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Christian Higher Ed
Episode 316th February 2025 • Dudes And Dads Podcast • Dudes And Dads Media
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In this episode of the Dudes and Dads Podcast, hosts Joel DeMott and Andy Lehman speak with Dr. Wally Brath, Head of Worship Arts, and Dr. Kevin Roberts, Provost; Professor of Behavioral Science, from Grace College, about Christian higher education. The conversation covers the challenges and opportunities in Christian education, identity formation in Christ, and preparing students for a secular world.

Key topics include:

• The role of the local church in shaping students' worldviews.

• The importance of understanding one's identity in Christ.

• Questions parents should ask when considering Christian colleges.

• The value of a Christian liberal arts education.

• A renewed interest in Christian education and community among young people.

The episode also features a lighthearted "Dudes and Dads Pop Quiz" to get to know the guests better.

Transcripts

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On this episode of the Dudes and Dads podcast, we're talking with our friends at Grace College about Christian higher ed

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Dole welcome. This is an interesting thing for us Andy. We are we are deep in the land of Winona Lake

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Why Nona Winona it however we pronounce it. I'm sure our guests will correct us officially, but

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We're really fortunate. We're actually in on campus here at Grace College and

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We have been invited to do a couple of what I'm referring to as the grace sessions

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It sounds I like sounds like official and that like some sort of Grammy winning experience will come out of this

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but

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Really our our exciting thing here is that we're recording

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Two episodes here and we have students that are a part of this recording session. They're gonna use these podcasts as

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Official projects to submit for recording classes. So we're excited about that

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We want to say thank you to our friend Scott Allen who helped set all this up

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Who's an instructor down here at grace and we've got a couple of guests as well

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from the college who are gonna talk about

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kind of big picture Christian ed and then on our next episode talking specifically about

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grace the experience the college experience here what's offered and

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And why grace is a great decision for someone who's looking for a Christian college experience

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So but before we do that Andy, we have people that help make this show possible

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So glad to have them as sponsors so grateful for their support of the dudes and dads podcast

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Well, hey this evening we have two will say

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Distinguished guests. I'm gonna I'm gonna use that kind of language about this

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I don't want to oversell it. I don't want to undersell it. So we've decided to use the word distinguished Andy. Is that appropriate?

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But so I want to have you guys introduce yourself

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Yeah, when we when we do this we do the dad stats. So tell me are you married? Do you have kids?

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Just tell me all about you. So first and I'll just say joining us our doctors Wally Brath and Kevin Roberts. They are so

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Dr. Bratz serves as the head of worship arts here at Grace College and then

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Dr. Roberts is the Provost

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I have never known you're gonna tell us what Provost is because I have never fully known people say Provost and I'm like that sounds

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Superficial. I don't know what that does. But you're also a professor here you you teach you are a past graduate student here as well

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I did read your bio. I looked into it a little digging

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So we're gonna get to hear more about that. But as Andy said you guys get to introduce yourself

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tell us all the things about you your family that you feel are safe for the internet and

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Wally we'll start with you first go for it. Sure

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well been married for for 35 years have three kids and

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My oldest is a senior here at Grace College. I studying engineering

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My middle child Carissa. She is at Ball State a

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Violin major there and my youngest is a junior in high school here at Warsaw High School

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One kind of interesting thing about us is is all of us play musical instruments

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So we have a we have a bass player my oldest son

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middle child violin youngest child

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Percussion my wife's a violinist. I play piano so we get to do things at church together

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Which is a little bit of a family band family band family band asked at the breath family

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Yes, the breath family players. I can just see it. It's in lights

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so

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Yeah, and also very interestingly my my kids

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They really dig like the music that that my wife and I are into

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in fact

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This this weekend. We're gonna go see Foster the People and she yes and but as a family, which is really interesting

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so my kids will listen to like, you know old Kansas Records and yes, and

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Just just I you know, that's not supposed to happen

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But for whatever reason my kids have have just really been into like well, it's because you've done something, right?

