by Clem Boyd, Managing Editor
From building into each other in discipleship groups, to inspiring classmates through HeartSong or chapel bands, to coaching and mentoring by Resident Assistants and Community Life Coordinators, Cedarville students learn early on that their 1,000 days will be exponentially better as they learn both to receive and then pour into others.
But few roles offer as much potential for touching the entire student body as class chaplains and the Student Government Association (SGA) Chaplain. Class chaplains speak to their peers twice a year, except for the freshman chaplain who鈥檚 elected fall semester and speaks in the spring. The SGA chaplain has 14 opportunities to bring God鈥檚 Word to undergrads, grad students, faculty, and staff throughout the school year.
With that level of influence comes a heightened sense of need for the student-speaker to be not just a skilled communicator, but also a person whose walk with Christ is maturing.
HISTORICAL COMMITMENT
Cedarville has a long history of student-chaplains, beginning in 1954. When Harold Green, the University鈥檚 first campus pastor, joined the staff in 1970, he formed the Advisory 12 team, which then became Advisory Seven (Ad7). Under Green鈥檚 supervision, Ad7 planned and organized services for what was equivalent to a student-led church. Meeting in chapel, then located in what is now the Apple Technology Resource Center, the Ad7 team preached from the Scriptures, led worship, updated students on ministry opportunities, and solicited prayer requests and lifted those up for a student 鈥渃ongregation鈥 of 400鈥700 on Wednesday nights, Sunday mornings, and Sunday evenings. 鈥淚t gave students like me a chance to cut my teeth on spiritual leadership, to be part of a team running a church service,鈥 offered Scott Kennedy 鈥97, who currently serves as Lead Pastor for Parkside Church 鈥 Lake County, in Mentor, Ohio.
鈥 Mark Hershey '07
Kennedy served from freshman to sophomore year with Ad7, mainly giving announcements and prayer updates, but also preaching several times. 鈥淚t became a formative time for me; the upperclassmen became friends of mine,鈥 shared Kennedy, who became a Christian at Cedarville his freshman year. 鈥淎s a newer believer, just starting to grow, it helped me tremendously to learn from others who were older than me. Just working under a deadline and thinking at a level I had not thought at before. It was a great discipling experience for me.鈥
Green, affectionately known as 鈥淧G鈥 for Pastor Green, met with Ad7 to discuss the student-led church services. 鈥淧G was a huge influence on me,鈥 noted Kennedy, who turned to Christ after sustaining a traumatic head injury playing intramural soccer. He was in a coma for several days at a local hospital, and Green visited him there. 鈥淔rom the time I woke up from the coma in my hospital room, he told me how this was no accident, that God had a plan.鈥
Green met with the Ad7 team like a senior pastor meeting
with his staff, Kennedy explained. 鈥淭here was just a lot
of structure for me that was super helpful, especially early
on,鈥 he said. Several years later, Vice President for Christian
Ministries Bob Rohm 鈥68 took over the leadership role with
Ad7. Kennedy went on to become Junior Class Chaplain and
then SGA Chaplain his senior year.
When Jonathan Farrell 鈥03 was SGA Chaplain his senior year, encouragement, accountability, and care came from several people.
鈥淚 had the privilege of meeting weekly with Pastor Rohm, every Thursday morning at 9,鈥 Farrell said, who presently serves as senior pastor at Grace Church in Morton, Illinois. 鈥淚n our time together, he cared for me personally. He鈥檇 pray with and encourage me. He would give me feedback on my messages, not a scorecard. He was affirming and helpful.
Mark Hershey 鈥07, who served as SGA Chaplain his senior year, also received helpful counsel and insight from Rohm. 鈥淲e talked more about personal things; it was a time of accountability,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e met on a weekly basis, checking in on how I was doing, discussing the pressure of the responsibilities.鈥
One of the lasting lessons has been to rest in Christ and depend on Him. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 about my abilities, or what I could or couldn鈥檛 do,鈥 said Hershey, who currently serves as Pastor of Adult Ministries at Hope Community Church in Andover, Kansas. 鈥淕od had called me, and He was going to work through me.鈥
INTENTIONAL INVESTMENT
The history of Cedarville student-chaplains is the story of intentional mentoring that goes beyond crafting of messages to the very heart of ministry, which begins with a cultivated devotion and honesty with Jesus and with fellow believers.
Today鈥檚 student-chaplains are part of a Chaplains Council, whose goal is to help them not just speak well, but follow Jesus wholeheartedly. The freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior class chaplains 鈥 Justin Schlabach 鈥22, Joe Nealis 鈥21, Caleb Whicker 鈥20, and Ray Tiell 鈥19 respectively 鈥 along with SGA Chaplain Campbell Bortel 鈥19, meet weekly with Aaron Cook 鈥99, Director of Discipleship Ministries.
