CIU Today - June2015 PDF
CIU Today - June2015 PDF
CIU Today - June2015 PDF
www.ciu.edu
A higher standard.
A higher purpose.
Summer 2015
FEATURES
10
12
May Commencement
14
Student Entrepreneurs
18
DEPARTMENTS
www.ciu.edu
20
Academics
22
Athletics
24
Campus Life
26
Development
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Alumni
Ill have to admit that when CIU Today designer Seth Berry told me late last year that he
entered the premier edition of this magazine in the Collegiate Advertising Awards contest, I was
doubtful we would win anything. In recent months, Seth and I reviewed a number of collegiate
magazines and I was impressed with both the content of the articles and the graphic design of
each publication. I knew that the CIU Today staff had put their best into that first October 2013
edition of the magazine, and we were pleased with the results but could it win an award?
Then, in late January, Seth was beaming as he walked down
the hallway to my office with the news that we had won
Gold in the single magazine category for Faith-Based
Colleges and Universities. Wow! And this is no small thing.
Bob Holmes, Editor-in-Chief
Letters to the Editor are welcome.
Correspondence must include
your name, address and phone
number. The editor reserves the
right to determine the suitability
of letters for publication and to
edit for clarity and length. There
is no guarantee your letter will
be published, nor will letters be
returned. Write to:
CIU Today Editor
Columbia International University
7435 Monticello Road
Columbia, SC 29203
Or e-mail
publicrelations@ciu.edu
Bob Holmes
CIU Today
Editor-in-Chief
CIU Today
Summer 2015
CIUNews
CIU NEWS
It was cool thinking that someone who could become the president cared enough to
come to our college, freshman Addie Allen said. It seemed pretty significant [that
he was here].
Perry also met with several CIU student leaders before he gave his message.
He was very relational with each person he met, and ... he showed a lot of interest
in them as a person, said junior Anni Jackson, who met with Perry beforehand. He
seemed down-to-earth.
Though Perry had to leave CIUs campus quickly to make other appointments, he left
a lasting mark on CIU students.
I enjoyed hearing his heart about God working in his life and changing him,
Jackson said. It was refreshing to hear someone with so much power and influence
talk about being broken before the Lord [and] moved deeply by Him.
www.ciu.edu
CIU Today
CIUNews
CIU NEWS
The competition also offers two additional $10,000 scholarships. The runners-up
include Ashton Collum of Warrenville, South Carolina who plans on majoring in
Psychology and become a counselor to at-risk youth. The other runner-up is Vlad
Hruntkovskyi who currently lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. He desires to major in
Business & Organizational Leadership and return to his home country of Ukraine after
graduation to be involved in government.
A Special Thanks
CIU President Emeritus Robertson
McQuilkin joined faculty, staff and
students at a reception honoring CIU
Board of Trustees member Marvin
Schuster. Schuster retired from the Board
in May after 28 years of service. The
Schuster Building on the CIU campus is
named for Mr. Schuster and his wife
Ruth.
The scholarship is named for Columbia Christian radio station WMHK, launched by
CIU in 1976 and now operated by the K-LOVE radio network.
CIU Today
Summer 2015
CIU NEWS
www.ciu.edu
CIU Today
MANAGING
MOES and
a MASTERS
CIU Student Finds God Faithful as
he Juggles Tacos and Theology
By Bob Holmes
CIU Today
Summer 2015
number of reasons:
maturity beyond his
years, ability to do
graduate-level work
without a bachelors
degree, juggling
full-time employment
and school, and
for preaching skills
that earned him
the annual Vance
Havner scholarship,
awarded to a student
on recommendation
from the faculty.
It is fairly common
to be able to write one or two of these
comments about many of our students,
Harvey noted. But it is rare to be able to
write all of them about one student.
So, how has Saxon gone about managing
Moes and a Master of Divinity degree?
Not watching a whole lot of television,
Saxon says with a laugh. I guess time
management is a pretty decent strength
of mine.
He describes the first couple of semesters
when his wife was working a night job and
he would, Race home after work and she
would hand the baby off ... at 8:15 I would
put the baby down and get the Hebrew
book out.
Saxon deflects praise of his academic
abilities, and instead credits a supportive
and excellent wife and points to two
components of CIU that helped him make
it through. One of those components is
the flexibility of the M.Div. program.