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Well, it's you've you've trained them up in the way. They should go. That's right. That's what's happened. That's what I hear. Yes. Yes

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Yes, thank you. So that's my family wonderful Kevin over to you. Yeah, so I've been married for

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29 years almost 29 years and to my wife Heather and we have two kids

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I have one that is a junior here at grace

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Just getting his M. Cats course back today. Nice

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so and then I have a daughter who's down at Huntington University and she is

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studying art education wonderful, so

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interesting about us

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We travel a lot as a family, I think I've been to all but six major league ballparks

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And after my own heart

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yeah, and

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my wife's a pharmacist and so

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Of course, I'm a psychologist so, you know, she gives them the drugs and I try to keep them away from people. So it's

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What the dynamic family dynamic that's great that's great. Yeah, wonderful

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Well, we're so glad to have you guys with us here on this show

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And I think it's a unique opportunity when we get to talk with people who are on the ground

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Daily working with college students. It's a someone who was a youth and young adult pastor for for quite a while

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Just this season of life. I think young adults number one and I've said this on our show before I'll say it again

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What an exciting time of life but very very critical and and I have a general sense that

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Of course, none of our grace college students fall into this category

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But you know our young adults are struggling in a lot of in a lot of ways and there there are some real serious

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challenges that lie in front of them and I just think it's a unique opportunity to be able to talk about those things and to talk

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about maybe even specifically as we're this this first session that we're talking just

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Christian education as a whole kind of the big 30,000 foot view

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What has been going on in Christian ed?

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what is going on thinking specifically to the needs of college students currently and and

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the questions and the needs that families have is they're trying to navigate like

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What what will be those educational decisions that we make so I

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When I sent the show notes out to you guys

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I'll just tell you back in I remember I remember the day back in

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2009 right around this time of year. I was sitting in a

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Graduate class. It was the psychology of pastoral counseling

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So, you know deep stuff had a clinical psychologist is teaching this class, but we always had

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a little bit of a kind of a devotional before before class would start and that day

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He brought a doozy. It was a recent article that had been picked up by the the Christian Science Monitor

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from an author known as Michael Spencer and Michael Spencer at the time was like one of the

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guys for our young people there used to be these things called blogs that people read and that was like

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long articles online before the podcast thing really really hit and so Michael Spencer was one of the top Christian bloggers in the

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in the country and getting thousands of tens of thousands of daily of daily reads regularly and he wrote this article on his blog that

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kind of picked up

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attention

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That was back in

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2009 that he wrote that he wrote this article and I have gone back every single year

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It's kind of like he made these kind of pronouncements and statements about his concern about

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Evangelical faith evangelical culture where we were going what what challenges were ahead and

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I have gone back every year to this article to kind of be like how what how right was he?

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Just as a kind of a little bit of a canary down the mine shaft so to speak, you know

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Am I seeing these things ongoing in our culture? Are these concerns still relevant today? And

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And if so, what are we what are we doing about it? Are we talking about it?

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So when we have these kind of conversations

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Especially with people who are professors who are at a Christian college

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there's a couple of items that he mentions in this article that are specific to that so I'm gonna read this quote and

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Then I want to like just dive in and see what you guys just what you think about it. Yay. Nay

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And all that and then Andy and I will just pepper you with questions after that. So he wrote again

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This is back in the spring of 2009. He wrote this article entitled

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The coming evangelical collapse. Okay, so like a really striking title, right?

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And as part of this article he writes this

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We evangelicals have failed to pass on to our young people an orthodox form of faith that can take root and survive the secular

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onslaught ironically

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The billions of dollars that we've spent on youth ministers Christian music

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Publishing and media has produced a culture of young Christians who know next to nothing about their own faith

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Except how they feel about it. Our young people have deep beliefs about the culture war

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But do not know why they should obey Scripture the essentials of theology or the experience of spiritual discipline and community

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coming generations of Christians are going to be

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monumentally ignorant and unprepared for culture wide pressures and he continues on in his next point

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He says despite some very successful developments in the past 25 years

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Christian education has not produced a product that can withstand the rising tide of secularism

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Evangelicalism has used its educational system primarily to staff its own needs and talk to itself

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Ouch, and by the way, I'm sitting and we're sitting here talking to college professors

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I was sitting at a Christian College getting a graduate degree and my

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Psych Christian psych professor is leveling the statement for a devotional mind you

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That was a little bit unexpected

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But it's just this is stuck out to me and I've just kind of gone back to this every year to say

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What is going on? So

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You hear these words

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You hear these concerns about are you training our young people?

