I want my friends to see this lovely tribute to my husband by his former coworker and our friend Katelyn Beaty. I linked to it on Facebook, but the Christianity Today firewall didn't let everybody read the whole thing. So here it is, in flagrant violation of copyright. If you subscribe to CT, you can also read it there, with better formatting.
Honoring David Neff, The Gentleman Scholar
A tribute to Christianity Today's esteemed editor in chief.
When I started in 2007 as CT's copy editor, I had three go-to grammar guides: The American Heritage Dictionary, The Chicago Manual of Style, and David Neff.
It turns out the last guide was also the best. After spotting a
misplaced comma or extra hyphen, David would walk down to my office,
kindly and clearly explain the linguistic law behind the change, and
point me to the right cms entry. And also throw in a historical tidbit,
just for fun. I trusted his wisdom so much that I began asking
WWDD?—"What Would David Do?"—before tricky editing projects, as no doubt
many staff have over the years.
Conversations like these underscore why editor Mark Galli named David
"a gentleman and a scholar" at a June board meeting honoring David's
legacy. In various leadership roles (six of them!) over 28 years, David
kept this magazine centered on the Cross when many voices co-opted the
word evangelical for political ends. Yet David also made sure
CT's firm theology bore witness to social issues of the day, calling
Christians to bring the Good News to all members and segments of
society. The gentleman-scholar's fingerprints are all over two key
documents of evangelical thought: "For the Health of the Nation" (2004)
and "An Evangelical Manifesto" (2008).
David's fingerprints are also all over this ministry. Some prints worth noting here: helping to launch sister magazine Books & Culture; prepping a forthcoming Spanish edition of CT;
mentoring former and current staff who are shaping religious journalism
in their own key ways; representing CT in dialogues with Jews, Mormons, and Muslims;
and in countless seen and unseen ways, raising our bar of journalistic
excellence. This doesn't even touch on David's roles outside this
ministry (as trustee of the Robert Webber Worship Institute, husband of
LaVonne, and choirmaster of St. Barnabas Episcopal Church).
As I write this, David is packing up his office, preparing for
retirement. And I am thinking of what the halls will be like without his
wisdom, insight, and vast body of knowledge gracing them. I am thinking
of our staff birthday celebrations, and wondering who will hum to get
us all singing "Happy Birthday" on the right note. We anticipate many
good things ahead for David (he says that a Definitive History of Evangelical Protestantism
is not in the plans, though I have my doubts). But we well know that
we're losing a gentleman and a scholar who got ct singing on the right
note for nearly three decades. May we carry on the tune well.
I cannot imagine CT without David's presence. But I know this new season will bring its own set of opportunities. I look forward to seeing how the Lord leads you both in the coming season of your lives!
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