Full-time Student Athlete, Full-time Jesus follower

Being a student is hard.  Being a student-athlete may seem to be a bit harder.

“How do you manage your time?”

“Are you a little bit insane?”

“Wait, 10 miles… in a ROW?!”

And my favorite…

“You do this for fun?”

Yes, yes, yes, and (kind of) yes.

Before coming to IUPUI, I was faced with the decision of whether I wanted to become a full-time student or a full-time student-athlete, praying for an answer and ultimately choosing the latter.  It seemed daunting.  Only a small percentage of students took this path, and I wasn’t completely sure at the time if this was part of God’s Grand Scheme for my life.  My friends would joke and say that I “signed my life away” and that they wouldn’t ever hear from me again.

I worried right along with them.  I worried that I wouldn’t have time for anything outside of school and practice.  

But God moves in mysterious ways, and I soon discovered that I had no need to worry.  Being a part of the running team at IUPUI has put things into perspective for me in more ways than I could have ever imagined.

For one, it’s an outlet.  It’s God’s special gift that helps me unwind and untangle my stress that builds up throughout the week.  It gives me my own little way of worship.  When I run, I am able to exclusively be with God and myself and reflect on things that need to be reflected on.

Being a student-athlete is its own form of praise for me – a way to say “thank you” to the God who has provided for, listened to, and loved me throughout my entire life, even when I have strayed.  When I compete, I compete for God.  He gave me the passion and ability; I aim to reach my maximum potential every time I step on the track so that I show God that I’m grateful for such an awesome creator.

Sure, being committed to a team takes away from my free time, but it forces me to become an expert in time management. It enables me to realize that I can give all my worries to God, and He will manage them how they need to be managed.  As Colossians 1:17 states, “He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.”  

It’s been a journey.  I’ve learned things about myself and how far I can be pushed to set my best a little higher than where it was before, and God is with me every step of every run, giving me the spiritual strength I need to take my physical stamina that much further.  Being a Christian on IUPUI’s running squad has been incredibly rewarding, and I owe it all to God, who has remained unconditionally by my side

Haley Welch, IUPUI Track/Cross Country & Student in Impact at IUPUI

Kings, Old and New
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If you think we have nothing to learn from the Old Testament, you are missing some really important stuff.

Lately, my church has been studying the kings of Israel, and there are some sinful, self-centered people on that throne. God never wanted Israel to have a king, though. The people begged for one, even though God warned them that a king would oppress the people (1 Samuel 8).

It isn’t until much later that the people realize their mistake. They faithfully follow their first king Saul into battles and create monuments to him. Samuel, their former judge, recognizes Saul’s secret wickedness and tries one last time to show the people their mistake. In the middle of the driest time of the year, he calls on God to bring thunder and rain (1 Samuel 12).

Finally, the people repent, and Samuel has an amazing response:

“Do not be afraid; you have done all this evil. Yet do not turn aside from following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart. And do not turn aside after empty things that cannot profit or deliver, for they are empty. For the Lord will not forsake his people, for his great name’s sake, because it has pleased the Lord to make you a people for himself. Moreover, as for me, far be it from me that I should sin against the Lord by ceasing to pray for you, and I will instruct you in the good and the right way. Only fear the Lord and serve him faithfully with all your heart. For consider what great things he has done for you. But if you still do wickedly, you shall be swept away, both you and your king.” (1 Samuel 12:20-25)

What a powerful warning! This is an important reminder for anyone who claims to follow God. There are two really important facts we need to understand before we can apply this, though:

1. It’s not about us, it’s about him.

2. He makes much of us, but only for him.

Samuel says that God will not leave his people, because it would go against the promises he made to his people, the people whom he chose because they pleased him. They exist “for his great name’s sake.” We, by extension as Christians, exist for him, not him for us.

Samuel also isn’t afraid to tell the people they’ve done wrong. There is no “it’s okay, we all make mistakes.” He warns that wickedness will lead to destruction. More than that, he gives them the formula for avoiding wickedness: turn away from evil and serve God with all your being. Easy to say, very hard to do. 