Master of Divinity degrees are available
both on campus and online, which
became especially crucial for Saxon when
Moes promoted him to district manager.
That meant moving to Charlotte, North
Carolina around the same time his third
child was born.
You could keep having children, change
jobs and change cities and keep moving
forward at the same pace, Saxon said.
CIU Today
mon, Dad. Itll be fun! This was my sons invitation to take a stand-up
comedy class from the Comedy Zone in Charlotte, North Carolina, just
a short drive up the interstate from Columbia. I agreed. And the rest is history.
Fairly humorous history.
The dozen students came from a wide variety of backgrounds; only one of
them identified himself as a Jesus follower. The two instructors explained
the type of comedy they were looking for as we developed over six weekly
sessions our three-minute sets which we performed at our graduation
showcase the seventh week.
The experience was quite educative for me. I learned a lot about this kind of
comedy (not easy to do). GTTF was often used by the instructors Get To
The Funny! The material presented by most of the other students made me
cringe. Their topics ranged from multiple divorces to sex education at Planned
Parenthood to...well, you get the idea. My set focused on my getting older,
exercise (or lack thereof), and dieting. For example:
My wife said to me the other day, Honey, it just dawned on me that there are
70 pounds of you that Im not legally married to... (Insert laughter.)
CIU Today
One student asked me in the mens room after class, Is it really true you and
your wife have been married for 44 years?! I said, yes. He asked, Whats your
secret? I said, Well, it takes three to make a solid marriage the Lord right
in the center.
At the first session, one of our exercises was to introduce ourselves. One
Harvard-educated student made clear that she is an atheist. So I made clear
that I am a theist and then had to explain it to the class!
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Summer 2015
This sub-culture
isnt being
reached by the
church.
Larry Dixon, Ph.D.
This sub-culture isnt being reached by
the church. Just so you know, Im not
particularly tempted to resort to comedy
material that would strip the stain off a nuns
desk. But these folk need the Lord, and His
forgiveness, and His cleansing!
Im not planning on retiring from teaching,
but there may be opportunities for me to
do clean comedy for Christian audiences,
senior citizens cruises to Alaska, perhaps
even a performance for organizations like
AARP.
Theres a lot of funny in our world. Lets not
leave it to the gross, the perverse, and the
lost. We were once there (Titus 3:3- foolish,
disobedient, deceived and enslaved by all
kinds of passions and pleasures. We lived
in malice and envy, being hated and hating
one another.) but now we have a lot to
laugh about!
If youre interested in seeing the set I
performed, you may find it on the March 1
entry at my blog:
www.larrydixon.wordpress.com.
www.ciu.edu
I think we had clean fun in our particular recording, and we were kind of
disappointed that we didnt win, Howell said. But in reflection, we can
say, We actually did this thing; we actually did this as a family and thats an
experience that we will take with us the rest of our lives. But for me, I just went
on the show because my aunt asked me to.
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CIU Today
MAY
COMMENCEMENT
A Time for Joy, a Time for Tears
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MAY COMMENCEMENT
www.ciu.edu
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CIU Today
Student entrepreneurs
at the Ram Shack.
(Left to right) Cousins
Suzanna Mitchell
and Sarah Bateman
display their BALMble
Bee Lip Balm while
Ram Shack Manager
Kathy Weathersby
and Christy Rutt hold
samples of Rutts Tiny
Tells messages. Both
products are available
at the Ram Shack, the
on-campus CIU store.
ENTREPRENEURS
AMONG US
Entrepreneur: a person who organizes and manages any
enterprise, especially business, usually with considerable
initiative and risk. Dictionary.com
Step up to the counter at the Ram Shack, the CIU student store
and coffee house, and youll notice professional displays of various
products including lip balm and colorful note cards. You have to
actually be in the know to realize the lip balm and note cards
were not placed there by national vendors. They are produced
and marketed by ambitious CIU students who not only keep up
their grades, but have created businesses on the side.
CIU Today got to know the young ladies behind Tiny Tells
and ShoShana Natural, as well as a student who has a business
meeting your heating and air condition needs.
Meet the entrepreneurs among us at CIU.
CIU Today
14
Summer 2015
ENTREPRENEURS AMONG US
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CIU Today
ENTREPRENEURS AMONG US
A Natural Thing
Mitchell and Bateman mix the lip balm, package it, and
ship it to those who order at their online store at
etsy.com, and sell it in CIUs new on-campus store, the
Ram Shack.
