Letter from our ED: Our Response to the Coronavirus

Dear Friends of the Study Center:

I hope this letter finds you well today, despite the difficult circumstances we are facing. Our hope in Christ will not disappoint, and he has come that we may have life today and forever.

In the midst of these hard times, our mission of offering the welcome, truth, and wisdom of Christ to UNC has never been more urgent, and we are grateful for the opportunity to serve in the future with your help. Thanks to the hard work of our staff and the prayers of friends like you, the North Carolina Study Center has been able to adapt as we have moved educational opportunities and events online and found direct ways of connecting with many individual students. As a supporter, I’d like to update you on how we have carried out our mission in this new season and how we are positioned going forward. This chart sums up our programming shifts, and I discuss some of what will follow in this letter on a podcast here.

Online seminars and events

During the past seven weeks, we operated more than ever as an educational center, equipping people to make sense of the world in light of God’s word. Our seminars on Augustine, Walker Percy, and the arc of scripture all became Zoom classes. In-person studies of scripture similarly moved to Zoom. Our Director of Spiritual Formation Bill Boyd started a daily podcast to help students and supporters create good routines for seeking the Lord. We noticed that a number of students who had been out of touch showed interest in these opportunities.

As the crisis unfolded, we hosted an early webinar with epidemiologist Dr. Nathan Thielman, advocating for students to take social distancing seriously (300 registered). The next week, Associate Dean Dan Bradley Staats talked with students about how to move forward in an economy that is on life support (100 registered). As the coronavirus’ peak loomed and questions about medical ethics predominated, Dr. Farr Curlin and Dr. Patrick Smith talked about how Christians in medicine and beyond should understand their dilemmas (450 registered). Last week, we turned to mental health. Dr. Warren Kinghorn and Dr. Nii Addy dignified those who are facing mental health issues and winsomely described how to walk with Christ through these hard times (420 registered). Directly after the event, one non-Christian student contacted us about how to follow Jesus. And this week, singer-songwriter Sandra McCracken teamed up with Old Testament Professor Dr. Ellen Davis of Duke Divinity for a live concert and conversation (550 registered).

Finally, we co-sponsored a trio of high-quality events with Veritas on understanding these times (with David Brooks and Andy Crouch), facing down the economic factors in play (with Arthur Brooks and others), and how to creatively engage with sadness and lament via the arts (with Lecrae and others). All of these events had very high UNC registration counts.

Continuing relationships

The difficult circumstances of these past few weeks have made relationships with students more important than ever. Graduating seniors have lost jobs, the bulk of our students are now living with their families, and most students have discovered the downside to solely computer-based instruction. Tragically, several Duke students and one UNC student are known to have died by suicide in the last four weeks.

Among our six ministry staff members, we are in direct weekly contact with over 100 student leaders, many of whom are supporting and reaching out to many other students. We have been laughing together in regular online “coffee hours,” learning together in joy-filled virtual discussions of Narnia and continuing to dive into scripture and God’s way of seeing the world in Zoom seminars. Finally, we have facilitated a fruitful online prayer movement called 8@8 where followers of Christ from around the world commit to prayer every evening at 8pm. Almost 15,000 have signed up to receive regular prayer reminders, and we have received strong feedback from participants that their prayer lives have been strengthened. 

Operational adjustments 

Behind the scenes, we have made a number of adjustments in order to remain fiscally sound. We have sharply cut our operating and programming expenses (by 80%). Staff have taken on administrative work we would have outsourced before. Our ongoing costs are $50,000 per month, as we are continuing to pay off the Battle House mortgage and our staff have remained active. Thankfully, our regular monthly donors have continued to give. And we have been blessed with an opportunity for a $50,000 match for all gifts made between now and the end of May. Finally, we have continued to prepare to renovate the Battle House and hope to have news about that soon.

Going forward

As the tide of the pandemic recedes and UNC makes plans to reopen in the fall, the university will be different in some ways. However, its strategic importance will continue. Many schools have learned that flipped classrooms have their advantages. Thus, as we have noted increased use of our online resources, going forward we will be asking what we should always make available online.

