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Conferences
National Faculty Leadership Conference
"Called
to Make a Difference" is the theme of a national conference
for Christian faculty. The National Faculty Leadership Conference
(NFLC) will be held in Washington, D.C., June 24-27. The conference,
sponsored by Christian Leadership Ministries, will bring together
faculty from around the country and the world to collaborate, network,
receive encouragement and be equipped on matters of faith in the
academy. A call for papers has been issued in 14 academic tracks.
Dallas Willard will be among the keynote speakers. Visit WWW.NFLC.US
for more information and registration.
C.
S. Lewis and Ethics in a Post-Enron Age
The Second Austin C. S. Lewis Conference entitled "C. S. Lewis
and Ethics in a Post-Enron Age" is a one-day Saturday conference
to be held at The University of Texas at Austin on April 17, 2004.
The conference considers the challenge of living consistently in
the complexities of our everyday lives by exploring Christian thought
through the writings of C. S. Lewis and others. Visitwww.CSLewisAustin.org
for more information
International
News
Christianity
courses lead students to Christ
In Taiwan,
university students can now choose from elective classes such as
“Introduction to Christianity,” “The Bible and
Life,” and “Christian Thought and Western Civilization.”
The
classes are a result of efforts by Christian professors at a major
university in Chung-Li to introduce biblical concepts to their students
in a credible manner. Approximately 2000 students at six different
schools enroll in these classes each year. Because of the issues
being raised, after-class conversations about knowing Christ personally
often occur. An estimated 10 percent of the students who take these
elective classes end up becoming Christians.
Two
other courses, offered in the engineering school at another major
university, serve as pre-evangelistic outreaches. “Engineering
and Life” and “Engineering and Social Change”
attract an average of 500 students each semester.
The
Christian professors teaching these engineering courses make a point
to let the students know about their Christian beliefs on the first
day of class when they introduce themselves. The course material
provides the faculty with numerous opportunities during the semester
to share their personal testimonies of how Jesus Christ changed
their lives.
In
addition, the professors invite students to optional discussion
times with Christian professionals from the community one hour before
the start of each class. During these times the community guests
can directly share the gospel and invite students to receive Jesus
Christ into their lives.
Praying
professors expand outreach
What began as a simple prayer for more lab equipment turned into
a movement of prayer among faculty in Taiwan.
In
1990, a professor at the country’s top university found himself
without the proper equipment to do his mechanical engineering research.
The professor asked his colleague, who was also a follower of Jesus
Christ, if the two of them might pray together regarding this need.
Over the next few years a growing number of mechanical engineering
professors, graduate students, and university staff continued to
gather regularly for prayer.
In
1995, God impressed upon these professors the need to unite the
various Christian campus organizations for prayer on behalf of the
university. On November 15, the anniversary of the university’s
founding, the first annual “Born to Love” prayer meeting
was held. Each year since then the faculty have held a similar campus-wide
prayer event.
The
professors’ commitment to prayer also inspired other faculty
at other universities in Taiwan. At one university, the Christian
professors sponsored an annual Christmas party as an outreach to
the faculty. An average of 20 guests would come each year. In 1999,
these professors decided to begin praying three months before the
holiday event. That year more than 90 people attended, including
the president of the university and three deans. Since then, each
Christmas season has been preceded by prayer and has now become
a time of rich spiritual harvest for the Christian faculty.
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