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Preparing them for the world in which they're going into and the and a little bit of the accusation here and mind you Michael Spencer was

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A chaplain at a Christian school as he as he wrote this as well down in Kentucky

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So in a little more context, he was kind of preaching to his own people, too

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When you hear this

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What what resonates with you?

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What maybe you would push back on where do you how do you see this kind of playing out within a student body?

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and

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And just kind of the broader sphere again. We're kind of talking big picture a broader sphere of within Christian education

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What resonates with you guys? What do you think Wally? I'll give it to you

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Give it to you first and we can kind of go around the room

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Yeah

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I

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Mean I think part of the

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maybe what he's what he's getting at there is I

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See as a result of maybe like the local church because we have a lot of students coming from a lot of different

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you know denominational backgrounds and you know, they a

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Large part of how they view their relationship with God and and

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Comes from the way they were shaped in that local church

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You know the the early Church Fathers said the way we pray or the way we worship affects what we believe

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and it now goes both ways what we believe affects how we pray and worship but

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You know that the

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how we worship week after week I

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Often tell students that that the the Sunday worship service is really the front lines of discipleship

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You know what we what we emphasize in worship week after week the sung prayers that we sing together

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Are shaping the way we see God and the way that we respond to him and

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Unfortunately, I think

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In kind of the larger evangelical context. It's gotten to be very consumer driven very

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and and so

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You know, it's kind of like this big machine that's kind of pumping out different, you know

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Whether it's music or conferences or you know books that kind of thing

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And so but I'm not sure

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We've we've thought you know a little bit deeper about how

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As a local church, we're actually, you know shaping the people of God so when so when we get students here

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They already have obviously, you know worldview and in ways that they think about

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the Word of God and in those things is so

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Yeah, so I mean part part of what we do with worship arts we have a you know

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a course in history of Christian worship and

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biblical theology of worship

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But we're trying to I'm trying to even let them see kind of the the trajectory of where where where their denomination has come from

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Right, so they kind of have a context of that

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but we look at you know kind of even pre Reformation and and you know

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What not everything in the medieval period was was you know was was bad, you know and even kind of going back kind of beyond the

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The Enlightenment and and the Reformation those kinds of things just so they get a context

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Of how how the church in each era interpreted the Word of God, you know, and that's that's really important

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So

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So yeah, so what we're trying to do is is trying to equip these students to be

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Pastoral musicians, you know worship pastors first

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and so we have in in our you know, you know, maybe we'll talk about this at a different point too in the podcast, but

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But we I think we have a good balance of kind of the theology of worship and then some real practical

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musical things that they'll they'll need to do as they as they go out into churches, but to realize that

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The kinds of worship services the liturgies that they're planning are shaping the people of God. I mean, I think that's a

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Really big part of it

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So I think even if they just kind of kind of understand that and kind of own it and feel the weight of that

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I think that could

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in turn maybe

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Change change the culture a little bit, you know going forward. So

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Yeah, I would go back to that first statement he says where he says we in the evangelicals have failed to pass on

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To our young people an Orthodox form of faith that take root and survive the secular onslaught. I think where I struggle

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And in a good way with this is I think it comes down to human for me. It comes down to development

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I don't think if you if you fail to understand that you are

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chosen known right adopted and

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Loved by God unless your identity is fully in Christ

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You are going to be swayed and you're gonna be influenced and I don't think

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we have probably done an adequate job in my opinion of

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really teaching identity formation that is in Christ and

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I think it's something we have to get better at because otherwise we're gonna be swayed by the

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Experiences right? Where does that where does that start? Is that?

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Starting at home when we're young or where does that start?

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I think that starts at home because I think you have to ask yourself the question all the time

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Right was does my performance determine my value does how pretty I am or how athletic I am

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Determine my value and where do I get my value from and so for me?