How do we avoid evil and stay focused on God? Samuel warns to stay away from the “empty things that cannot profit or deliver,” and instead focus on what God has done for us. He created us to be in community with him. He saved us when our human natures condemned us to death. He gives us the wisdom and power to do the work he calls us to. What is there that could draw us away from him?

Unfortunately, I know how easy it is to get distracted. So, like Samuel, I will do my best to pray ceaselessly for you, and I hope you will do the same. As Jesus, our righteous and eternal kind, said,

“I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)

Kaitlin Silvey, Impact at IUPUI Student President

The Final Countdown
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I'm going to make this quick since I know you have all got a ton to get done in the next few days.

Over the weekend Kaitlin and I had the opportunity to watch some incredibly talented Christmas singers proclaim through songs the life and story of Jesus. As professional performers their words and lifestyle proclaimed the Gospel to people in a way I could never do and to an audience I could never reach. 

Watching them made me think of the people I have an opportunity to reach because of my unique position. God has made us unique and placed every one of us in a situation unlike any other so that we can reach people that others would never have the opportunity to.

In this last week of the semester, think about those you are going home to see. Whether you have a huge family waiting hundreds of miles away or an apartment just off campus, there are people in your life who desperately need to hear the Gospel (and not just from a pastor, but from a friend). Pray that God will give you opportunities to share the story of Jesus this Christmas break and pray for boldness as you return home.

'Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”' - Matthew 28:18-20

Mac Silvey, Advisory Board Member for Impact at IUPUI

Commuter in Community
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“It will be great for you!” my mom said. “You’ll meet new people!”
“I like the people I already know,” I replied, with just a note of sarcasm. 

Looking back at my lack of interest in making friends when I started college, the irony is palpable. At seventeen, I could count my close friends on one hand with two fingers still folded under and, frankly, I was skeptical that IUPUI would provide anyone I cared to know.

(Let’s just establish that seventeen-year-old me was neither a very sociable nor a very wise person.)

Fortunately, that attitude changed. As I sat in classes and attended campus events because my mother wanted me to, I realized there were people I cared to know here. There were a lot with whom I didn’t share interests or values, but then there were some who loved Jesus or loved the same things I did. There were even a few that seemed like real friend material. Now the only challenge was that I didn’t live with them. Most people I met freshman year lived on campus, many of them in the same community. I lived in a house I had to go home to every night, where I shared a room with my sister and was expected to update my mom on what happened each day. I’m already an introvert, and I could easily not have built deep relationships with people on campus. 

In retrospect, this is one of many instances where I see how God is faithful to give me what I don’t even know I need. Because he did put me in contact with wonderful people who reached out to me when I wouldn’t have reached out to them. My first semester, I got involved with a Bible study that met on campus and consisted mostly of people who lived there, and who were lovely and thoughtful enough to include me. They didn’t have to do that. But they did, because they were obedient to God’s command to love, and they loved me well.

This feels oddly like product placement, and it isn’t meant that way, but people, my Bible study is awesome. It was awesome first semester when I was just meeting people, desperately trying to belong, and feeling jealous that they got to hang out after I went home. It was awesome sophomore year, when there were some new people, and I got to be part of the group that welcomed them like others had welcomed me, just because I’d kept coming. It was awesome junior year, when we decided to move it to my house, because one of the very best parts about not living with the campus crowd is that I can offer my home as a place for others to get away from campus and to remember that community is bigger and deeper than the people on your hall. Because I have a dining room table just perfect for suppers and card games, a mother with the gift of hospitality in buckets, a father who is so gracious with people singing noisy praise to Jesus at all hours of the night, and a living room that can always hold more people than I expect. 

This community is not just one of my favorite parts of college. It’s one of my favorite parts of my whole life. And it’s a part I didn’t know I needed. I didn’t ask God for kind people to welcome me and for friendships that could start on campus and overflow. I can take zero credit in making it happen. He drops grace right in front of me, and all I have to do is look up. 

