Tag Archives: College

Time to Make a Shift

I wanted to share a few highlights from our recent area-wide fall conference, shift.11 at Black Rock Retreat.

Here are quotes from students at York College, from a great blog post from Evan, our InterVarsity staff at York:

“I didn’t realize I could have a personal relationship with God – Growing up, it was just sort of this communal thing, something everybody did.”

“I’ve been panicking about my future a lot lately. Asking a lot of questions. God’s showing me how to ask the right ones, and he’s interrupting that feedback loop that just fuels the panic.”

“That seminar really helped me… usually when I talk to people who don’t believe in Jesus, I just debate it with them. But now I get that I can have compassion, and ask questions. I can stop trying to ‘win’ the conversation, but see them like Jesus does.”

Check out Evan’s full post, and check back here for more pictures soon!

Connecting to the corners of Our Campuses

Some exciting things have been developing this semester as college students across South Central Pennsylvania press out to the corners of their campuses.

At York College, students wrestled with how to engage their friends during St. Patrick’s Day festivities.  From their InterVarsity staff worker’s blog:

As more and more young adults become convinced that this is the one and only standard by which to measure the good life, we see campuses devolving into communities of nascent alcoholism, addiction, and escapism. St. Patty’s Day offers an excuse get drunk in so spectacular a fashion that friends will be talking about it for weeks, though you yourself will have no memory of it.

Jesus managed to hang with some pretty unsavory types. He liked them. He went where they lived, he ate their food, he sat on their couches, and he listened to their stories. Jesus loves broken folks, dirty folks, poorly-behaved folks. Why? Because like a doctor making house calls, he’s come for the sick.

As a broken, dirty, poorly-behaved dude myself, I’m grateful.

Fast forward 2,000 years to this Thursday. Based on the kind of folks Jesus went out of his way to befriend, where would you see him? Some student friends and I have decided where we’re spending our Saint Patrick’s Day – How about you?

At Dickinson College, students are gathering their friends and new acquaintances to have spiritual conversations.  A recent update from their InterVarsity staff:

Our spiritual discussion group this past week went well. Those who came said that they were happy to see something like this on campus. They were engaged and actively participated in the discussion. One girl kept saying, “This is blowing my mind!” Our discussion really caused her to think in a new way. We are hopeful that this discussion group will gain momentum.

At Penn State Harrisburg, their InterVarsity staff has been working on calling students to a vision of connecting across campus.  A recent text message from the staff:

I stated the vision 100 times today.  Result: could interpret need to invite to “dessert party” after bible study today and participate in open mic night missionally. More students excited and articulate about mission.

Soularium

An update from Kelly, Campus Staff at Dickinson College:

At the end of last semester, we (the student Soularium team & I) had decided to try another run of Soularium early in the spring semester with a follow-up discussion group meeting.  One of my favorite moments was at one point when this one girl was taking the survey while her friend watched. “I’m just watching,” the friend said at first when I asked if she wanted to do it at the same time. After the girl was done, her friend, intrigued after having observed, said “Can I do it!?” “Of course!” I replied.

A couple of days later, during the second round of Soularium, I was particularly struck/amused by this pair of friends, two sophomore guys, who did it together. I had stepped out and went through my usual plea, “Hi I’m with Dickinson Christian Fellowship, and we’re doing this survey to find out more about the spiritual lives of students on campus, do you have a few minutes to do it? It’s sort of connected to the pictures.” They looked at each other. One said, “Do we want to do it?” The other replied, “Sure, let’s do it!” They went on to absolutely love it. They said multiple times, “This is the best survey I’ve ever done!” They gave extremely long in-depth answers to each question. They loved the whole idea of it- answering using the photographs, as well as the spiritual nature of the questions.

These ended up being the two students who showed up to our follow-up discussion group this past Tuesday. The theme of the meeting was peace & serenity, since it was a big common theme from our Soularium surveying- students feel that they are lacking it in their crazy college schedules but really want it in their lives. Our outline for the meeting looked something like this:

  • Intro:  What does peace mean to you?
  • Where do you find that peace? Can you find it on campus?
  • Philippians 4:4-7  Do you pray? Do you see any purpose or value in prayer?
  • For you, is there a connection between peace & prayer?
  • John 14:27, 16:33  The world is not a peaceful place. However, Jesus claims to bring peace/be a source of peace.
  • What do you think about Jesus?

We all participated in the discussion. The two friends really liked sharing their personal ideas and experiences, but also hearing ours. We had a lot of interesting discussion on peace, prayer, the Bible and Jesus. One of the guys is an atheist, and the other Quaker. So they had varying ideas and experiences but both really liked to talk about them with us. They were interested in what I had to say and share.

