College is a Spiritual Quest for Many Students
However they don't automatically seek answers from Christianity
However they don't automatically seek answers from Christianity
When 1,200 InterVarsity staff and spouses return to St. Louis for a National Staff Conference, January 2-6, 2008, there will be many similarities and some key differences with last year's Urbana 06 Student Missions Convention in St. Louis.
The Incarnation is infinitely more mysterious than balancing on one finger atop a basketball. As miracles go, the Incarnation is stunning, unexplainable.
Mer Bilhorn has lived two lives—pastor and engineer. Throughout his life, he has had a passion to proclaim the truth of the gospel and to find out the best way to store energy in batteries.
Perhaps it is easier to offer grace when we understand the temptations that college students often face. At many schools there are a plethora of party options on the weekends, where sex is sometimes as casual as a handshake.
As we contemplate the incarnation, we would do well to look beyond the cute baby in the manger to see the revolution that came with the Son of God.
Learning how to partner with God in what God is doing in the world
Defending First Amendment freedoms and religious diversity on the college campus
Peter Bosscher lived the vision of InterVarsity: transforming students and faculty, renewing the campus, and developing world changers.
For more than sixty-five years InterVarsity has been proclaiming and demonstrating God's love to students and faculty on college campuses. We establish and build witnessing communities that share God's love by communicating the Gospel in clear, credible, and compelling ways.