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In one way or another, I’ve been working with college students
and college ministries across the country (and world) for the last
30 years. Now, I’m a parent with college aged kids. It can be a
scary experience sending your 18-year-old son or daughter off
to the university only to have them call back saying they want to
go on a mission trip to Afghanistan with a group called the “Wild
And Crazy” (WAC) campus ministry. A fine organization you’re
sure, but one you know absolutely nothing about.
For all you college students out there, or all you concerned
parents (and grandparents), I want to give you a short bio on ten
ministries I would feel pretty good about my son or daughter
spending time with.
I know I’m going to make some of you mad by leaving out the
particular college ministry that touched your life. If it makes you
feel any better, it was for that reason I didn’t include the
organization I founded 20 years ago — Student
Mobilization. Looking deeper, though, maybe I was just
insecure, fearing others wouldn’t think we belong in the
top ten!
Leaving out so many great ministries was tough — like many of
the Wesleyan Centers,1 or International Students
Inc. (ISI)2 which works only with foreign students
on our soil. I excluded all the spectacular single campus
ministries — like Breakaway3 at Texas A&M
(3,500+ coming each week). What’s worse, there isn’t room to
include all the tremendous local church based ministries across
the U.S. — like University Presbyterian Church in Seattle,
Wa.,4 or Grace Bible in College Station,
Texas,5 or University Baptist in Fayetteville,
Ark.6
Each campus ministry on my list is different. And that’s good.
Each group, at each campus, will attract and minister to a whole
range of students. We Christians shouldn’t be trying to compare
or compete. In fact, I have been trying to learn as much as I can
from these ministries (and others) over the years. I want be a
lifelong learner, so I continue to study their vision and values,
their strengths and weaknesses. This gives me objectivity when I
train and consult with various organizations.
In my humble opinion, here is a list of ten top college ministries
across the U.S. — in alphabetical order.
1. Baptist Collegiate Ministries (BCM)7
Formerly known as “Baptist Student Union,” they are now called
“BCM” or “Christian Challenge” across the U.S. They are the
campus arm of all the Southern Baptist churches in each state.
Nationwide, there are over 880 campuses that have a BCM on it;
they touch almost 250,000 very diverse students each year, with
about 85,000+ actively involved.
Maybe you’ve been to a noon luncheon (free food!) or an
evening worship service or plugged into their Metro ministry
trying to reach all the commuter students in many major cities.
Besides the weekly large group meetings and the small group
bible studies, they host weekend conferences, summer mission
trips, and an annual Beach Reach each spring break. Many BCM’s
are tied into Louie Giglio’s excellent Passion ministry that
sponsors the ONE DAY and THIRSTY conferences for students
and campus workers.
2. Campus Crusade for Christ (Cru)
Founded by Dr. Bill Bright on the UCLA campus in 1951, the
underlying concept of Campus Crusade is to "win the campus
today and change the world tomorrow.” Their strength over the
years has been going to major universities and winning key
campus leaders to Christ through a simple and transferable tool,
The Four Spiritual Laws. Now, 50+ years later, an estimated
43,000 students are actively involved and 2,500+ staff are
ministering on or near 1,000 U.S. campuses.
Maybe you’ve been to one of their life changing Winter
Conferences, spring break outreaches, or summer training
projects at resorts across the U.S. Or maybe you’ve logged on to
one of their many websites (like
www.everystudent.com ) designed to lead students to
Christ and help them begin to grow. They just surpassed the
one-million mark, passing out “Freshman Survival Kits”
containing Bibles, Christian books and music, etc.
3. Campus Outreach (CO)8
Founder Curtis Tanner, a layman in Briarwood Presbyterian
Church, started ministering on the Samford campus in
Birmingham, Ala., in 1978. Today, CO has evolved into a thriving
campus ministry with over 400 staff ministering on 65 campuses
stateside and overseas. The staff is divided up into regions who
work in partnership with (and under the authority of) a large
local church, but who maintain a non-denominational profile on
campus. Their goal is to win students to Christ and to build
them into laborers with a commitment to the Great Commission.
Maybe you’ve been to one of their huge Christmas conferences
or one of their impact summer-long beach projects where they
teach students how to study the Bible and share the gospel. As
they find, build, and launch Christ centered leaders, they are
effectively fulfilling their objective to “build laborers on the
campus for the lost world.”
4. Chi Alpha (XA)9
Begun in 1953 at Southwest Missouri State in Springfield, Mo.,
this campus ministry is an outreach of the Assemblies of God,
headquartered there in Springfield. Dennis Gaylor is the U.S.
Director, overseeing a rapidly growing list of campuses, now
numbering over 200. Each of their staff are trying to create a
Christ centered community of worship, prayer, fellowship,
discipleship and witness.
They are known for their lively worship, creative outreach and
enthusiastic staff. Maybe you’ve been to one of their weekly
praise sessions or their annual SALT conferences over the
Christmas break. Their annual two week Reach the U training
session for new staff and student leaders is a life changing
experience to go with a whole myriad of mission teams that
spread across the world each summer.
5. Coalition for Christian Outreach (CCO)10
Begun in the early 70’s, this ministry, based in Pittsburgh,
focuses strictly on campuses in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West
Virginia. Their staff work in cooperative partnerships with
churches (many of them Presbyterian) and colleges on 69
campuses throughout this region. President Dan Dupee and staff
have a unique commitment to “self-examination, repentance
from racism and prejudicial ethnocentrism, accountability to
each other for our attitudes, words and actions, and an active
pursuit of racial and ethnic reconciliation on both individual and
institutional levels, especially in the development of a Christian
worldview.”