Almost daily, we hear from parents of incoming students of the class of 2024. They are excited that their children will have the chance to be formed as Christians while they are at UNC. Our Carolina Way Camp is still on for the coming fall. Close to 100 current students applied to be counselors this year, and we are excited to help students as they transition into college. We hope CWC will be at Camp Rockbridge, but if group size constraints make traditional camp impossible (we expect at least 250 this year), we will host it in Chapel Hill. And we are considering a number of ways to resource and connect with incoming students beyond camp itself. 

Please be in touch with us as you have prayer requests and questions. And, as the Lord leads, please continue to partner with us financially. If you can continue to provide for our critical needs, we will be poised to carry out our mission going forward.

We are with you in prayer and hope to see you very soon!


In Christ, 

Madison Perry
Executive Director

COVID-19: Ways to Help

Are you a student or community member looking for ways to support those around you in the midst COVID-19? Below is a list of researched and tested ways to help if you are able!

1. Stay as physically distant as possible. 

If you don't absolutely need to go somewhere, don't. Here is a cool graphic visualization of how important social distancing is from The Washington Post.

2.  Donate blood. 

Fear about COVID-19 and social distancing has led to a national shortage of blood. Donating blood is a tangible way to help meet this need and a good reason to get out of the house for a bit! Learn more here on the American Red Cross’ website.

3.  Help meet the food needs in your community. 

Donate food. Some organizations, such as TABLE in Chapel Hill, are discouraging in-person drop-offs of food and instead encouraging orders through Amazon or monetary donations.

Volunteer. Other organizations such as Meals on Wheels are seeking volunteers to help stay in operation. Learn more about volunteering with your local Meals on Wheels here.

Check to see if your local school system needs support distributing food to kids who are out of school.

Offer to bring groceries to older or more at-risk members of your community. 

4. Stay in touch. 

Social distancing is especially hard on those who live alone or who feel especially scared by or at risk from the virus. Call your other favorite older adults! Get in touch with your pastor or local senior center to see if they know of anyone who is lonely and would like a phone call or who needs groceries delivered. Remind the people you love what you love about them. 

A Prayer for Uncertain Times

God over all,
Master of history,
Sustainer of the world, 
You who knows what is in the heart of every person,
we ask You now to give to each heart what it needs
that we might know You better,
and so live Godward in uncertain times.

For those of us gripped by fear,
grant us comfort, Holy Spirit.
Let us remember:
no sparrow falls unseen,
the lilies are clothed in splendor,
and our Creator God cares most
for his dearly bought image-bearers.

Grant us the courage to know
You will never forget your people,
and your grace intersects, 
always,
this present moment. 
Meet us who are fear-bound with the freeing peace of Christ,
which transcends our understanding,
and is firmer than all our circumstances.

For those of us gripped by anger and impatience
at the response of others or the swirling complications in this time,
grant us stronger compassion for the weak, the vulnerable, 
and for those whose hearts are bent at different angles than our own.

Let us remember:
You stoop low to heal the sick, fill the needy, and bless the humble.
You call us to love as You have loved,
and You will empower what you command.
Dig in us deeper wells of empathy and grace,
so that we may better taste and better tell
of the love of an ever-close God.

For those of us gripped by sickness,
grant us perseverance, deep-rooted joy, and hope
in a God who won’t leave the world this way forever.
As we sense in our own bodies
the bone-deep cracks at the heart of creation,
give us, your children, the assurance that this too shall pass,
and we will one day put on incorruptibility.
We ask You for our protection and our healing.

Christ, let us all 
rest in your abiding love,
be constrained by your grace,
and hope in your return.

Amen.

Cancellations and Adjustments Due to Coronavirus

Dear Friends,
 
I write to tell you how the North Carolina Study Center is adjusting to the COVID-19 crisis as an organization and to provide a few thoughts on how we may respond as a community.
 
Over one week ago, we canceled a spring break trip to Israel for 40 UNC students and two of our staff out of concerns our travelers would end up quarantined. Going forward, the Study Center will be looking to UNC’s policies for guidance regarding public spaces, educational activities, and large group gatherings. Accordingly, we are canceling our events for the next three weeks (hopefully to be scheduled again next year) and plan to continue discussion seminars and our Fellows classes online.
 