Something particularly intriguing was the atheist student. He had attended one or two of a secular students organization’s meetings. He (and his friend agreed with him) said that they are very anti-Christian in their atheism. They don’t even talk about other deist religions (theoretically they would disagree with them as well) but tended to just be against Christianity. It caused this student to lose respect for them- even though he is an atheist. He doesn’t even like to be associated with them. He specifically said that even though he technically identified with them belief-wise, he preferred talking with us- the Christian Fellowship- about spiritual things. Both friends said they really enjoyed our discussion and would like to come to more of them.

Interested in hearing what people are saying in response to Soularium?  Read here.

Interested in conducting your own Soularium surveys?  Order here.

Renewing Campuses begins with RESTORE

About a week ago, on January 29, about 70 college students from across South Central Pennsylvania gathered at Lebanon Valley College’s campus in Annville PA.  The gathering was for Restore 2011, a one-day conference focusing on restoring our own inner beings for the sake of then turning to restore the world around us, titled “Life on the Road”.

Students from Millersville University arrive at Restore 2011.

Students were led in a moving time of musical worship led by Nick Peterson, and then offered some insights into a conversational relationship with God through two short talks by Dan McWilliams.

There was time to put these new ideas into practice.  Students took an hour in silence to simply be present with God and listen, followed by many lively conversations between students from different schools.

Finally, in the afternoon, students broke into more focused practice groups to help put into practical terms this journey of following Jesus, both on the college campus and in life after college.  Seniors preparing to graduate played a Time Management game to simulate decisions they will soon face as they balance home life, work, friendships, and church.

Students pondering their next moves in a Time Management Game.

Students playing the Time Management Game.

Curious about time management and what these seniors are wrestling with?  Check out this video of Scott Belsky over at the 99 Percent.

Here’s what Kelly, InterVarsity staff at Dickinson College, had to say:

Students enjoyed the opportunity to get off campus and attend an event with other Christian students, a change from the usual campus fellowship atmosphere. At dinner together in my apartment afterwards, students shared that their favorite part of Restore was the hour of quiet time with God they had after the first speaking session. The speaker had provided a few questions to reflect on for this time.  Each of the students felt that it was an expectionally good quiet time, with no distractions and silence–something hard to come by on Dickinson’s busy campus. We brainstormed ways they could find such spaces, which led to sharing of some of the more obscure little known places on campus that we have found.

Video: InterVarsity at Dickinson

Kelly, InterVarsity staff at Dickinson College, explains what InterVarsity is and why we do what we do.  Enjoy!

http://kellyatdson.blogspot.com/2010/11/video.html

Final Exams

As we head into final exams at our college campuses around South Central PA, here are a few reflections from campus staff Jesse Stowell, serving students at Penn State Harrisburg and Lebanon Valley College.

Finals are a melodramatic time in the life of a college student:
Sometimes you wake up in the library at 3am, surprised that your body is still functioning.
Sometimes you realize that you’ve given yourself 100 hours to research, but only 10 hours to write the term-paper…
And sometimes romantic difficulties make a final project nearly impossible to concentrate on.

As the end of the semester looms, college students everywhere are under pressure to write term papers, study for final exams, and place the finishing touches on senior projects.

Please pray for the college students you know!
Send an email of love and prayer to encourage them!

Many students will need strength from the Holy Spirit to stay motivated (I know I did), and reminders of love will help them to remember God in what often feels like an endless, sleepless, over-caffeinated week of madness.

shift.10 Opening Night

Students from across South Central Pennsylvania have arrived at Black Rock Retreat, in record numbers: 92 students from 7 campuses.  Students came with excitement and anticipation and were not disappointed by this first evening.  Betsy Staudt Willet led moving worship, Neil Livingstone brought the word from Luke 5, and students dove in getting to know each other across campuses in a lively open mic coffeehouse emceed by Nick Peterson.

All to begin digging into the question: how are you pursuing the good life?

Tonight, from Luke 5, we see a guy named Simon get interrupted by Jesus jumping into his boat, challenged by Jesus to take it deeper, and then find himself standing knee deep in fish.  How might Jesus be breaking out of all the boxes we put him in?  What boxes do I even have?  Where do I find myself?

Back to campus!

As you’re well aware, a new school year is upon us!  I’m amazed at what change happens between the early weeks of August and the end of the month.  Besides all the kids heading back to school, there were 50,000 undergrads across South Central PA heading to campus.  That’s like 90% of the city of Lancaster deciding to change work schedules and living arrangements within a two week window of each other.  It creates some chaos!