CIU Today
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Summer 2015
ENTREPRENEURS AMONG US
www.ciu.edu
Peter Yeh
17
SOCCER
GOAL:
Spread the Gospel
in Guatemala
By Brittany Bradley, CIU Student Writer
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www.ciu.edu
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CIU Today
ACADEMICS
ACADEMICS
CIU SSM Launches Five-Year
M.Div. Program
By Dr. John Harvey
Dean of CIU Seminary & School of Ministry
CIU Today
20
Dr. John
Harvey (left)
discusses
the Five-Year
M.Div. with
student Cam
Duecker.
Summer 2015
ACADEMICS
Connexus
RESOURCES
New Books by CIU Professors
21
CIU Today
ATHLETICS
ATHLETICS
75
I was head over heels in love with the game, said Coach
George Bryan. I was addicted.
I would literally sleep four, five hours a night, maybe six, and
I would be at the golf course before the sun would come up
practicing under the lights, not lights that you flip on, but street
lights, so I was practicing in the dark, Bryan added.
The commitment paid off. Bryan made the USC Gamecocks
mens golf squad as a walk-on freshman, and golf would become
his vocation.
After college, Bryan pursued a professional golf career
personally teaching and coaching hundreds of professionals and
amateurs, and implementing golf-related entrepreneurial and
educational endeavors for over 25 years.
Bryan created the Irmo-Chapin Recreation Commission Golf
Program in suburban Columbia and was instrumental in various
golf initiatives in South Carolina schools through the South
Carolina Junior Golf Association (SCJGA). He also created the
George Bryan Golf Academy located at various golf courses
throughout the Columbia area helping juniors and adults
improve their game.
Soft-spoken with graying hair, a warm smile, and a face slightly
weathered by decades on sunny southern golf courses, the
53-year-old downplays his score as below par and says he has
had the privilege of competing at times at the highest levels.
Major golf events on his resume include the PGA Championship
at Medina Country Club near Chicago in 1999 and at Harbour
Town on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina in 2004.
About the only thing Bryan did not have on his golf resume was
college coach. That brings us to the second life-changing event
in his life.
October 1, 2013, spiritually, I came alive, Bryan begins his
Christian testimony.
Since that day Bryan has wanted to serve and glorify God.
Bryan says before that date he was a church goer, but a very
CIU Today
22
Summer 2015
ATHLETICS
Womens Basketball
Mens Soccer
Womens Soccer
www.ciu.edu
23
CIU Today
CAMPUS LIFE
CAMPUS LIFE
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Summer 2015
CAMPUS LIFE
The coffee house feel of the Ram Shack has made the former
www.ciu.edu
25
CIU Today
DEVELOPMENT
Guatemalans changed,
so were the lives of the
members of the CIU
soccer team.
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21
DEVELOPMENT
www.ciu.edu
27
CIU Today
COMING
THIS SUMMER
With an attractive design, the new CIU.edu will feature easy navigation
so you can find what you are looking for with just a click or two. Plus, youll enjoy:
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Summer 2015
ALUMNI
ALUMNI
A Special University
Still Indebted after 70 Years
By Stan French (57)
Stan French
as a CIU student.
CIU not only provided me with a life-shaping education but also with a girl who
shared the same goals. How much can you ask from any university?
Dorothy and I have come to realize what a difference CIU has meant to us
individually and to our marriage. Also, both of my sisters and their spouses were
impacted for life by CIU. We often reminisce at get-togethers.
In later years I enrolled in masters and doctoral programs in history and Hebrew culture at New York University, but the time I
spent at CIU shaped my entire life in a way that nothing else has ever matched. I taught for 15 years at what is now Kings College
in New York City, which had the same goals as CIU, and tried in that way among others, to repay all that I had received.
