Recommended Colleges
The potential student is NOT heading for F/T Ministry…they’re thinking about Math or Accounting.
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"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com
As far as the other schools, I’ve had friends who went to Liberty and had a very positive experience.
I will also plug Maranatha since my in-laws work there, however I do not know much about their business program.
Good luck to your friend’s daughter!
LU is going to offer much broader educational opportunities as an accredited liberal arts institution. I imagine they are going to be much broader in the overall evangelical spectrum as well than would BJU (one of the other schools you mentioned they are looking at), in partnerships, practices, and overall culture of the institution. I would imagine some would be better equipped to handle that atmosphere than others. Some of the level of caution might depend on how grounded the student was. I wouldn’t promote the institution, but I don’t think the institution is devoid of value for everyone.
Clearwater gets another recommendation from me, FWIW. I think Dick Stratton has the school pointed in a good direction, and there are some positive perks as far as location and such, too.
Greg Linscott
Marshall, MN
"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells
BJU and some other fundamentalist colleges and universities are accredited by the Transnational association. This is a recognized accrediting agency by the Department of health and education. However, secular institutions and employers are not familiar with this accrediting group and do not consider these institutions as accredited. If you wish to go into a field other than one related to Christian ministry I would only attend regionally accredited schools. Also, in spite of what some graduates would have you believe„ unaccredited Christian schools give you a substantially inferior education. Some have too many of their own graduates teaching at their schools and have long term inherent weakness in breadth of exposure in various disciplines.
I do not recommend The Masters College which is just down the freeway 10 miles from me. Too many problems.
[Jay C] Greg, I had totally forgotten about Clearwater Christian. I’ll make sure to tell my friend about it tomorrow night at the men’s group.Nobody listens to me… (see post 1) :cry:
Seriously, I’ll direct my brother to this thread…it will encourage him!
"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com
The chances are she will get a much fuller education (minus the Bible, but isn’t that what church is for). I know Northland wasn’t really known for their science program, but I remember looking at their science classes and thinking, I took their highest science class as a Junior in HS. Even their math was only a class or two higher than what I took in HS, and I was about average in math in HS. Many of my friends were taking math classes from the CC as they had finished all the math available at HS. (And my HS offered classes beyond Calculus)
Those are my thoughts.
My son graduated with the accounting degree from BJU. I had a lot of interaction with his faculty. I was very surprised by the amount and difficulty of the work he had to do. Some of his classes rivaled my masters level accounting classes. Also, BJU has a great internship progam (during the junior year) for the accounting majors, so accounting majors graduate with at least one semester of practical experience under their belts (many of them also intern at firms during the summers). My son interacted with accounting majors from the other big state schools in the south (Clemsen, U of SC, etc.) during his internship and at recruiting events, and their programs weren’t nearly as comprehensive or as demanding as BJU’s program.
One word of warning: Accounting is one of the most difficult majors at BJU (along with nursing). Your friend’s daughter will have to be very committed and disciplined. Lots of work, difficult tests, very demanding academics.
Kent McCune I Peter 4:11
Given the other advantages of a Christian education, I think it’s a no-brainer.
Now if you want to be a professional scholar, the decision is not so easy because academia can be pretty snobby. But my experience has been that employers are much more pragmatic. In my own case, I got into a full time job in customer service on a Bible Ed. degree from BJU… and then eventually a full time IT support position… and at that time had a BA in Bible Ed. and M.Div.
The schooling is just not necessarily what they’re looking at, though it mattered to them alot that I had finished college somewhere.
But for legal and financial work I’ll concede that the school matters more. I just don’t believe it matters to point of even beginning to cancel out the advantages of a good Christian education.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
So, for those who think they may be interested in federal government work, it may be worth looking at these requirements as you choose a school. Particularly if you do not intend to earn an advanced degree from an institution that would meet these accrediting requirements.
Overall, though, Liberty is a good school for a Christian; it’s conservative but it has many the advantages of big schools, including accreditation, and it’s academic reputation is moving up. One of my teachers there (Emily Heady), who is now in charge of all of the writing assessment at LU and just finished compiling the most recent report based on a university wide assessment, told me when I was a Freshman that my degree from LU would be worth more when I graduated than it would have been if I got it in 2005, and she was right, and that trend will only increase. According to Jerry Falwell, Jr., the school’s number one priority right now is increasing academic quality.
I’m happy to recommend LU to people who aren’t intent on academic careers; if they are, I would recommend secular schools or one of the more academically respected Christians schools (Wheaton, Calvin, etc.), even though Liberty does well in some areas (e.g. pre-law, history, their philosophy program is getiing better, etc.). There are good faculty there, who care about academics and about Christianity, and it’s a more academically mainstream environment than many if not all of the Fundamentalist schools (two of my siblings went to PCC, and we received very different kinds of educations).