Don’t get me wrong, building and maintaining school relationships as a commuter student takes work. It feels like work sometimes to go to an event at the end of the day when I’ve been carrying my backpack around for eleven hours and really only want to go home. It takes grace to know that I simply cannot be part of everything happening on campus, because when I’m there, I’m there for school. It takes patience and attention to balance school and social obligations with the fact that I still live with a family who wants to see me every once in a while. 

Sometimes all those factors are quite a load, and I’m not trying to say that community just blossoms perfectly with zero effort. What I’m trying to say is that God is faithful. God is faithful to put people in front of me who point me to him. He is faithful to give me what I need regardless of whether I know I need it. He doesn’t send people off into voids and then forget about them. Sometimes finding fellowship takes work, and sometimes it doesn’t happen the way we want. But all the “sometimes” moments put together don’t cancel out God’s always faithfulness. 

He is with us. And he gives his children good gifts. 

Krystiana Kosobucki, Student in Impact at IUPUI

Strength as My Anchor

It is well known that ‘life’ isn’t easy. Society calls for a strong front in the face of tragedy, every single time you get hit with a metaphorical hard brick in your face. How do people remain calm?

I have not reached the answer to my question. Trust me, I’m still working on it. 
HOWEVER, I have learnt from previous experiences that my role as a Christian in this troubled, uneasy world is to be at peace in the wings of our Lord and thank Him for everything I have been through because to my surprise, strength comes from the smallest prayer said and the calmest of minds that don’t normally exist amongst college students. 

It doesn’t need second awakening to know that over the past six years I have lost a couple of important people in my life and heaven knows how much I miss them. How do you deal with the grieving process that gets reinforced every few months in the year? It has been incredibly hard on me, let me be honest. A verse in Isaiah tells us that God has the power to strengthen you during your worst, and we needn’t be dismayed; his right hand is constantly on us, protecting us wherever we go! (Isaiah 41:10). How reassuring. 

I am constantly reminded of the line pronounced by St. Francis of Assisi – “Make me an instrument of your peace”.

Our lives are called to be led on an uneasy path that will eventually lead to our success stories, but the wait till the final prize is long and unstable, and we really need to know that our hearts can take it; our minds should not lose hope. “Take heart! I have overcome the world”. We are blessed to be called the children of the most loving Savior and friend and we should be thankful for that. 

I have led my life knowing that I am who my Lord has created me to be, safely and securely in my mother’s womb. How amazing is it to know that you are loved and protected, regardless of what you go through? This is strength to me, this is my anchor. I have kept my faith up knowing that the people I have lost over the last few years are with me in spirit everywhere I go and they will continue to be at the pinnacle of all the decisions I have made and will continue to make through my journey in Graduate school.

This is strength in the Lord; this is always going to be the anchor that keeps me from falling. 
Find your strength; search for your anchor.

Trust that the Lord knows who you are and where you are headed. He will get you through it all. 

Rhea Mathew,  Graduate Student in Impact at IUPUI

Funeral Dinners and Business Majors
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One of the sweetest ladies that went to our church passed away about a month ago. It was tough saying goodbye. For most of our members who go to be with Jesus -- we do a dinner after the funeral and graveside. So for this sweet lady's family... We did a lunch afterward.

I know I am losing some of you, but hang with me... 

So, as you can imagine, a funeral dinner is a prime time to meet and talk to IUPUI students about being involved in our ministry on campus. 

Um, not really. The crowd is typically of the older persuasion. 

Yet this day was different because of one young man who was at the funeral and stayed for the dinner. His name? Zach. He is a sophomore at IUPUI and is in the Kelley School of Business. And check this out:

He had just been praying about how he wanted/needed to be involved in a campus ministry at IUPUI. (We are having this conversation nearly 35 miles from campus, in the middle of cornfields.)

Zach has been coming to one of our Life Groups ever since our divine appointment meeting and is expressing interest in starting a Life Group/Bible study with the guys and girls who live near him.  He also is planning to write a post like this one for our site next month.

