by Caroline (Tomlinson) Kimball, Managing Editor
Cedarville's campus community would not be possible without the leadership of our students, whether that be in public for others to see or behind the scenes and barely noticed. Cedarville students are amazing!
But how does Cedarville consistently find and equip confident and competent student leaders? First, we benefit from the strong families and parents who build into these students for the first 18 years of their lives. Then, when they arrive at Cedarville, it鈥檚 the mentoring from godly faculty members. It鈥檚 the life-on-life discipleship. But it鈥檚 also the model that students see every Friday on the chapel stage 鈥 the student leaders who are a part of the Student Government Association (SGA).
When you ask an SGA President 鈥 current or former 鈥攁bout why they ran for office, they quickly talk about the SGA President from their freshman year and what a profound impact he or she had.
Every year, students witness what servant leadership looks like by seeing what SGA does for the student body. The example that SGA sets inspires students to lead in the residence halls, discipleship groups, or even pursue SGA leadership themselves.
But what is SGA, what exactly do they do, and how do they inspire student leaders? Many students don鈥檛 understand all that goes into serving on SGA. Some may say, 鈥淭hey鈥檙e just the face of the student body鈥 or 鈥淭hey really don鈥檛 do anything.鈥
Behind The Scenes
But SGA is much more than what meets the eye: much more than faces, much more than titles, and much more than what students see in SGA chapel each week.
SGA leaders spend the school year setting an example of what servant leadership looks like by offering their time to students and administration to help build community across campus.
鈥淚t means being in about six to eight hours of meetings a week. It looks like interpersonal communication and interacting with people almost constantly,鈥 noted Sage Showers 鈥23, 2022鈥2023 SGA president. 鈥淲e get to serve as the glue and the connecting point between different groups across campus. It鈥檚 one of the most rewarding, but also probably most invisible, parts of the job.鈥
But it鈥檚 not just the President and Vice President. SGA is made up of nine positions. These include President, Vice President, Chaplain, Events Director, Involvement Directors, Campus Community Directors, and the Worship Band Leader. The team supports the campus community, encourages the student body, and provides cohesion between groups across campus.
The President and Vice President lead the team and communicate with administration. The Chaplain delivers a sermon each week to the student body. The Worship Band Leader leads the student body in worship at the start of every SGA chapel. The Events Director creates memories like Elliv, the end-of-year student talent show, and Junior/Senior. The Involvement Directors lead the dozens of student organizations on campus. The Campus Community Directors put on annual events like The Banana Project 鈥 an event in which thousands of bananas are offered to the student body with the requirement of leaving an encouraging note for someone else.
These student leaders work together to create the campus community that students have come to expect.
Though many of the roles are responsible for creating experiences for the students, the SGA President and Vice President have the unique responsibility of serving as the liaison between students and administration.
There is so much work in the SGA office that goes unnoticed. Hundreds of emails, dozens of meetings 鈥 it can be exhausting at times. But it鈥檚 the impact on the student body that encourages the SGA team.
鈥淭heir job is to represent the student body to administrators. They meet with Jon Wood (Vice President for Student Life and Christian Ministries) weekly to share what they鈥檙e hearing from the student body,鈥 said Brian Burns 鈥95, Director of Campus Experience. 鈥淭hey also represent Cedarville to the students. Maybe it鈥檚 updating the students on how we鈥檝e changed our parking policy or Residence Life.鈥
SGA serves administration by communicating weekly with the students by email and in SGA chapel, delivering announcements to boost student morale, and supporting the mission and vision of Cedarville.
The goal of SGA is not to promote personal agendas or combat administration. Instead, the SGA President works closely with administrators like Burns and Wood.
This close working relationship not only benefits the student body as a whole, but it builds leaders out of those humbly willing to learn.
What this looks like day to day has changed over the years and looks different with each President.
Regardless of how they choose to lead, you can鈥檛 talk to an SGA President without the words 鈥渟ervant leadership鈥 coming to mind. Whether they say it directly, or it鈥檚 delicately laced between their words, this is truly the one thing each SGA President has in common.