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You're gonna easily be swayed if you do not realize first where you're rooted

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Because it all comes back to and if you follow the longings that all human beings have

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They come back to some of those very root things about being in Christ, right? We want to be accepted

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We want to be loved and we want other people's approval

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But we have that in Christ and that's where I feel like if we failed we've probably failed there

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yeah, what so

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You know, I think about

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Moms and dads aunts and uncles

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You know fellow

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believers in a faith community

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who

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Who want to see their young people succeed, right? They want it. They want to see them be discipled and to you know grow up and there's

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You know, they're a lot of our young people, you know

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the 18 19 years before they ever find themselves in a college context if that's the route that they take and those are I mean

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For someone who does a lot of you know, adolescent talk

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Thanks a lot and talks a lot about adolescent brain development and all those sort of I mean, they're a sponge right?

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Like they're just they're they're sucking all of this culture all these experiences up long before they're ever even you know

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I'm sure you you many times have felt like man if I only could have

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Connected with this student a few years a few years earlier

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But for a community that really wants the best for for young people

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And and then they're they're hoping that maybe this next

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The college experience the next the next phase of their life, which is again

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So critical will be kind of this determining factor will help solidify some of the things Kevin that you just outlined here in terms of identity

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What

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What questions for anybody that's thinking about Christian education for their young for their young person

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and

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Is concerned about that identity question when they're looking at colleges?

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What questions should they be asking to sort of say is this a place that is

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Concerned about that

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Andy and I had a very riveting conversation on the way down here because I'm always asking it

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I'm always asking this question of of the sort of the formal learning aspect and the formational aspect and the integration of those two things

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I think my bias would be that places tend to do very well

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You know, I don't want to make a bifurcation here

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But they tend to do well may be better in one area and not so well in the other or vice versa they can that can

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happen on either side

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You're counseling a potential future college student who's looking at Christian College

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Parents are trying to ask this question of like oh, is this the place that's going to help them

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With their identity like understand their central identity in Christ

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What would you counsel them toward what would what questions can they be asking the colleges what questions can they be asking staff and things

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Like that because I'm sure you answer those questions yourself. So

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Yeah, help us

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well, I think that's the I think that's the beauty of going to a Christian College in the first place and it's an even a

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liberal arts

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Institution like ours. I think the value is that we're interested in the whole person, right?

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We're interested in them emotionally spiritually. We're interested in their intellectual development

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And yeah, we may not have some of them you there might be some things that we don't have that a big university may have

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But we're also interested in your complete development

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Right. Our goal is that you have a formed Christian worldview, right?

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And we want you to know where your identities add so that you're not easily swayed that you're going out and you're serving in your church

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And you're impacting your community and meaningful ways

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Right. So for me, I think one of the things that they have to look for is what do you want from for your child?

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Right. What do you want? Do you want?

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Intellectual development or do you want the whole package?

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For the parent that just wants their kid to make a lot of money when they graduate college like what what about what about that?

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Is that is that bad?

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Should they be shamed or should they be gently?

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Corrected and told told for to go on a different path. What Wally help us help us out, man

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I probably the wrong person

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As a being in in worship ministry for you know, 25 plus years and then yeah

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Yeah, I mean I think of that I think of what Jesus said in the Gospels, you know, he said like, you know

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What good is it if you if you gain the whole world and yet forfeit your soul?

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I mean

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I don't obviously we need to be able to make a living and take care of our families and

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So for for me, you know a lot of time parents will say well, you know my my my student

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They love music. They love worship, but I want them to be able to make a living

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You know that I don't want them living in my base, right?

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And and part of that I mean, you know, I know my my experience, you know, God has always taken care of

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My family, you know, even when we just started out we were just kind of in small churches

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and we were part of some church planting when we were at Bethlehem Baptist in Minneapolis and

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You know this kind of entrepreneurial, you know starting up different churches and that kind of thing. God has always

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Been faithful to take care of us. So I mean I that might seem like a cop-out

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but but I think if you're feeling called to to ministry whether it's you know, preaching or you know,

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overseas ministry or you know kind of worship ministry

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You know, you're not gonna make you know, you're probably not gonna make a ton of money in that

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But God's gonna God's gonna take care of you

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but I think for the the students that want to study, you know, like that are more in STEM and engineering and

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You know business and that kind of thing. I mean they they just need to know how to

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Not see that as an idol and and also how best to kind of steward the resources that that God will give them

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You know kind of in the future in their in their vocation. So I think

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Here, you know, I think at a Christian

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institution

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Hopefully we're gonna kind of instill those values as well how to be good stewards of that. So so

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Part of my story is right out of high school. I graduated. I'm gonna date myself here graduated in 1998

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high school went two years to a small Christian school in

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Illinois and

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Stopped and went life took me somewhere else didn't graduate from there now that college is no longer

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We're seeing a lot of this disappearing. So I ended up going back later

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I got my degree online from another Christian University, but

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But did it online? Do you think it?