How impressive is our God? 

Sometimes we just have to be paying attention to what He is up to in the day to day. He is working. He is moving. And this extends to our ministry at IUPUI, which is for His glory and reputation alone. 

We are along for the ride. 

Here is a great passage to close:  "Now the God of peace, who brought up from the dead the great Shepherd of the sheep through the blood of the eternal covenant, even Jesus our Lord, equip you in every good thing to do His will, working in us that which is pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory forever and ever. Amen." (‭Hebrews‬ ‭13‬:‭20-21‬ NASB)

Andrew Hodges, Volunteer Lead Campus Minister

Coffee, Classes, Coffee
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My agenda for today includes: two classes, three assignments, four readings, two group project meetings, and a lot of coffee.

This is the third year I’ve been in college, and I still struggle with motivation. Will my literature homework help me in my career 10 years from now? I doubt it. Is this reading on Old English going to make or break my chances at graduation? Probably not. But I’m still going to do it. Why?

As a full time student, I think of college as my job. This is the means to reaching my personal and career goals. It’s also a chance to glorify God by taking the opportunities He has blessed me with.

It’s not really a normal job. Rarely do I work from 9 to 5. Often I’m hitting the books all weekend and spending sleepless nights pouring over notes before an exam. In the moment, it can feel like the most stressful thing I’ve ever experienced! That’s when temptation kicks in.

You know that feeling. Your eyes are drooping or your phone is buzzing and you think I’ll just take a short break. Two days and 14 Lost episodes later, you remember the project is due soon - in an hour.

Ah, procrastination. The ultimate lack of motivation.

Where do we lose our motivation? Many of the wise men in the Bible suggest it comes from short-sightedness:

"The sluggard will not plow during the planting season, so at harvest time he looks for the crop but has nothing.” Proverbs 20:4 (NET)

When you look at your assignments at the beginning of a semester, do you take the time to “plow”? Do you plan ahead or come up with a way to break down the task? Or are you like me, avoiding it altogether until the very last minute?

If we put off what needs to be done, we will not get the results we are expecting. We cannot harvest success in an area where we do not plant and cultivate hard work. Every time we put off work in favor of distractions, we end up hurting ourselves. 

The writers of the proverbs also say "The appetite of the sluggard craves but gets nothing, but the desire of the diligent will be abundantly satisfied” (13:4). When we keep our end goal in mind, our current struggles become less important. By putting in the effort needed now, we allow our satisfaction to come from something beyond the immediate. Our hard work glorifies the God who created us.

I pray that your hard work will bring abundant satisfaction! Even more, I pray that your diligence will point to God’s eternal glory. Hang in there!

“Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.” (I Corinthians 10:31)

Kaitlin Silvey, Impact at IUPUI Student President

How God Chose My Major (from an IUPUI student's perspective)

As my senior year in high school rolled around, I began to dread the end. I didn’t want to go to college, I didn’t want to be a grown-up, and I certainly didn’t want to go off somewhere into the frightening non-home void and have to figure out what to do with my life. I remember deciding that the only prayer I could pray with honesty was for God to make His desires for these next few years fool-proof . . . because I didn’t trust myself to listen and I would crumble under the weight of choosing for myself. 

God isn’t a prayer elitist. He doesn’t choose to listen only to the wisest or holiest or most elegant prayers, and as underachieving as those prayers from seventeen-year-old me might have been, He answered them. The first thing He did was to rule out every single college on my list except one, IUPUI, either because they didn’t accept me or because they wouldn’t foot the bill and, for my family, those were the conditions. So here I am.

The second thing God did was to put me in a freshman English class with a professor who reveled in challenging the assumptions of sheltered little Christians. In class, I fumed. Outside of class, I thought of all the bold and compelling things I should have said while I was there, and worked hard to say those things in essays. My professor’s attitude could have intimidated me, shaken my faith, or jaded me. What he actually did was inspire me. I wanted his job. He got to stand in front of this whole room full of impressionable freshmen and exhale powerful ideas, neatly wrapped in coursework. I didn’t resent him for challenging my convictions. He didn’t change my opinions; he forced me to claim them. I had to listen closely for the faults in his logic, and sometimes I couldn’t find them. But when I couldn’t, I knew it was my lack of understanding, and lacks are there to be filled. 

