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By
Chuck Edwards
A mother describes what happened when her daughter went off to college:
Our daughter was raised in Christian schools and in a Christian
home. Two years out of high school at 20, she enrolled at the University.
Unfortunately, she was overwhelmed by the professors and began to
believe their philosophies. She graduated two years ago
and
has turned her back on all that she believed in. We are trusting
God to bring our girl back. The wait is sometimes difficult, but
we are on bended knee.
How tragic! Yet this is just one example of a growing trend: kids
raised in Christian homes who lose their faith at college. In fact,
national surveys indicate that up to 51% of Christian students no
longer claim to be born again by their senior year.
But it doesnt have to be this way.
Another letter, this time from a student attending a liberal Ivy-league
university, explains how he enjoys playing, as he called it, guerilla
warfare with his non-Christian professors. He has even started
a student newspaper that reports on issues from a conservative and
Christian perspective.
How was this student able to thrive spiritually, intellectually,
and emotionally at such a liberal school? [For one thing,] this
student had previously attended a Summit Ministries summer leadership
conference where he was taught to distinguish between the various
philosophies presented in the classroom. With this understanding
under his belt, he was able to see through the secular humanist
and Marxist ideas presented by many of his professors. And more
importantly, he learned to champion a Christian worldview.
Worldview training at its best
Each summer for the past 41 years, Summit Ministries has trained
students in the art of thinking biblically. Located in Manitou Springs,
Colorado, Summits intensive two-week sessions combine classroom
training with an enjoyable youth camp atmosphere. Typical morning
and evening classes equip students with a deep understanding of
the Christian worldview and other prominent worldviews of our day
as well as providing an insightful grasp of the key issues of our
current culture. The afternoons are reserved for sports and relaxation,
horseback riding and whitewater rafting, informal discussions, small
groups, and worship.
Can two-weeks of worldview training make a difference in a students
life? Listen to comments from those who have attended:
Summit training is
so much a part of how I think
. I have been meeting with
an atheist during this semester
We have had some good hard
discussions about evolution, the nature of secular humanism, and
even things as abstract as neurological determinism. He still
rejects the notion of faith in the unseen, but at least he realized
that faith has its reasons. Joel
Thank you 1,000
times for the Summit and the change it has wrought in me. I know
you hear this all the time, but I have never experienced such
a dramatic, life-jolting two weeks in my entire life. Julie
(After attending the Summit, Julie regularly writes letters to
the editor of her local newspaper, has served as a page in the
Washington State legislature, spoken out on a television talk
show, and testified before a Washington State Senate committee
on AIDS education in the public schools.)
Summit radically changed the apathetic nature in me. I now
read a book and two newspapers every day. I find myself not only
well-versed on the current issues but up-to-date on the topics
which concern me the most. Adam
The Summit prepared me for a liberal education. I am a pre-law
student and I had an Honors Sociology class last semester that
attacked Christianity every week. I not only knew what I believed,
but I knew exactly how to defend the Christian faith. I never
could have been so successful in that class if I hadnt been
so prepared. It is a mission field here and I feel very equipped
because of your program. Allyson
The stories of these
students are instructive for parents of high school and college
students. No longer can we assume that a Christian home and regular
church attendance are enough to keep our children from falling prey
to the radical ideas they face in our post-modern culture.
Teaching your college-bound teenager to understand the times could
mean the difference between whether he graduates with his faith
intact or whether you are the next parent writing a tear-stained
letter on bended knee.
For more information about Summit Ministries, go to www.summit.org
or call (719) 685-9103.
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