I remember back 11 years ago, to my first few days on a college campus.  I remember at the strange new rhythms of life, like leaving “home” (my dorm room) at midnight to wander across the quad to another dorm to see who was around to hang out.  In high school, no one I knew ever casually wandered around their neighborhood in the middle of the night looking for snacks and a chat.

And even though this mass migration occurs every year around this time, every late summer is a little different.  Again going back 11 years, I remember going through the campus activities fair to see all the various student groups, and everyone kept wanting my email address.  At that point, I was like 90% of other internet users and had an AOL account, but really email was a novelty, little more.  So I had no qualms about giving the address to anyone and everyone who asked, quickly signing up for about 2o clubs.  A few days later, in my first classes, my professors also wanted my email, promising that they’d be sending assignments…  That back-to-school season marked the introduction of email into my life, no longer as a novelty, but as a primary communication tool.

These changes in technology keep coming, marked in significant ways by a new school year.  My senior year of college, when we all arrived back on campus, suddenly everyone had a cell phone!  About five years ago, Facebook had some followers through the winter and spring, but it wasn’t until the fall back-to-school transition that almost everyone had an account.  We see hints of these changes coming over the summer, but they’re not fully manifested until a few weeks into the semester.  And so I ask and wonder–what will be new this year?

With the mass migration and the cultural changes, this can be a disruptive time for new students.  Purposefully so, this is the busiest time of the year for our InterVarsity staff and students.  As one staff wrote recently in an update:

Please pray with us, especially in these first few weeks of school, that the current students would reach out to the new ones, and that everyone on campus would have an opportunity to be connected to someone who is living out their faith and ultimately connected to God.

May it be so.

“I don’t want to grow up…”

A story of a witnessing community from Evan Smith, campus staff at York College:

“I don’t want to grow up…and college is a great place to not grow up!”

These words were at once saddening and beautiful to hear from one member of our Vision Team.  Saddening, because it is so true — college has, for many, become a context in which to put off responsibility for choices, to relax and just be “infants, tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and there by every wind of teaching by the cunning and craftiness of people.”  (Ephesians 4:14)

But it was also beautiful to hear because of the context — our Vision Team was beginning to share some of the fears and struggles they face looking at their calling for the upcoming year.  For this student, it was tempting to long for a time with no cares or responsibility, but also no influence or leadership for the renewal of the campus.  As she and others learned to share their fears openly with each other, I could almost see the bonds of community forming.  We prayed for her, and each other — “be strong and courageous” as Jesus leads on…

What is enough?

The question of enough has been haunting me for a while now.  Most of my time has been spent around the issue of materialism, as I’ve wrestled with the specific question, “What is enough stuff?”  To be sure, this is an important question in our day and age of excess and entitlement.  It’s a question that I’m reminded of every year around this time, as college students move out of the dorms and leave dumpsters piled high with perfectly functional goods that they just don’t feel like taking home with them.  Even with the green shift, we live in a disposable culture.  Perhaps this is the inherent contradiction of the Millenials: desiring to save the world, but not wanting to be inconvenienced by budgeting or packing light.

On one hand, packing light and keeping the enough stuff threshold is incredibly freeing: there’s less to worry about, less to remember, less to store.  But the other hand, it’s incredibly difficult.  Keeping to a budget is a discipline not easily mastered but many of us free spirits.  Giving up a shirt that I really like but haven’t worn in the past year is strangely personally painful.

Besides stuff, this issue of enough extends into just about every part of life.  Most of the college students I know are asking questions like, “What is enough study and preparation?” and “What is enough community?” and “What is enough sex?” (that’s a blog post unto itself).  Professors have to grapple with questions of “What research is enough?” and “What publishing is enough?”  Friends in every profession wrestle similarly.

The enough question hit me in a new way today as I read my favorite blogger, Seth Godin.  The post I read provoked a new question: “What is enough generosity?”

This is difficult in its own way.  Followers of Jesus squirm around the issues of no good actions meriting more or less of God’s favor, and yet what we do does matter.  Jesus’ call for us to follow him asks for our whole lives, but how do we quantify?  It’s easy to say that all my money is God’s anyway and thus easy to give away, but that’s a nice generality and not as helpful in making a specific choice.  This evening I’ve been pausing to honestly reflect on how I avoid known needs, on where I casually walk around places I know I’ll be asked to help.

This is a question for my own generosity, and it is a question I face as I am the one doing the asking for the generosity of others (as a person who fundraises a full budget for a religious non-profit).  As I ask for financial partnership, what does that do to those I ask, as they are on their own journey of navigating enough in generosity.  I want to invite greater generosity, not subtly introduce either arrogance or numbness.  I’m not sure there’s an answer to this, just something for those of us in fundraising or sales to be conscious of.

What do you think?  Where is enough for you?  What is your journey?