Saturday, June 9, 2012

Reflections On The CCBC Days



Due to the unfortunate and recent passing of our good friend Kevin Lines, who I met at Calvary Chapel Bible College, other friends from Bible college started reconnecting over Facebook and sharing old photos and warm memories of our time together.

(Note: I will write about Kevin Lines and my friendship with him after his memorial service. I still can’t believe he’s gone.)

Every time I think about CCBC I have a mixed bag of emotions. I’ve had some of the most fun and meaningful times there. I also had some of my greatest failures there. But instead of talking about “only the good times” I’ve come to realize that both failures and triumphs nearly always contribute to a person’s maturation and a Christian’s sanctification. So despite my shortcomings, I fondly look back at that time. Here are the reasons why:

Laughter

I can say with absolute certainty that I have not laughed as often or as hard as I did at my time at CCBC. If laughter is truly medicine to the soul then my soul nearly OD(ed). And yes, I still laugh often and hard. Okay, I will acknowledge that most of the laughter was juvenile but still, it was great. There’s a difference between Christian juvenile activity and secular juvenile activity, and I’ve been a part of both. For example, secular juvenile activity would include (but is not limited to) egging someone’s house. A Christian, however, would say, “Wait, we don’t want to destroy property, let’s just toilet paper it instead.” There’s a difference.

When my buddy Bryan and I arrived at CCBC, barely graduated from high school and never really having any real responsibilities, we didn’t know what to except. We just noticed there were a lot of white people. The first day of arriving at our dorm we met 6’9 130lbs Joshua Grooms. Everyone started to unpack. I had to get something from the car and when I got back Josh and Bryan were spilling their guts to each other like Steel Magnolias. Josh knew as much about Bryan as I did in a matter of 15 minutes. We decided to jump him in our gang (figuratively speaking). Over the next two years we would laugh, cry and steal Josh’s food at every opportunity we had.

Later we formed close bonds with Joey Bell, Andre Garces, and Jeremy Camp (when he was a nobody). A semester after that it would be Sean, Moxi, Andy, Andrew, Brandon, Jeanine, Vanessa, Jennifer, Shannon, Jeanette, Jason, Nick, Dave, Sammie, and yes, Kevin Lines. They were some of the most amazing people I’ve ever met. It would take too long for me to explain all of their uniqueness and how each one of them loves the Lord and the impact they had on my life. So I’ll give you only the cliff notes.

No matter how busy things got everyone had lunch together and when one of us was missing, we would notice. "Hey, where's 'so-and-so'?" During that hour of lunch everyday I couldn’t remember a more diversified group of people laughing so much with one another (and at one another). It was such a joyous time and the first time I felt a part of a family. And yes, Bryan and I kept trying to steal Josh’s food.

Worship

I don’t remember a sweeter time of worship. Even after earning two master’s degrees in bible and seeing how theologically incorrect and anthropocentric some of those songs were, they still had a positive impact on my life. Not so much because of their incorrectness but despite it. The main reason was because of the people I was worshiping with. Everyone sang and it all felt sincere. I don’t know if you’ve been in a worship service when no one is singing but lemma tell ya, it stinks. It’s like being at a ball game and no one is cheering but you, and you’re the one that looks like a lunatic. “It’s a freakin’ ball game, you’re supposed to be loud!”

I tend to analyze things to death reflecting on reflections of reflections. I feel like I’m in a house of mirrors with so much reflecting going on. It is possible, though, to over analyze things in the name of balancing the heart and mind in worship. I miss that time when I simply stop analyzing stuff, let my words be few, and allow my heart to weep because I am touched by the love of God. Every morning we had devotions, which consisted of 15 minutes of worship and another 15 minutes where someone from the student body opened up God’s word and read from it. I was in my young arrogant, “I could do things better if I were running the show” stage in my life and those 15 minutes of worship every morning slowly chipped away at my hardness of heart. Every morning, without fail, I knew the Lord loved me. It was humbling. Is there a better way to start the day? I say no.

It helped having Jeanine, Jennifer, and Vanessa singing. They had angelic voices and hearts of gold, which managed to stay uncorrupted dispute their constant contact with Bryan and I. Truthfully, I don't know why they were our friends. If I were them I wouldn't have been. It was probably because they loved Jesus and even Jesus hung out with jack@$$es.