In terms of our general hospitality, we will be closed for the rest of UNC’s extended spring break (3/16-20). To the extent that UNC prioritizes social distancing and encourages students to remain away from campus for the common good, our hospitality will follow suit. You can see UNC’s most recent statements here. We are considering remaining closed to general traffic after 3/20, and will make further announcements next week on our news page.
 
How do we best honor our mission and serve Christ in our current situation? As Dr. Luke Bretherton recently noted in a letter to his students at Duke Divinity School, our concern is to ensure the medical system is not overwhelmed by rapidly increasing demand. So, out of care for the wider community and in solidarity with those who care for the sick, we must adjust.

This introduces a thought for our many students. Although you are in a low-risk demographic, you come from somewhere. I encourage you to reach out to those you know who are likely afraid. Let your parents and grandparents know you love them. Tell your aunts and uncles what their past care has meant to you. Remember your Sunday school teachers, sports coaches, and the many others who have supported you.

In light of these changed circumstances, we at the Study Center are discerning new ways to offer Christian life, education, and formation to members of the UNC community. For now, our staff will be available to students for conversation and care by phone, email, and video conference. And we will be announcing opportunities to continue our theological educational programs.
 
As we make strategic adjustments and prepare, our hearts cannot be set on the news cycle. God’s grace is sufficient and doesn’t change. We are invited to live in the world of Scripture, where death is expected around the corner but God’s kingdom presses in more urgently with a deeper peace. “In peace I will both lie down and sleep; for you alone, O LORD, make me dwell in safety.” (Ps. 4:8)
 
We are sad to think of a spring with an empty living room. Yet, this period of hardship can be deeply formative if we let it teach us a lasting humility and awareness of our true everyday state. Every day Jesus Christ comes for the sick, not for the healthy, and his eternal riches are on offer. He will give them to us if we will ask.
 
In Christ,

Madison Perry
Executive Director

Five Novels to Deepen the Soul

Students and staff reading Augustine’s Confessions together in one of our seminars this spring.

Students and staff reading Augustine’s Confessions together in one of our seminars this spring.

Writer and teacher Jonathan Rogers once said that “good stories make us feel differently and more deeply about the things we’ve known all along.”

In light of his thought on how a great book can enlarge our souls, I wanted to share quotes from five of my favorite novels. Each story can help you feel more deeply about something that perhaps you’ve known all along.

1. How to feel deeper about the hard right choice: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

“I will keep the law given by God; sanctioned by man…Laws and principles are not for times when there is no temptation: they are for such moments as this, when body and soul rise in mutiny against their rigour; stringent are they; inviolate they shall be. If at my individual convenience I might break them, what would be their worth?” 

2. How to feel deeper about loving your enemy: Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card

“In the moment when I truly understand my enemy, understand him well enough to defeat him, then in that very moment I also love him. I think it’s impossible to really understand somebody, what they want, what they believe, and not love them the way they love themselves.”

3. How to feel deeper about the world to come: Peace Like a River by Leif Enger

“I moved ever higher on the land, here entering an orchard of immense and archaic beauty. I say orchard: The trees were dense in one place, scattered in another, as though planted by random throw, but all were heavy trunked and capaciously limbed, and they were fruit trees, every one of them. Apples, gold-skinned apricots, immaculate pears. The leaves about them were thick and cool and stirred at my approach; touched with a finger, they imparted a palpable rhythm…

The place had a master! Realizing this, I knew he was already aware of me—comforting and fearful knowledge. Still I wanted to see him. The farther I went the more I seemed to know or remember about him—the way he'd planted this orchard, walking over the hills, casting seed from his hand.”

4. How to feel deeper about ordinary, well-lived lives: Middlemarch by George Eliot

“…the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.”

5. How to feel deeper about loving your neighbor: Gilead by Marilynne Robinson

“There is no justice in love, no proportion in it, and there need not be, because in any specific instance it is only a glimpse or parable of an embracing, incomprehensible reality. It makes no sense at all because it is the eternal breaking in on the temporal.”

Kari