Working as residence hall directors, community service
coordinators, coaches, student activity directors, faculty or on
church staffs, the CCO personnel customize their outreach and
discipleship to fit each campus and student. Their campus
ministries along with their annual JUBILEE conference help them
live out their core values: 1) All things belong to God. 2) Jesus
changes people’s lives. 3) We love college students. 4)
Faithfulness is pursued together. 5) We celebrate life.
6. Great Commission Ministries (GCM)11
Jeff Kern is the President of this vibrant ministry headquartered
in Orlando. Begun in 1989, they have now spread to 44
campuses and 23 countries. This movement exists to create
church communities that will reach the emerging generation
with the message of Christ. They start out on campuses by
doing grass roots evangelism, seeking to incorporate students
into the starting of a church based campus ministry. This
strategy, along with using creative materials and web based
tools, has been effective to attract and involve thousands of
students.
Maybe you’ve been to one of their dynamic IGNITE conferences
around the country or been one of 2,400 students who have
experienced their summer Leadership Training (LT) program.
Their outstanding Board of Directors and dedicated staff are
committed to world missions and leadership development and
thus supplying the church around the world with a fresh supply
of equipped laborers.
7. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship (IV)
In 1938 Stacey Woods, the Canadian IV director, met with
students at the University of Michigan and formed the first IV
chapter in the U.S. Today, there are more than 1,000 IV staff
serving more than 34,000 students and faculty on more than
560 campuses nationwide. They have a “rich tradition of campus
witness, thoughtful discipleship, and a concern for world
missions.” President Alec Hill, located at the IV headquarters in
Madison, Wis. oversees a very multi-ethnic and multi-racial
staff, resulting in 35% of students involved being from ethnic or
racial minorities.
IV is known for the excellent materials and books they publish
each year through Intervarsity Press. IV’s world missions
emphasis and summer teams are capped off every third year by
the 20,000 strong student Urbana missions
conference they’ve been sponsoring since 1946. During this
conference, thousands of students commit their life to God’s
glory and purposes throughout the earth.
8. Navigators (Navs)
Dawson Trotman started leading sailors to Christ and discipling
them in the early 1930’s. These new disciples started ministries
as they enrolled in colleges around the country and the
movement has today grown to over 70 staffed campuses, with
another 100+ led by volunteers. Dr. Jerry White is now President
of the Navigators, who have staff in 105 countries. The
collegiate arm’s ministry goal is: To reach, disciple, and equip
college students in the U.S. to know Christ and to make Him
known through successive generations in all the nations.
The Navs are known for their spiritually deep staff who work
with students one-on-one and in small groups seeking to build
biblical convictions and personal character. Their excellent Bible
study materials (published by Navpress) along with the
conferences they hold at Glen Eyrie, their impressive Colorado
Springs headquarters, help them to fulfill their goal of building
life long laborers for Christ.
9. Reformed University Fellowship (RUF)12
RUF, the collegiate ministry arm of the Presbyterian Church of
America (PCA), began in 1973 on a single campus, but today is
moving towards staffing 90 campuses nationwide. They have
over 12,000 students involved in 30 states, mainly across the
South. Dr. Rod Mays directs the organization from their
headquarters in Lawrenceville, Ga. Holding to the Westminister
Confession of Faith, the ordained staff are seminary trained to
effectively teach the great doctrines of the Bible to students.
Maybe you’ve been to one of their meetings, loudly sang some
of the old hymns, and listened to the staff person explain
Biblical truth in a simple, but profound way. Or, maybe you’ve
heard of their annual summer conference in Florida that
hundreds of students flock to in order to learn and grow — all in
an effort to carry out their motto: “A heart for God, a love for the
campus.”
10. Victory Campus Ministries (VCM)13
Begun by ten campus ministers on two campuses in 1990, VCM
staff members are missionaries who work in and through a local
church. They are the collegiate ministry arm of the worldwide
church planting movement MorningStar International. Rice
Broocks is the President, while Bret Holman directs VCM from
Torrance, Calif., where the ministry has a unique partnership
with Fuller Theological Seminary — new staff goes through
Fuller’s six month “Campus Missiology” training module.
The staff seeks to win, establish, train and send students into
the world. They have a strong emphasis on involving students in
the local church as well as raising up an army of missionaries.
Ministering on close to 50 campuses (and many more overseas),
and through an exciting annual conference called CAMPUS
HARVEST, they are trying to fulfill their mission: “Change the
campus, change the world.”
Final Note:
All of us are growing and changing, seeking to take the
unchanging gospel and make it relevant and applicable to an
always changing collegiate culture. This list represents only ten
U.S. based college ministries. There are hundreds of others in
this country and abroad I wish I could include and describe.
Most of the ten ministries listed above (and others) have a story
of a college student’s changed life included in a recent book by
Steve Shadrach entitled: The Fuel
and the Flame: 10 Keys to Ignite Your College for Jesus Christ
. You can order your copies at
www.thebodybuilders.net.
1 www.gbhem.org
2 www.isionline.org/
3 www.breakawayministries.org
4 www.upc.org/page.asp?id=1
5 www.grace-bible.org
6 www.ubcfayetteville.org
7 www.student.org
8 www.campusoutreach.org
9 www.chialpha.com/
10 www.ccojubilee.org/
11 www.greatcommission.org
12 www.ruf.org
13 www.vcm.com
Copyright © 2004 Steve Shadrach. All rights reserved. International copyright secured.
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