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In the world where it's harder and harder worth these smaller schools are closing closing down

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What does that look like so is it is it still I mean

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Do we is it smart to still go to a small school that may be closing in?

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Two years or is it and this is a flip side of that coin

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Is it also maybe better to wait a little bit for me? I went back in my 30s

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And finished and got my degree. Is it smarter to wait?

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For that like because I'll go on the other I'll just say this Andy was a phenomenal student in his 30s

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I was I was a terrible student in sometimes they say education is wasted on the young right and it's and it's like

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That's a that's a great point, you know

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yeah, so I just I guess the the thrust of your question is just this is

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Well, we're always asking this question is college the best is it the best thing right right after it's right out of high school

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As you guys think about the Christian college experience or whatever. I know I was

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You know, I just I just think about my own experience

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I was such a better student at toward the end toward the end like just such a better so much more focused

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I knew I knew how much my money was actually worth. That's exactly yes

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When I'm right now, I was responsible for my loans right then, you know things like that

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What I don't if you guys have you know

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Kevin if you have thoughts just on yeah, I just done on that of

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The timing and discerning because there's obviously pressures for some of like I got to know the next thing

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What do you think what would your count again?

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We're we're talking to we're talking to families who are coming to you for the sage advice of what they should do with their with this

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Pedential college student. What do we think? Well, my family were they were not believers

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So I started at a university and when I got saved I I went and I was not ready for college

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And no one had ever been to college on either side of my family

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So, you know, I probably had a robust 2.2 GPA at the end of my first year and a half

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Because I didn't know how to study I had never studied and so

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So it was it a good use of my money right then

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no, it was not but I stay I obviously stayed the course and

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I do think there's value in going

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early

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The difference between an 18 year old brains development and a 21 year old brains development

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it is

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Huge and you can see it in the conversations in the classroom

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You can see it in the the kinds of things that you can the thoughtful discussions that you can have

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There are much harder when they're younger

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So I think there's value in going early. I'm probably biased that way

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But

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Clearly you get to be a better student

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When you see that you have to pay those student loans back and it feels more real to you. Yeah

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so

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What what are they in Kevin? Maybe this is a

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Wall if you've got thoughts on this too, I think

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Asking we kind of asked this question about like in the Christian college world. What are the like? What are the trends that are emerging?

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What are the what are the big things?

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What are the kind of the national Christian college level as you guys go to your conferences and you're part of your associations or whatever?

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What are people talking about? What are the what are the the challenges? What are the the victories?

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What where's the you know, hopefully we're all feeling hopeful about about things but also

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You know it as someone who leads a just even a secular non-for-profit now

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the money is not getting any easier and and

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People's hesitations seem to be increasing for a number of reasons

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What what's what's what's emerging? What is what are the big conversations? This is made this is a provost question for sure

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I'm just interested to get your yeah to get your your sense of that

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Well, I was just in Texas last week at an International Alliance of Christian Education that kind of goes k-12 all the way through so

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You know, we spend a lot of time talking about some of the real the realities that are really difficult that we're facing right now

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and some of them are things like AI how I AI is going to influence all of us and

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The ways it's influencing education and are we embracing it are we not

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And so there's a there's a lot of debate about that right now. I think the other things that we face are

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finding the right faculty and

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Industry we're the hiring of the right faculty members has become

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You know

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Increasingly more of a challenge there's because there's some disciplines. You just can't hardly find them

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I mean interesting we've had positions and one of our disciplines open for four years and

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You know finding those folks are

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Difficult is it difficult from so I'm just wondering is it difficult?

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Just based on the skill set itself or is it skill set and

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Believe, you know like because we I am assuming we're hiring Christian professors here. Yeah, right

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So they have to sign off on the belief statement, right?

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There's a doctrinal component is is it collectively the challenge or is it both are both are an issue?

