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Frederick Buechner
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===Literary success and ordination=== [[File:Princeton_University_Chapel_2003.jpg|alt=|thumb|Chapel at [[Princeton University]], Buechner's alma mater]] During his senior year at [[Princeton University]], Buechner received the [[Glascock Prize|Irene Glascock Prize]] for poetry, and he also began working on his first novel and one of his greatest critical successes: ''A Long Day's Dying'', published in 1950.<ref>Buechner, Frederick (1982). ''The Sacred Journey: A Memoir of Early Days''. HarperOne. p. 107. {{ISBN|9780060611835}}</ref> The contrast between the success of his first novel and the commercial failure of his second, ''The Seasons' Difference'' (1952), a novel with characters based on Buechner and his adolescent friend James Merrill which developed a more explicit Christian theme,<ref>Merrill, James. ''A Different Person'', A Memoir, Knopf, 1993, p. 62.</ref> was palpably felt by the young novelist, and it was on this note that Buechner left his teaching position at Lawrenceville to move to New York City and focus on his writing career. In 1952, Buechner began lecturing at [[New York University]] and once again received critical acclaim for his short story "The Tiger", published in [[The New Yorker]], which was awarded third prize in the 1955 [[O. Henry Awards]].<ref>https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1955/01/09/92615387.html?pageNumber=130</ref> Also during this time, he began attending the [[Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church]], where [[George Arthur Buttrick|George Buttrick]] was pastor. It was during one of Buttrick's sermons that Buechner heard the words that inspired his ordination: Buttrick described the inward coronation of [[Christ]] as taking place in the hearts of those who believe in him "among confession, and tears, and great laughter."<ref>Buechner, Frederick (2017). ''The Remarkable Ordinary: How to Stop, Look and Listen to Life''. Zondervan. p.84. {{ISBN|9780310351900}}</ref> The impact of this phrase on Buechner was so great that he eventually entered the [[Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York|Union Theological Seminary]] of [[Columbia University]] in 1954, on a Rockefeller Brothers Theological Fellowship.<ref>Hodges, Sam (July 19, 2008). [https://www.pressreader.com/usa/the-dallas-morning-news/20080719/282510064338018 With Current Generation of Pastors Close to Retirement, Leaders Seek Young Clergy] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181218010909/https://www.pressreader.com/usa/the-dallas-morning-news/20080719/282510064338018 |date=December 18, 2018 }}. ''The Dallas Morning News''. Retrieved December 17, 2018.</ref> While at Union, Buechner studied under such renowned theologians as [[Reinhold Niebuhr]], [[Paul Tillich]], and [[James Muilenburg]], who helped Buechner in his search for understanding: {{blockquote|I wanted to learn about Christ β about the [[Old Testament]], which had been his [[Bible]], and the [[New Testament]], which was the [[Bible]] about him; about the history of the church, which had been founded on the faith that through him [[God]] had not only revealed his innermost nature and his purpose for the world, but had released into the world a fierce power to draw people into that nature and adapt them to that purpose ... No intellectual pursuit had ever aroused in me such intense curiosity, and much more than my intellect was involved, much more than my curiosity aroused. In the unfamiliar setting of a [[Presbyterian church]], of all places, I had been moved to astonished tears which came from so deep inside me that to this day I have never fathomed them, I wanted to learn more about the source of those tears and the object of that astonishment.<ref>Buechner, Frederick (1983). ''Now and Then: A Memoir of Vocation''. HarperSanFrancisco. p. 10. {{ISBN|9780061974533}}</ref>}} Buechner's decision to enter the [[seminary]] had come as a great surprise to those who knew him. Even George Buttrick, whose words had so inspired Buechner, observed that, "It would be a shame to lose a good novelist for a mediocre preacher."<ref>Buechner, Frederick (2017). ''The Remarkable Ordinary: How to Stop, Look and Listen to Life''. Zondervan. p. 85. {{ISBN|9780310351900}}</ref> Nevertheless, Buechner's ministry and writing have ever since served to enhance each other's message. Following his first year at Union, Buechner decided to take the 1955β56 school year off to continue his writing. In the spring of 1955, shortly before he left Union for the year, Buechner met his wife Judith at a dance given by some family friends. They were married a year later by [[James Muilenburg]] in [[Montclair, New Jersey|Montclair, N.J.]], and spent the next four months traveling in [[Europe]]. During this year, Buechner also completed his third novel, ''The Return of Ansel Gibbs''. After his [[sabbatical]], Buechner returned to Union to complete the two further years necessary to receive a [[Bachelor of Divinity]]. He was ordained on June 1, 1958, at the same [[Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church]] where he had heard George Buttrick preach four years earlier. Buechner was ordained as an [[Evangelist (Anglican Church)|evangelist]], or minister without pastoral charge. Shortly before graduation, as he considered his future role as minister of a parish, he received a letter from Robert Russell Wicks, formerly the Dean of the Chapel at [[Princeton University|Princeton]], who had since begun serving as school minister at [[Phillips Exeter Academy]]. Wicks offered him the job of instituting a new, full-time religion department at [[Phillips Exeter Academy|Exeter]]; Buechner decided to take the opportunity to return to teaching and to develop a program that taught religion in depth.
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