As I look back over almost 70 years since first arriving on campus, I realize how much I am indebted to those faithful Christian men
and women who shaped my entire life. I am even more in debt to a God who blessed me greatly by leading me to CIU.
www.ciu.edu
29
CIU Today
ALUMNI
ALUMNIClass Notes
1940s
1950s
Ed (51) and Mary Lee (Fry) (52) Walker served in Haiti for
23 years, equipping national leaders and building a vibrant
radio ministry. After returning to the United States, Ed
served as World Teams U.S. director for seven years, before
1
CIU Today
1960s
Barbara (Ardis) Coker 62 4 lives in Sumter, South
Carolina where she is active in her home church, Faith
Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church. Barbara prepares
the worship bulletins and serves as substitute pianist/organist
barbaracoker@ftc-i.net
Gordon (69) and Andrea (Steelman) (69) Simms 5 serve
with Interim Pastor Ministries where Gordon is director
of coaching. Gordon is also interim pastor at Windhaven
Church in Mt. Jackson, Virginia. He and Andrea have three
children and have their permanent residence in Factoryville,
Pennsylvania. gdsimms@live.com
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Summer 2015
ALUMNI
1970s
John (76) and Linn (Dillard) Crowe (76) met at CIU. John
pastored a CMA church in Charlotte, North Carolina for
six years before serving in Portugal for 12 years with Bible
Christian Union (BCU) and The Evangelical Alliance Mission
(TEAM), and then in Cairo, Egypt for six and a half years. They
founded MRCofNC (www.MRCofNC.org) two years ago, which
connects missionaries to the resources they need, such as
use of a car, counselors, places of respite, debriefs, etc. The
great bonus is that they are located in Raleigh, North Carolina,
where their two daughters, Ashley Martindale (00) and Julie
Hayes (04) live with their four and two kiddos respectively!
Jim (78) and Sue (77) Ness 6 praise the Lord that after
30 years of working with Wycliffe on the Daasanach Bible
Translation and Literacy project in Kenya, the Daasanach New
Testament is complete. The dedication took place in northern
Kenya in September 2014. jrness08@yahoo.com
Jean (Nelson) Werner (78) served with Pioneers abroad. She
now lives stateside, promoting interaction between Americans
and incoming international graduate students.
jnwerner2001@yahoo.com
1980s
Grady Enlow (82) 7 has been appointed as the new vice
president for Institutional Advancement at Thomas University.
Dr. Enlow will supervise personnel in the areas of fundraising,
alumni relations, foundation relations and communication. He
received his Doctor of Education degree in higher education
this past December from Florida State University.
genlow@thomasu.edu
1990s
Greg (92) and Emily Bryan 8 , along with their children,
were featured on the hit HGTV show Hawaii Life as the
family was making the move to Oahu from Ohio to restart a
campus ministry at the University of Hawaii.
gregbryan@gmail.com
www.ciu.edu
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CIU Today
ALUMNI
Mike (99) and Beth Matheson and their two girls are moving
to Papua New Guinea with Wycliffe Bible Translators. Mike will
be ministering as a youth pastor to over 100 teenage missionary
kids who live on a large mission base in the highlands. You can
learn more about their ministry at www.mkyouthpastor.com.
2000s
Matt (00) and Joanne Cole live in College Station, Texas
where Matt works as chief litigation counsel for Sexing
Technologies, a world leader in livestock reproductive
services. He advises his clients on matters related to risk
management, compliance, and growth opportunities. He
received his law degree from Baylor. They have three children:
Kaleb (16), Belle (13) and Emma (11). mattgcole@gmail.com
Tim (01) and Jenita (01) Pace 9 and their son Carter (age
10), live in Etowah, North Carolina where Tim is a pastoral
intern at Grace Community Church. He completed his Master
of Theological Studies at CIU in May. Jenita is a counselor at
Brevard High School. tarheelpace@gmail.com
Kevin (03/11) and Tara (Direnzo) (03) Figgins 10 will
celebrate 13 years of marriage this year. They have four
children, Ashtyn (11), Jada (9), Ellie (6), and Malachi (4). They
recently moved back to the Columbia area to work as church
planters-in-residence at Columbia Presbyterian Church in
downtown Columbia with the hope of planting a church in
Lexington, South Carolina in January of 2016.
www.ctklexington.org
Claudio and Amy (Donell) (05) Molina 11 have two
daughters, Jillian and Olivia, and are in pastoral training.
Before moving to the United States two years ago, they lived
in Argentina. Amy worked as an ESL teacher and Claudio as
pastor of a church in Villa Carlos Paz. They hope to return to
Argentina in 2018. amydonellmolina@gmail.com
9
2010s
Gregory (14) and Rachel Vruggink 14 have four children
and live in Grand Rapids, Michigan where Greg is working on
a Master of Theology degree at Calvin Theological Seminary.