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No, it's not both. I would say it's definitely the industry. Okay. Yeah more and more people have left

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especially when you get into the sciences

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Your

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Psychologists and what they can make immediately in industry is so much different

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Yeah, then we just don't pay them as well. Yeah. Yeah, and and that's the challenge, right?

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So but you're looking for those best qualified people and so sometimes waiting to find those

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Great fits and highly qualified people. Sometimes you're waiting for a couple of years to get them

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Does it look like I've heard some of my colleagues talk about the and this is I think this is a made-up term

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but the

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adjunctification of

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Christian ed where you're finding

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More and more part-time professors or people that are in in an industry in a discipline who are coming in and who are you know?

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Offering I mean what good bad is that like is that a concern?

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Well, it is it can be

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It can also be a wonderful blessing too, right?

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Because you know there was when I first started and fell in love with teaching

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It was I was out there doing counseling and I was doing the work and so you're bringing a ton of expertise

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right there -

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But how do you integrate faith and see everything from a Christian worldview?

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and those people are coming in part-time and we don't always pay them the best money in the world and

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And yet we're we have these you know high standards that we want to reach and so it

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That creates a little bit of a dilemma for anyone in higher ed. Yeah. Yeah

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at the end of the day, I mean our

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So, I don't know if you guys have either one of you like national and the national enrollment levels at the Christian College level are we

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Where are we? Like? How are we doing? We're we're we are out of space. Okay

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We had to shut down we had to shut down

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Emissions last year we were pacing ahead of even last year

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and so

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you know, we're

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You know, we we bought up houses

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We've done other things to just try to meet the demand for students at the at the bigger at the bigger picture

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Is there?

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Because I'm incredibly hopeful about this actually because I think there's a as the young people to say maybe a maybe a vibe shift going on

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here but like is there a new

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Is there a renewed interest in Christian education is there maybe a renewed

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Value I have heard from some young people where it's it's like I never would have considered this but I recognize like I

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need this kind of community in my life for this this next this next phase because I have felt so

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Distant or disassociated from a really good an intentional Christian community and this this this might be by the way

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People that it could vary whether they were directly connected with the Christian community at a congregation level or not

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They're still having there's still those challenges

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and

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And there seems to be a renewed just a general renewed

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interest in spirituality

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Amongst amongst a certain age group and I we kind of feel that I'm really hopeful for that

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So you guys here specifically and I wonder I think maybe there's other places that are like this if this kind of bigger conversation of

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like are our Christian college is prepared to scale and

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If not, what do we do it? Like what do we do about that?

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if there is an a new wave of student coming in at a

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Increase, you know increased level. I just I just wonder like not that we can tell the future but I wonder like what you know

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What's the answer is there is there one?

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well and you couple that with an interesting problem that

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Some of the schools are are really diminishing and like you said, I don't know if it was Lincoln Christian College

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It was I've been on that campus a hundred times. So

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But you know you see some of these schools that are vanishing and obviously there are a lot of needs and and so

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We do face some interesting demands, but I will say, you know, Indiana's got a lot of Christian colleges here, right?

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we've got several of them all within the a pretty narrow area of probably an hour and a half and

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But not all have seen increases. Yeah, so yeah. Well, I I think

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You know as we're talking again just kind of big picture Christian College here

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I there it sounds to me like there's a lot of a lot of reason to be hopeful for the for the future and a lot

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of a lot of

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reason to to invest in it and yet

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some just some discernment that has to that has to go on ahead of time and and

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You know, I would I would offer this I'm guessing you guys would agree like

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Make a lot of visits start your visiting process soon

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Ask ask all the questions that you can ask

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Interrogate you're gonna be spending a lot of time at this place wherever it is that you're going interrogate it

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And and and find and find out and you know

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For those of you listening as I sit across the table from these gentlemen here tonight that I can see they are ready for interrogation

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They are they are they're the they encourage it. They welcome it. So so so come in come and do it and and and

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really

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You know the Christian education the Christian College

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You know, we've had some discussion about you know people there we tend to think I know in my my college

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It was we trained ministers teachers and nurses, you know, and that's that's true for here at grace, too

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That's a that's a big that's a big part of it. But again our future business leaders are

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You know our future medical professionals

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You know even beyond beyond nurse, you know in addition to nursing on all those sort of things all these different areas

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and

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And really a Christian a Christian education in those in those spaces

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it just seems that we're able that it's able to offer a

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kind of a more integrated approach I think that's that's the goal right because

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Because if you're at a Christian college and you're sitting in a business management class, right there there is this

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assumption that we're teaching business management through the mindset of how to do this as a Christ follower and

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I've worked with a lot of people my friends who?