I am sure there are problems out there. But I think some are overstating them.
Roger Carlson, PastorBerean Baptist Church
Life is interesting. I muddled through, learned a lot—even a little Italian, and by God’s grace made it through with everything balanced and accounted for until God called me back to BJU. “A man’s heart deviseth his way: but the LORD directeth his steps.” (Prov 16:9)
ps All that exposure to opera during my undergrad years came in handy there as well…one of the profs was an opera oficianado, and he was duly impressed that someone from a school that believes in the Bible could also have some artistic prowess. We exchanged notes on “Faust”, which led to some spiritual discussion. God is great.
"I pray to God this day to make me an extraordinary Christian." --Whitefield http://strengthfortoday.wordpress.com
The additional plus to this is that one develops helpful contacts in the field, which can be a real leg up when one is ready to enter the workforce. One may even be able to arrange for apprenticeships, references…
Discipleship can be continued through a solid local church campus ministry. I will set one up if you tell me the school he or she wishes to attend. This may involve church planting.
Only for the mature and those interested in a faith stretching college experience.
Derek Jung
Able and willing.
Derek Jung
[DJung] If the prospective student is a baby believer or average individual seeking training for ministry send them to bju or pcc or maranatha for spoon feeding for another 4-8 years. Derek JungMy own experience: came to Christ at age 7 after seven years of being taught the gospel (yes, it started at birth). After ten more years of solid exposition at church supplemented by Bible courses at school and chapel speakers there, went to four years at BJU.
Got way, way more than spoon feeding there.
Got ministry experience in a variety of settings, extracurricular experiences I still lean on regularly. Got a network of likeminded peers. Most importantly, got all the academic stuff a college is for but packaged in a worldview that held the Scriptures as supreme and integrated all other subjects in their proper place.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
I read testimonies such as Aaron Blumer’s, Diane Heeney’s, and and I am led to believe that those who go to Christian colleges are more often in line with his than not. The Christian college product is still a quality product. Yet, my wife went to a secular school and I marvel at her spiritual fitness. It excels mine. There are numerous examples of secular school graduates who are serving the Lord faithfully. God can/will use any person who is surrendered. For what it is worth: BJU, PCC, TTU, Northland, and Maranatha grads make great officers in the military. As do other Christian college graduates. I can give you many examples of both line and staff officers (Army, Navy, USMC, and Air Force) who are well respected by their peers. Somehow, those schools prepare men and women very well for the military.
As far as Tavis brought up about the military, I actually joined the Marine Corps right out of high school, and loved, still do love, the Marine Corps as well as kept a Christian testimony while serving 11 years as a Marine, before becoming a Chaplain. Although some parts of military life are as Tavis describes, I didn’t need a Christian college to live for Christ. Any job, and I had several, outside the Christian bubble you go into will test your faith somehow; and while I went to BJU for college, I am fairly sure that I could have attended a secular college and had a good testimony as well as opportunities for ministry. The only reason I am a Chaplain today is because I had so many opportunities to minister in the Marine Corps as a Marine that I never had serving on a pastoral staff.
As for actual colleges to recommend, I like Liberty and North Greenville University, and if you definitely want to stay in a fundamentalist orbit, then Clearwater Christian College or BJU. Word of Life is really more for those preparing for ministry and wanting a Bible degree. As I already said, I think local college can be a good thing; and what could be better than having a college student who is committed to Christ and the local church stay in the community and serve in the church.
PS - just noticed that the topic of accreditation was brought up. after my wife and I both dealing with the accreditation problem, I 100% believe that unless you are getting a degree in Bible, you should go to a regionally accredited college (like Liberty, NGU, and Clearwater) In all fairness, it was not an insurmountable problem to deal with while living on the East Coast; because BJU has a fantastic testimony of high educational quality among many businesses, including the military. I have spoken to folks here on the West Coast who have had a much more difficult time because of a BJU degree.
[Aaron Blumer][DJung] went to four years at BJU.Well, the person you are quoting obviously has never been a student at BJU.
Got way, way more than spoon feeding there.
Got ministry experience in a variety of settings, extracurricular experiences I still lean on regularly. Got a network of likeminded peers Most importantly, got all the academic stuff a college is for but packaged in a worldview that held the Scriptures as supreme and integrated all other subjects in their proper place.
The “network of likeminded peers” has been a wonderful source of encouragement through the years.
(I don’t know how to bold a quote. How do you do that, BTW with this newer version of SI?)
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