This article contains excerpts from Ryan Rench’s book A Case For Bible College. Many young people have enjoyed and benefited from his writings, and it has become our desire to share some of this helpful information with you.
My brother is working on building his own little house right now. He and my dad went through the phase of digging ditches, setting rebar and pouring concrete. That was lots of work! Those footer ditches had to be deep and wide! That was no fun digging those footers by hand… they won’t even be seen!
Imagine if my brother just got sick of digging and quit.
“No one will see these dumb holes. We are just going to fill them up with concrete anyway. What’s the point! I just want to start building, man!”
Imagine him grabbing a 2×4, whipping it above his head with a scream of war (trying to summon the powers), and smashing it into the ground, hoping it pierces the topsoil enough to stand upright.
“Hey! It worked! All that rage and fury helped! I’ve got my wall started!”
So he thinks.
Now, imagine him doing that over and over until he has a row of these 2x4s pierced into the ground, standing upright like fence posts. “I’m sure my wall will be sturdy once I add the siding. Hey, at least something shows, man! I’ve got a wall up! Forget these dumb ditches and footers or whatever. I like these dirt floors anyway. I’m rustic. Yeah. That’s it. Rustic—like a log cabin in the pioneer days.”
Sure bud. Whatever you say. You’re cool.
That is, until the first bugs come through the walls and floors. Or until the first rain. Bye-bye house.
You see, a concrete foundation seals out the bugs and the rain. It holds strong against the wind. It is unmovable. It is stable. You can build on it without fear of the building collapsing.
Bible college is like a concrete foundation for the rest of your adult life. Since the only sure foundation is God’s timeless Word, Bible college is a place that tries to anchor every part of your life to the Bible.
Imagine a place that teaches and preaches the Bible every day. Imagine classes that focus on studying the Bible. Imagine living with hundreds of people whose passion is to know the Bible—immersed in an environment where peers and mentors are all pushing you toward a deeper relationship with God and His Word. This is Bible college.
While some people might have had godly parents and a good church to give them a solid childhood foundation, a lot changes after high school. When a graduate is presented for the first time with much more freedom than he has ever had, he should strengthen his foundation rather than launch straight into building his life.
Is it possible to “make it” in life without Bible college? Of course! But at what other time in life will a person go through an intensive lifestyle of being immersed in the Bible? Was that level of foundation laid at home?
In most cases, it was not. Even in the best-case scenarios that I have seen where the Bible is central to a family and the kids have been raised in a solid, Bible-preaching church, the kids who grow up in that home still have room for improvement.
To be clear, no one is ever ready for life. I get that. The point here is not that a person is inept at life and has no foundation if he does not attend Bible college. The point is that Bible college is a powerful tool to form or strengthen a solid foundation for the remainder of one’s adult life.
My wife had a roommate in college who was saved months before starting her freshman year. She did not have a childhood foundation and came to Bible college hardly knowing anything about the Bible. Everything she learned was new. The Bible Survey classes she attended were not review to her… they were foundational! She is now a missionary in Australia.
My best friend, John, was saved in Washington under Pastor Dave Brown’s ministry. He was a senior in high school with a mop of hair on his head. After high school graduation, he decided to attend Bible college, cut his hair and move halfway across the country.
God used Bible college to build a solid foundation for the rest of John’s life. He grew in God’s Word. He learned to read, study, live and love God’s Word. He became truly passionate about knowing and obeying God’s Word. He allowed God’s Word to be his only foundation. At first, he would sit through Bible college classes not knowing much of anything. The professor would say, “Turn to the book of Job” and he thought that book was a story of employment (“How To Get a Job”). Bible college was his first solid foundation, and it set him on the right course for a fruitful Christian life. John Lande is now the college director at the church he attended through Bible college, and he is using his life to train others to build their lives on the foundation of God’s Word.
My story is different. I was saved when I was 5, was raised in church and I knew all the Bible lessons. I memorized portions of Scripture, competed in Bible quizzes and could sing the books of the Bible. I was in Bible classes all through my Christian and home school life and was ever growing in the Lord.
While I was developing my own personal convictions through high school and had already received a solid foundation in my childhood years, I still had plenty to learn. Without realizing it at the time, I had no real answers as to why I believed what I believed. I had been taught correctly and I believed it, but I did not always retain it.
Bible college, for me, was as much a foundation to the rest of my adult life as it was to those who did not have the same upbringing as I did. Sure, I knew more Bible stories than they knew, but I still needed to know more than just the facts of the stories in order to have a truly solid foundation. I needed to know the truths of the Bible and make them mean something to me.
Yes, I knew much of the Bible already. Yes, I had been raised in a Christian home (a pastor’s home, at that)! Yes, God absolutely used my childhood years to mold and begin my life’s foundation.
However, I see now that I needed much more than my childhood foundation in order to give me the tools to build my own foundation. What God used in my life was Bible college.
Most Bible colleges are structured in a way that the student’s freshman year is packed with basic, but foundational, Bible truths. Many Bible colleges offer a one-year Bible certificate that will immerse the student in Bible classes primarily, and allow him to experience one year of this intensive study.
Whether you believe Bible college is for you or not, you cannot overlook the fact that probably no other place on the planet will be more intensive about building your life on the foundation of God’s Word. From the dorm life, to the classes, to the chapels, to the mentors and examples all around you—Bible college is completely focused on providing a solid Bible foundation for life.