While most students only see the SGA President on the chapel stage once a week, this represents just one small piece of a much larger commitment.
鈥淚 think about 10% of SGA was seen on the chapel stage. The other 90% really was behind the scenes on vision casting, talking with the administration, leading the team, and seeking solutions for the student body,鈥 explained Ryan Smith 鈥19, 2018鈥2019 SGA president.
On The Stage
In addition to weekly meetings with the SGA team, administration, and different groups across campus, the SGA President and Vice President have the weekly responsibility of leading SGA chapel, perhaps the most visible part of the SGA experience.
The first time an SGA officer steps onto the chapel stage is before they鈥檙e even elected. SGA election chapel in the spring gives running parties the chance to introduce themselves.
Once elected, it becomes a weekly responsibility. The Chaplain delivers a sermon every week, while the President and Vice President deliver announcements.
One of the most unique and memorable chapels of the year is Live@10 鈥 the late-night, early morning show that takes hundreds of hours to produce.
Rahul Jacob 鈥17, MBA 鈥21, started Live@10 during his year as SGA president, 2016鈥2017.
鈥淚 had this idea of a late-night talk show for the chapel hour. Nothing like this had ever been done before, but I wanted the student body to laugh together,鈥 said Jacob.
Live@10 is no small undertaking. It takes script writing, coordinating with production services, receiving approval from administration, not to mention the dozens of meetings leading up to this one-hour event.
鈥淲hen you add it all together, it was probably over 1,000 hours of everyone working tirelessly to pull this off. The result was better than we could have imagined. Just a full hour of students having fun and bonding together over shared experiences and a love for their community,鈥 added Jacob.
This show is co-hosted by the SGA president and University President Thomas White. With skits, videos, music, and jokes, Live@10 always leaves students with a smile on their face.
While SGA chapel is fun, and Live@10 creates long-lasting memories, they wouldn鈥檛 exist without the tender hearts and passion for people that every SGA leader possesses.
At The Heart
Beyond the work that they do and the positions they hold, the greatest way that SGA impacts students is through the character of those who serve in these positions.
Each SGA leader has had different reasons for seeking office. They had unique slogans like 鈥淟et鈥檚 Get Real,鈥 or 鈥淏etter Together,鈥 or 鈥淧ress In,鈥 to name a few.
Getting up on stage once a week can look glamorous to some, but that鈥檚 not what you hear when you talk to SGA team members.
鈥淪ometimes leading can feel very lonely. I鈥檝e learned that to be visible also means to be attentive. You can鈥檛 just be a face in a position, you have to be a person in a position. And that sometimes means many late nights and early mornings,鈥 commented Showers. 鈥淚 ran for SGA because I love Cedarville and I love people. My ultimate 鈥榳hy鈥 is to serve.鈥
Jake Johnson 鈥21, 2020鈥2021 SGA President, stated, 鈥淚t was during Live@10 my freshman year when I first became interested in SGA. The President had a unique opportunity to bring joy and unity to the student body.鈥
Jacob added, 鈥淚 wanted to give the students an opportunity to be real with one another, to laugh, and build relationships.鈥
For the SGA leaders, it鈥檚 not about personal fame. It鈥檚 not about hidden agendas.
鈥淲e as SGA are to manifest and encourage Cedarville鈥檚 core values. That is how we have success,鈥 noted Smith. When asked about his 鈥榳hy,鈥 Smith said, 鈥淔or me, success was defined not by numbers but by being an example of someone who loves God, loves others, lives with integrity, and works with excellence.鈥
When you talk to SGA leaders, their love for Cedarville is clearly evident. They didn鈥檛 pursue leadership because they were popular or because they wanted recognition. They did so because they humbly signed up for the task of loving God, loving others, having integrity, and working with excellence.
SGA not only makes leaders out of the students who serve, but it inspires the next class of students by modeling what humble leadership looks like both on and off the stage.