A new season for the ESBS
After a long process of careful planning and prayer, we're excited to announce that beginning
June 2015, the ESBS will exist as its own non-profit entity, and will no longer be
a division of Camp Lurecrest Ministries. We will be hosting the upcoming 2014-15 ESBS at Camp Lurecrest, but will no longer host schools there after the completion of the 2014-15 academic year.
We
are incredibly thankful for the many wonderful years the ESBS has enjoyed at Camp Lurecrest, and we will forever remember these years as formative years for
the school. With thankful hearts
we look forward to a new season for the ESBS, and we’re excited to follow God
towards a new location to host the school in 2015-16.
Please
pray with us as we begin this season of discerning God's leading for the program, and as we prepare for another great ESBS year right here at Lurecrest this fall!
Tom Phillips
ESBS Director
tphillips@camplurecrest.org
Tom Phillips
ESBS Director
tphillips@camplurecrest.org
Tuition Need
We are fast approaching the final quarter of this year's ESBS, and I'm excited to announce that we have very strong interest in the program for next year already, with students already accepted and planning to be here in the fall. We're excited about what God is doing in this year's school and what he's planning for next year!
As we approach the 4th quarter, one of our students is still in need of the bulk of their tuition figure for the 4th quarter. We are moving as a community to be a part of meeting this tuition need. Id like to ask you to consider joining us as we give towards the need. We're working towards raising $1850.
Please contact tphillips@camplurecrest.org if you're interested in participating in giving, and thank you so much for being invested in what God is doing at the ESBS!
Tom
The Worn Spot
This is solid gold...written by Ellen Stark (second year ESBS staff):
"I have always despised and rejected the classroom floor. You don’t realize, until you have to clean it, that it’s nearly impossible to clean. Wood, cut into tile-size shapes with nothing filling in the cuts…this classroom that is surrounded by gravel and red mud quickly creates an extremely dirty floor. And you have to vacuum every. single. crack. And no matter how much dirt you suck up into the vacuum, there’s always more.
Hate, frustration, apathy…any negative emotion you can think of, I’ve probably felt it for this floor.
But there is one spot that I’ve realized I love. The most worn down part of the entire building is right by the door. No finish on it, no stain, nothing – it has been worn down to bare wood.
And I wish that I could preserve it. Why? Because it speaks of what this classroom has been to so many people. It screams the change this building has played a part in creating for so many people.
The classroom.
In the summer it’s known as the “Hensen Haus” (no, I did not accidentally misspell “house”).
In the fall, winter, and spring, it’s known simply as “the classroom”.
In the fall, winter, and spring, it’s known simply as “the classroom”.
Two different groups of people. Two different atmospheres. Same building. Same Gospel. Same Jesus.
The building has one distinct smell. None of the other buildings on campus have this smell. Nowhere else I’ve ever been has this smell. Is it dirt? Grease? Mold (I hope not)? What is that smell?!
In my heart and mind I realize that I’ve come to associate this smell with learning, turmoil, and peace. It’s the smell of security, stability, and simplicity. There’s not much to boast about in the classroom. To anyone who doesn’t love it, anyone who holds it to the standard of “real schools”, it looks like a worn down, crooked, smelly building.
But if the classroom could speak, it would boast Jesus.
If the classroom had a voice and a soul, it would speak of the riches gained by 8 groups of people. No money, nothing visibly impressive, but vast riches unseen.
If the classroom could talk, it would tell you of the late nights, the early mornings, the thousands upon thousands of paragraph titles, the tears spilled inside and out, the heart-wrenching grief, the silent joy, and the sudden pause of typing fingers for a mind to reflect. Laughter, bickering, iron sharpening iron…this classroom has seen it all!
It’s seen the all-perfect, all-knowing God make whole so many broken and needy people. Needy because they are so very much in need of Him. It’s a room full of struggle and laughter.
This classroom has depth. And beneath the smell, behind the run down look of the place, there is beauty.
There is no grand way to finish this post. Nothing concisely, perfectly said that I can write because the story of the classroom is not grand, concise, or perfect. Much like its people, it is crooked, well worn, beautiful, and loved. One day, hopefully not too soon, I will leave. It’s inevitable.
And the room I’ll miss most will be this room."
ESBS welcomes two new students for the Old Testament!
| Taylor Wilsie and Abigail Buckman, new students starting this quarter |
This semester we are joined by two new students, Abigail Buckman and Taylor Wilsie. Abigail was a students in 2012 and had to withdraw from the program after the New Testament to undergo brain surgery. Now a year later, she is well and she's returned to complete the course! We're so excited to have her back!
Taylor Wilsie is Julia Phillips' cousin, and comes to us from Jacksonville Florida. He's the first ESBS student we've ever had who is beginning in the Old Testament. Taylor has been with us since November, and has been working on his own to get up to speed with the inductive Bible study method, and he now joins the class as a full-time student starting this week as we begin Genesis.
We have an exciting quarter in store with 5 guest lecturer's lined up (David Hansen, Jon Black, Cam and Kaari Speer, Evan Hays) and a late January surprise for the students! It's going to be a great 2014!