By sophomore year I declared a double major in Creative Writing and Philosophy. If you’re looking for a sure way to gain skeptical glances from godly and well-meaning adults (especially mothers), that’s it. Not only does my major not come with a job, but going off to a secular university to study Philosophy is just not a very Christian, pastor’s kid, virtuous-Jesus-loving-homeschooled-girl thing to do. From a distance, I understood the skeptical glances. Up close, they made me sad. I wanted so much to show people, not only that this was not an off-the-deep-end thing to do, but that it was (only in part, because please people, have a bigger vision than classes and grades) what God had put me here to do and to learn.

There’s a quotation flying around the internet from theologian Frederick Beuchner. It says, “the place God calls you is where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.” That’s what writing is to me. Deep, deep gladness.  Ideas are strong, and they’re stronger when you have words to express them. 

So that’s why I write. Because I care about ideas, and I want to communicate them well. 
Because I believe that mind that creates and delights in the creation is the image of God, and words are my medium. Because stories thrill me as much as conversations do, and because I see history and that is exciting. And I want other people to see it too. 

The most common question when people find out my major is, of course, “what do you want to do with that?” The second most common is “So you want to teach?” After three and a half years, neither one of them intimidates me anymore. I do want to teach, but even if I didn’t or if I didn’t know, why should I worry? I may feel like writing is what I’m made to do, but I’m going to go back on my words right here and now and say it isn’t. Not fundamentally. Writing is a “deep gladness” and a tool that God has given me to use, but what He deep-down-at-the-core made me to do is to know Him. That’s why He created me. That’s why He created you. That means that if God asks me to follow Him somewhere different than into the university classroom I still daydream about, the classroom dream is going to put itself on hold. My commitment, even as a college student who is supposedly doing well because I have a tentative career plan that genuinely excites me, is not to a plan. It’s to a Person. It’s to a Person who will be as faithful today as He’s been since time began, a Person who wants me and you more than He wants a specific agenda in our lives, but a Person who gives us tools and passions and doesn’t forget about them.

Dorothy Sayers, another Christian woman who also didn’t quite follow the what-girls-are-supposed-to-do norms, said that our work as humans should be “the full expression of the worker’s faculties, the thing in which he finds spiritual, mental and bodily satisfaction, and the medium by which he offers himself to God.” That might be writing or teaching. It might be alleviating pain and sickness. It might be making machines that work. It might be sitting down with person after person who doesn’t believe that they matter and telling them that they do. I don’t care whether your thing is different than mine. Actually I hope it is. I want us to have different visions, because our God is big. But mainly I want us both to be offering ourselves back to our Him. 

Soli Deo gloria. Glory to God alone. 

Krystiana Kosobucki, Student in Impact at IUPUI

Five Ways to Make it This Semester
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DAY ONE: God says let there be light. IUPUI student receives their first syllabus.

DAY TWO: God creates the sky. IUPUI student is excited to go to class.

DAY THREE: God creates dry ground. IUPUI student feels up to their neck in homework and tests.

DAY FOUR: God completely shows off by creating the sun, moon, and stars. IUPUI student turns to coffee and late nights to try and finish all that has been assigned to them.

DAY FIVE: God goes to the sky and to the sea, creating fish and birds. IUPUI student wishes they could fly out of their 4 hour lab to a place far, far away.

DAY SIX: God shocks the world by creating animals, followed up by the first two human beings (Adam and Even). IUPUI student can see progress that has been made and wonders how they've made it this far. They also wonder how they'll have enough drive to make it through the rest of this semester.

DAY SEVEN: God rested from all His work. IUPUI student scratches head, wondering when there is time to rest.