He is employed as an online writing instructor and theological
researcher. gregvruggink@gmail.com
Philip Thompson (14) is a husband and new father who
serves as a lay teacher at Suber Road Baptist Church in Greer,
South Carolina. He holds a Master of Arts in Theological
Studies from Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary and a
Master of Divinity from Columbia International University.
He wrote an article titled, 5 Ways to Prepare for Vocational
Ministry published on the website of the Council on Biblical
Manhood and Womanhood www.cbmw.org.
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12
13
10
14
CIU Today
32
Summer 2015
ALUMNI
Will Norton Sr. (39),
celebrated his 100th
birthday on Feb. 14, 2015,
Valentines Day at Go Ye
Village, a retirement home
in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.
With him was Colene (39),
his wife of nearly 76 years.
Colene celebrated her
100th birthday on May 19,
2014. The couple met at
CIU (then Columbia Bible
College), married after
graduation, and began a
long career together of
taking the gospel to the
ends of the earth. In 2012,
Will Norton was awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree
from CIU for his ministry in the Belgian Congo and Nigeria where
he founded a seminary and Bible institute. Dr. Norton was also
instrumental in the founding of the triennial Urbana Missionary
Conference that challenges thousands of young people to enter
missionary service.
CIU alumnus David Moreland (67)
received the Lifetime Achievement
Award from Shell Point Retirement
Community in Fort Myers, Florida
where he has served as vice president
of sales and marketing for 31 years.
Moreland and his wife Shirley Hunt
Moreland (71) met at CIU where they
continue to have a significant impact.
David is a member of the CIU Board
of Trustees and Shirley is a former
president of the Alumni Council. They have twin sons; David
and Jonathan (98) and four grandchildren.
33
CIU Today
ALUMNI
The Celebration of
Dr. David Chows Honor
at Homecoming
November 6, 2015
CIU Today
34
Summer 2015
Weve heard much in the news recently about several states passing bills with names
such as The Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Those of us who follow Christ can
certainly appreciate any legislative body that desires to codify further the religious
freedom stated in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof...
Such freedom remains exceptional in the annals of world history.
More important than the religious freedom granted by the Constitution or by state laws,
however, has always been the freedom we have in Christ. Regardless of the nation or
culture in which we live, we have freedom that extends far beyond the exercise of our
personal religion. We live both free from sin and free to love and serve others through
the One who liberated us by His death and resurrection.
So if the Son
makes you
free, you
will be free
indeed.
John 8:36
Jesus declares: If you continue in My word, then you are truly disciples of Mine; and
you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free (John 8:31b-32). A few verses
later He makes it clear this describes freedom from sin. That freedom alone changes
everything for us.
Our freedom in Christ, though, also has implications for the way we relate to others,
even when they try to cause us harm. Peter writes, For such is the will of God that by
doing right you may silence the ignorance of foolish men. Act as free men, and do not
use your freedom as a covering for evil, but use it as bondslaves of God (1 Peter 2:15-16).
A bondslave of God has his Masters interests at heart, and we know that Jesus said of
Himself, ...the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a
ransom for many (Matthew 20:27).
So, we should use our freedom to love and serve others, even those who may show
contempt toward us and our beliefs. As Paul reminds us, For you were called to freedom,
brethren; only do not turn your freedom into an opportunity for the flesh, but through
love serve one another. For the whole Law is fulfilled in one word, in the statement, YOU
SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF. (Gal. 5:13-14).
For Americans, protecting our religious freedom remains precious. For all believers,
though, far more precious in the sight of God continues to be a freedom in Christ that
serves others and shows them how they can be set free from sin.
So if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed (John 8:36).
Yours for His glory,
William H. Jones
President
www.ciu.edu
35
CIU Today
November 6-7
Come home to the anchor! Celebrate Homecoming at CIU where the
anchor holds in core values established over 90 years ago. Reconnect
with friends and current students, as you hear CIUs vision for the future.
Join us for a Ram-packed weekend of traditional and new
Homecoming events planned for you.
www.ciu.edu/alumni/hc15
Questions? Call (803) 807-5500 or email alumni@ciu.edu.
Non-Profit Org
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PAID
Columbia, SC
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