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Who who never got that?

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not ever got that assistance in their in their management training or or what or whatever and

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It goes it goes a long way again you said Kevin

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I think you said a great like this whole idea of identity of identity who who we are

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And pointing pointing people back because ultimately we're saying here putting back to them back to the core of the gospel

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Really? I mean that that is that is at the core of it and I would say

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I'm guessing you guys would agree like for anybody that's thinking about Christian education

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Like maybe asking the question like how is the gospel impacting every single class here? What is its place? What is its purpose?

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You know as you're thinking about that next that next stage for for your student or for our for our young people

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We have young people listen to this show - they're thinking about that. Maybe that's a that's a key question. So

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Gentlemen, we're so grateful for this time with you. We can't end any episode without

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what we know as

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The dudes and dads pop quiz now, it's time for the dudes and dads pop quiz

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All right

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So the pop quiz is essentially we ask you questions that are not related to anything with this episode just to get to know you

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A little bit better - two questions each two questions each. Okay. All right. All right first question

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What book should I be reading right now?

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You both get to answer

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There's so

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My first book that I always would recommend is Andrew Murray's humility book, okay

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Small yes, then as a humility book should be

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One of the great reads but the first time you read it

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It'll impact you the second time it'll have profound impact interesting interesting. I

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Would say I just got done reading Malcolm Guy. He's an Irish poet. He

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Came up with this collection of advent poems. I'm having an epiphany and then but it's not just his poems

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it's like a collection of of lots of different poetry and

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With with commentary as well. So I would really recommend that

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Malcolm Geitz

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ITE his his his collection of advent poems

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Fantastic. Okay. All right, and I'm more of a technology person whereas Joel was more of a book type person

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So I'm gonna ask the question if you had to delete all but one app from your smartphone. What would you keep?

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And the phone app itself doesn't count yeah, yeah, well now we'll let it function still as a phone

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The way got intended

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I

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Love the ability

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Through my banking app to take a picture of a check. Yes

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Visits a bank anymore. I mean really I

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I'm so lazy

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That's great that is that that is a very hard question

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He's looking at his phone, right

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Because I'm thinking he's trying to make a decision

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All right. All right, I would say I'm gonna do a game because that this would make it Star Wars galaxy of heroes

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Okay, right. Okay much nerdier answer than I thought I might get so that's bonus points for that. That's fantastic

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Okay. Well, thanks gentlemen. We you successfully passed the dudes and dads pop quiz. Well, well, well, well done. Well, hey friends

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We're so grateful for you listening in

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Thanks so much as always you can head over to the dudes and dads

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calm for

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Past episodes. Yeah present episodes our

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Merchandise feel free to get a get a hoodie get a hat and he's supporting the hat tonight on tonight

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Yeah show notes all the good stuff. If you want to know more we'll make even our guests here on night

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We'll make them embarrassingly easy to easy to find over at dudes and dads calm if you've got future show ideas

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What should they do Andy?

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Email us email us. Thank you. Remember the voicemail number, right? Yeah, so you can email us

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Dudes and dads pop dudes and dads podcast at gmail.com if you get future show ideas or a strong rebuke to send to us for

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The whatever it is that we put out on the internet and you're just uncomfortable with it

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Feel free to let us know why we should take it down

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That's never happened before so I keep once once excuse me what's happened one time

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but just be there nothing too controversial, but

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I keep on upping the ante on just trying to invite people to send us an email

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And we didn't we actually got a visit our last show we got a really nice email

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Did we get a nice email through somebody we did so no one sent us the rebukes. It's been all it's all been all nice

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So far, that's fine, too. Okay. Well, hey everybody. We're so grateful for you listening. Thanks for hanging out with us

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And until next time we wish you grace happy

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You

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