pastoral Excellence Program at Columbia seminary. He is the author of the bestseller, The Hidden Lives of Congregations (Alban), Perspectives on Congregational Leadership (Educational Consultants), and A Family Genogram Workbook (Educational Consultants), with Elaine Boomer & Don Reagan, and Leadership in Ministry: Bowen Theory in the Congregational Context.

His books on education include Mastering the Art of Instruction,The Craft of Christian Teaching (Judson), How to be the Best Christian Study Group Leader (Judson), and Planning for Christian Education Formation (Chalice Press).

Galindo contributes to the Wabash Center’s blog for theological school deans and to its teaching and learning blogs.

Dr. G. & Friends