Fellowship

As I already mentioned, it was the first time I remember feeling like a part of a family. The guys and I had prayer meetings every other night (usually for secular rock bands to become Christians so we could start listening to them again) we said hard things to each other when we needed to, and all us of wanted to become more like Jesus. Yes, we were an immature bunch of young guys. But we were a bunch of young guys pulling for each other (when we weren’t trying to steal Josh’s food).

As part of this fellowship at CCBC, I watched a group of wonderful young ladies grow to be confident, selfless, and God fearing women. Most of them are now amazing wives to decent men and even better mothers to lovely children building a house that serves the Lord, a foundation which every society needs in order to thrive. None of us were perfect but we all knew it and we loved each other anyway. Isn’t that what a community of believers is supposed to do? I say yes.

Personal Failure

There are some advantages, although not many, from growing up in a broken home without any Christian influence. One of those advantages is never feeling obligated to appear to have it “all together.” I struggled and thrived during my time at CCBC. I failed at so many levels and at one point thought my life wouldn’t ever be the same. I wasn’t always a good friend to people. I wasn’t always patient or kind. I was selfish and egocentric. I was upset when I didn’t get my way. I felt like I knew everything and that no one had anything to teach me. I thought of myself highly and then God in His mercy brought me to my knees.

It was all a road test. It was a loosening up of the hard ground. I needed a little extra time to mature. I mean, I had Bryan as a friend. Who wouldn’t need extra time? A couple of years after CCBC I started attending Biola University. There were a lot of similarities but plenty of differences. I don’t think I would’ve cherished my time at Biola quite as much without my experiences at CCBC. My friendships were rooted in meaningful things. There was less time for juvenile behavior (although there was still plenty of it) and a deeper sense of responsibility towards my academics. Chapel was actually enjoyable for me. Most of my groomsmen were guys from Biola, and there was plenty of food so I didn’t have to steal it from a guy like Josh.

All of these things were a direct result of having spent time at CCBC, having spent time with the people at CCBC. This, it appears, was God’s plan all along. It was a place where God gave me the grace and room to fail in order to succeed later on. I’ve certainly failed in other ways since that time but unlike the initial failures I had, I know there’s redemption at the end and there’s a purpose and a plan from the God who is both sovereign and good.

I’ll never forget my time at CCBC. There were so many wonderful people, amazing friendships, tears of pain and joy shared, confessions to one another, rejoicing with one another, grieving with one another, being wronged and forgiving, having wronged and asking for forgiveness, being kicked out, being let back in, beating up Josh, getting beat down by everyone else, sobbing over God’s goodness, laughing until it hurts and then laughing some more, eating like there’s no tomorrow and then eating Josh’s food, praying deeply into the night, worshiping in the early morning and then missing breakfast because you were too late and the cafĂ© closed, reading, learning, getting your heart ripped out, learning some more, and now wondering, “Where has the time gone?” That sounds a lot like life.

9 comments:

  1. Thank you for posting this, Junior. It was so well done (and hilarious as usual). You were able to articulate so well how I felt and feel about much of my CCBC days. (Although, I never stole any of Josh's food.) ;) You have such a gift from the Lord to communicate well in your blogs. Keep them coming!

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    1. Thanks Jeanine. You were (and are) a big influence on my life. I'm extremely grateful for having you as a friend.

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  2. Poor Josh. No wonder he only weighed 130 lbs.

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    1. Hey Uncle John, it's always good to hear from you. You sound like the girls at school rebuking Bryan and I for stealing Josh's food.

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  3. Great post JR!!! I too look back and can't help but laugh...1. For the great memories 2. For thinking I was receiveng top notch education (LOL). Thankfully the laughter for the former outwieghs the latter!

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    1. Dude Andre, I seriously am grateful for you bro. Everyone I mentioned (and probably more people I forgot to) made that time special. I know God had a purpose in all of it. I think a reunion is in order.

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  4. Thanks JR. You really did capture it. The Lord is good. It's been fourteen years and All of you are dear to me still.

    I'm all for a reunion. I was thinking the same thing these last few weeks. I was thinking early October? ( it's selfish. That's when we'll be out in Cali. :-). )

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    1. No, you're not being selfish. Who is in Cali anyway?

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  5. You've got a point. If you don't mind I will talk to Vanessa and maybe we can work something out for then. That gives everyone a few months to be able to plan.

    Hey, thanks for the post on Kevin. Wish I could have been there. I keep thinking of him up in heaven praising and worshiping our Lord. How excited to think of!

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