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The foundational truths that guide

Cedarville University are clearly on

display between DeVries Theatre and the

dining hall in Stevens Student Center:

LG, LO, IC, and EE.

“This covenant is in everything we do:

Love for God (LG), Love for Others (LO),

Integrity in Conduct (IC), Excellence

in Effort (EE),” noted Jon Wood,

Vice President for Student Life and

Christian Ministries. “Those are our

core values.”

“Those core values have been the

bedrock of what we’ve tried to do and what

Cedarville has always done in the lives

of students,” observed Brian Burns ’95,

Director of Student Life Programs.

“I remember Dick Walker ’74 talking

about your commitment to love the Savior;

Paul Dixon asking how we love others and

if we were serving; that you were doing

what you said you would do, your integrity;

saying everything done in the name of

Christ should have quality stamped all over

it — excellence.”

Such values have always been

important because of their biblical

underpinning in the Great Commandment

(Matt . 22 : 37–40 ) and t he Gre at

Commission (Matt. 28:18–20). In a day

when rapid change is the norm, these values

are more important than ever.

“We stand in the great tradition

that higher education is built on the

foundational truth that God is the Creator

of the universe,” Wood said. “And the study

of all knowledge is worship and pursuit

of Him.”

There’s always been spiritual darkness,

Wood affirmed, but over the last two

centuries there’s been a deepening

antagonism to a Christian worldview in

Western culture. “This is our opportunity to

equip students to stand as those who speak

to the culture around us with the specific

truth of the Gospel and the general truth of

human origins and marriage and sexuality,”

he said.

“This isn’t just about wanting to be right,

but it’s the way God designed life. Human

flourishing depends on society living

according to His truth. The more culture

deviates from this into darkness, the more

it will ultimately break down the flourishing

of our society and the people around us. It’s

really a matter of love that, as the darkness

increases, we take seriously our stewardship

to equip students to engage the world

around them.”

MAKING STUDENTS BETTER

Student Life and Christian Ministries

(SLCM) is a large umbrella at Cedarville,

capturing just about every aspect of a

student’s nonacademic experience, from

living in a residence hall, to growing

in a discipleship group, to singing with

HeartSong. It encompasses nine different

departments: Student Development,

Student Life Programs, Career Services,

Church Relations, University Medical

Services, Campus Recreation, Production

Services, Global Outreach (GO), and

Discipleship Ministries.

“They all fill one of three functions,”

said Wood. “They provide campus services

to students, they equip students, or they

provide opportunities for students to reach

out and impact the world.”

In today’s higher education terminology,

SLCM is responsible for the cocurricular side

of the Yellow Jacket learning environment.

“We come alongside the academic

foundation of the University to help

students grow in their spiritual depth,

moral character, and professional and

intellectual capability so they fulfill God’s

mission in their lives,”Wood said. “We start

with clarifying the Gospel, making sure

they understand the Gospel and are able

to share it with someone else. We want to

make sure they have truly come to a point

in life where they have been converted as

Jesus’ disciples.

“We’re building into students’ lives a

deep spiritual commitment, a walk with

God that is day in and day out, where

they’re engaging in a prayer life and have a

mindset of service and discipleship.”

It’s really the big picture of Christian

education — helping shape minds and

hearts transformed by the Word of God.

“They will be able to know and approve

what God’s good, pleasing, and perfect will

is,” Wood said, citing Romans 12:2. “He

wrote a book for us to knowHim and know

the world He created from His perspective.

When we pursue that, we can think rightly

and develop professionally in a way that will

glorify Him, whether we go out as nurses,

accountants, or missionaries.”

The tagline of a familiar ad campaign

expresses SLCM’s mission well — we don’t

make the products you use, but we make

them better. “The core of accomplishing

this is the faculty, who model a Christian

commitment and deep walk with God

and exhibit professional excellence in a

particular field,” said Wood. “Our job is to

augment and enhance what they do.”

LEADERSHIP DEFINED BY GOD

Part of that enhancement is helping

Cedarville students know and live out the

Bible’s view of leadership. “Leadership is

discipleship,” Wood said. “Leadership is

not just tied to being in front of people,

or even having an obvious title. We

define leadership with three key words:

stewardship, influence, and service.”

Burns added, “Leadership is the

stewardship of one’s God-given gifts,

abilities, and opportunities in seeking to

influence and serve others.”

That def init ion is rol led out ,

explained, and discussed during Getting

Started Weekend. “If you wait till

they’re sophomores, you’ve missed it,”

Burns said. “When they’re with their

Resident Assistants (RA) and they

hear, ‘We need to be good stewards,’

there will be that connector right from

the beginning.”

Not all Cedarville students will hold

leadership positions, but it’s hoped that by

beginning the discussion early on, they’ll

retain a stewardship-influence-service

definition of leadership by graduation. “The

University’s mission is to create lifelong

learners,” Burns said. “We better make

“We define leadership with three key words: stewardship,

influence, and service.”

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Cedarville Magazine