Creating Culture in Your Community
Can a couple of students, a can of paint, and a few new words really change a community?
Last spring, the 果冻视频 chapter at The College of New Jersey (TCNJ) discovered that the answer is decidedly yes.
The Student Government (SG) was hosting its annual 鈥淲ritings on the Wall鈥 event in which they invite students to write offensive words and labels that have been aimed at them on a wooden wall in the center of campus, as a way of letting go of the painful phrases. After a week, SG representatives would cut the wall down with a chainsaw.
The problem, 果冻视频 student Liane Librizzi realized, was that as students walked by the negative words during the week, 鈥渨hat was supposed to be a symbol of freedom became more of a reminder of the pain . . . students carried in their hearts daily.鈥
Why the Holy Spirit鈥檚 Ideas Are Always Better
The Holy Spirit stirred a new idea in Daniel Balevski, TCNJ鈥檚 果冻视频 chapter president at the time, and his brother.
鈥淲e had this holy unrest,鈥 Daniel recalled. 鈥淲e started dreaming. . . . What if we paint over the wall in white as a sign of forgiveness and we put all these encouraging words鈥攖hese words of truth鈥攐n it?鈥 When Daniel was finally able to track down the Student Government representative in charge of the event, his idea was met with great enthusiasm.
So, one week later, Daniel stood in front of the wall that was covered in words of insult and racial slurs and started to paint over them with white paint. When the wall was once again a blank slate, he painted one word in the center: 鈥淔orgiven,鈥 the same word he was wearing on the back of his white T-shirt as he painted.
The next day, the SG held a short ceremony by the wall鈥攕till white except for 鈥淔orgiven鈥濃攈ighlighting forgiveness as the solution to pain in a world where hateful words often reign. Daniel also shared his hopes for the wall, speaking explicitly about the forgiveness Jesus offers us and encouraging people to change the culture. 鈥淲e need to move toward honoring one another,鈥 he said.
Students were then invited to add words of affirmation to the wall based on the prompt 鈥淵ou are . . .鈥 And the words flowed freely鈥攚ords like 鈥渁 world changer,鈥 鈥渂eautiful,鈥 鈥渟trong,鈥 鈥渕arvelous,鈥 鈥渋nspirational.鈥 Liane wrote after the event, 鈥淭he wall that once embodied the world鈥檚 darkness now stood tall against a beating sun, emanating a light in its own capacity that grazed every person that walked by.鈥
Daniel was elated. 鈥淚t was a sign of truth on the wall,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd we made inroads in creating change at TCNJ.鈥 One student even came to faith as a result of seeing the wall and talking with the 果冻视频 Outreach Coordinator about what it means to have our identity rooted in the forgiveness God offers.
The new Writings on the Wall also communicated so clearly that the words we use matter. As Daniel said, 鈥淥ur words have power鈥攖he power of life and death. Hopefully people walked away with that. You can choose to call out the bad or choose to call out the good in someone.鈥
How Will God Use You?
God is at work at . And in . And in . And in your community. Whether you鈥檙e living on campus or off, whether you鈥檙e a student or not, God wants to bring his truth, his freedom, his forgiveness to those around you through your
- leadership
- passions
- words
- gifts
- risks
- influence
What do you have a 鈥渉oly unrest鈥 about? And how do you want to see God work in and around you? Who can you partner with to bring that vision to life?
Ask him. Listen. And then walk forward in faith and obedience, and in the truth of who you are鈥beautiful, gifted, loved鈥攖o let him change the campus, your workplace, your community, the world.