The days of creation are a great example of what we were created to do: worship and create, worship and create, worship and create. We are creative beings that were made by the ultimate Creative Being. Yet in the midst of a semester -- creativity can seem the furthest thing that the college student is accomplishing. It may seem like you are just maintaining to make it, instead of flourishing the way God intended the college student to flourish in a semester's time.

The key is day seven, and yet there never seems to be time for day seven. We recycle to day one and start all over again, without any refueling.

Check out another take on the seventh day, found in Exodus 31:17:

It is a sign forever between me and the people of Israel that in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day he rested and was refreshed.

How is it that God was refreshed? Isn't God always on the top of His divine game? Psalm 121 says that He doesn't even sleep or get tired. So what does this verse mean, and how does it apply to the college student?

The word for refreshed is literally translated as RE-SELFED. When God rested it was just God being God. It was Himself being Himself. It wasn't just an example for us, it was a way of being that God continues to be. 

So, here are five great ways for you, in college at IUPUI, to RE-SELF yourself. (That was an odd sentence!)

  1. ROUTINE, ROUTINE, ROUTINE Try to go to sleep and wake up and the same times during the weekdays. You'll be amazed at how much better you'll feel and how much more motivated you'll become.
  2. BIBLE TIME IS UNTOUCHED Just like showering, teeth brushing, eating, bathroom time, etc. are all non-negotiable -- so should time spent in the Bible. Allow God to refresh you with his very words. Make time for personal Bible study and group Bible study. If God is #1, he always seems to provide the necessary time for all things school related.
  3. SERVE SOMEONE Make a point to do at least one act of kindness toward someone during each day. Encouragement note, txt, tweet, or something like that. Share a verse with someone. Buy someone's lunch. Get someone a cupcake. Serve at a food bank. Do something that is beyond yourself and your schedule.
  4. EAT YOUR FAVORITE MEAL Do I need to say more? Eating junk makes us feel like junk. At least once a week, eat your favorite meal. Take your time while you eat it. Refuel. Relax. Laugh. Eat it with others.
  5. WAKE UP ON SUNDAY MORNING If Jesus could... oh... say... raise from the dead on the first day of the week -- so we should be able to get up and worship with a wide range of Jesus followers. Old, young, tall, short, employed, unemployed, etc... you get the point. The church is meant to edify each other and bring honor and glory to God on Sundays. You are really missing out if you are miss this. There are great churches nearby IUPUI. Here are a few that we love: www.chapelrock.org www.kingswaychurch.org www.thecreek.org www.plainfieldchristian.com 

God's will never involves us hating our lives, no matter what the circumstances are (Philippians 4:4). 

Maybe the problem lies with us not taking the time to re-self, refresh. 

We are praying for you to make it!

Andrew Hodges // Volunteer Lead Campus Minister

Break Lag

At the end of August our family took a vacation to Michigan. It was so great to get away for the better part of the week. To refresh. To reflect. To sleep. To eat, much. There is nothing quite like taking time away from your normal routine. The perspective you gain from getting away is unmatched.

But then you get back into your routine -- and it is tough. 

My daughter and me.

My daughter and me.

This is kind of what it is like to come off of a Fall Break in college. It isn't quite time for Thanksgiving, and it is far too soon to be thinking about the coveted Winter (Christmas) Break. You are caught longing for more of a break, and it can go one of two ways.

1) MOTIVATION SHUT DOWN // You find your academic effort wanes in the face of impending breaks. All motivation to press on is gone. Grades suffer when we are on this shut down.

2) DIG, DIG, DIG // You use the coming breaks as motivation to turn it up a notch. You go the extra mile. You lean in more and more to allow God find the deepest character you possess. You thrive now, crash later. 

i really believe that the answer lies in the following passage in Epehsians 3: 

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Strengthened in the inner being -- with power from the Holy Spirit.

This is the key to overcoming break lag as a college student. 

You. Can. Do. This! 

Andrew Hodges // Volunteer Lead Campus Minister

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