鈥 Justin Schlabach '22
They are joined on occasion by Jeremy Kimble, Assistant Professor of Theology, and Jon Wood, Vice President for Student Life and Christian Ministries. With the council, the chaplains have the opportunity to preview messages and receive feedback, debriefing after sermons are delivered. But more than anything, the chaplains have found the council a place to soak in the grace of God.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just a blessing to have that time to come together as people who are doing the same thing on campus, sharing that same role, who know what the trenches of that ministry look like, and the spiritual warfare we face when preparing a sermon, then being able to encourage and support each other,鈥 said Bortel.
鈥淪ometimes we talk about sermons that are coming up or have someone walk through what they鈥檙e going to be talking on, and we鈥檙e offering some feedback,鈥 Bortel added. 鈥淏ut for the most part it鈥檚 what God鈥檚 doing in our lives right now, going around and sharing that to just encourage each other, that this is what鈥檚 fueling our outpouring, and we鈥檙e holding each other accountable to do that.鈥 What they鈥檝e formed is a band of spiritual brothers. 鈥淎aron鈥檚 good at talking about life with us 鈥 let鈥檚 talk real here and get to know each other,鈥 noted Schlabach. 鈥淪ometimes that鈥檚 lighter things, and sometimes deeper, but what hit me is Aaron saying that we want to pursue holiness. How are we growing in our time in the Word, so that can be an outflow of what we鈥檙e doing on campus, not just on stage or in our leadership roles, but in our everyday lives: in the classroom, on campus, and in our own spiritual lives as well.鈥
鈥淎aron likes to say that he wants our private abiding to fuel our public adoration,鈥 said Tiell. 鈥淭hat means almost every week we鈥檙e talking about what we鈥檙e learning in the Scriptures and in our private quiet times, what God鈥檚 teaching us, how we鈥檙e growing, and even how we鈥檙e struggling and how God is pulling us through that. That鈥檚 for us but also for the people we get to minister to. The deeper we know God, the deeper we can push people to know God.鈥
鈥淲e seek to have a time there where we鈥檙e talking about our spiritual disciplines, sharing about what God is teaching us in the Word, sharing our stories of how God brought us to Christ, and how he鈥檚 growing us now, and then seek to push one another toward Christlikeness,鈥 Cook affirmed.
THREE-PRONGED APPROACH
鈥淭his is an intentional partnership between Student Life and Christian Ministries and the School of Biblical and Theological Studies,鈥 noted Wood. 鈥淚t shows curricular and co-curricular cooperation in a really beautiful way. That鈥檚 unique to Cedarville.鈥
For instance, all chaplains are encouraged to take Kimble鈥檚 first Text-Driven Preaching course, but SGA chaplains in particular are required to take the class before they can serve in that role. Students taking Kimble鈥檚 class are required to prepare and deliver two messages. They meet with Kimble prior to and after they speak to get feedback. There are also extra measures taken to help the chaplains develop their skill at receiving critique and evaluating and offering feedback.
鈥 Jon Wood
鈥淲hen Jon Wood and I preached earlier this semester in chapel, we came to the Chaplains Council and critiqued each other鈥檚 messages as a way to model this process to the students,鈥 Kimble said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to receive constructive criticism, how do you receive it, how do you learn from it, and how are you able to move forward in your preaching capacities?
鈥淎s well, it was a way to show how to critique and say things lovingly. How am I building up my brother to help him become a better communicator and preacher? I thought that was a good time where the student chaplains hopefully saw us be able to receive and give feedback and have it be done in a healthy way.鈥
HOPED-FOR OUTCOME
With all this input, feedback, accountability, and encouragement, it鈥檚 hoped that each chaplain will grow as a minister of God鈥檚 Word, but even more as a servant-leader whose character and focus on Christ are true no matter what venue they find themselves ministering in.
鈥 Campbell Bortel '19
鈥淜imble and Cook both talk about not letting your abilities outpace your character,鈥 Tiell said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 scary to walk up on that stage, and think I could very easily walk off and completely destroy my witness by being foolish.鈥
鈥淎aron said it best: It鈥檚 the little things that usually make the biggest impact,鈥 Schlabach said. 鈥淚 believe I鈥檝e been called to ministry. Going into that church role, you get up there and preach every Sunday, but most are watching you outside of that. That鈥檚 something I鈥檓 being prepared for.鈥
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what ministry God has for me exactly,鈥 noted Bortel, who is a geology major and the only non-Bible major serving in a chaplain鈥檚 role this school year. 鈥淏ut whether I鈥檓 a preacher, an interim pastor, serving in church leadership or worship ministry, these experiences are developing my character and a skill set for preaching that is going to benefit whatever church congregation I鈥檓 in.
鈥淭his training of refining who I am and what I believe, my character and my skills for discipling and preaching, all these things are going to be valuable, whether or not I鈥檓 a pastor. Those are valuable because everyone鈥檚 got to share their faith at some point if you鈥檙e living out the commands of Scripture.鈥
----------
Clem Boyd is Managing Editor of Cedarville Magazine.