āGo and Make Disciplesā: How Student Leadership is Transforming Michigan State University
Tsen from Michigan State University remembers the day he committed his life to Jesus: February 10, 2025. After months of avidly listening to podcasts and reading books by philosophers, apologists, atheists, and other deep thinkers, Tsen didnāt know yet if he was ready to decide what he believed. He did know though that he found the Christian worldview the most compelling.
āI looked at other perspectives, but the one that made the most logical sense and resonated with me was Christianity,ā he said.
However, when his friend messaged him and asked him if he had made a decision, Tsen hesitated. He wondered if there was more he needed to learn before making a commitment.
His friend disagreed. In an act of boldness, Tsenās friend told him to get off the fence and put his faith in Christ. Those words were enough to push Tsen to action.
āI [realized] I could stay on the fringes forever. But to understand what Christianity is, who Christ is, I think I need to immerse myself,ā Tsen said. āIām going to put my faith in Christ. Iām going to go all in.ā
Tsen may not have become a Christian if it werenāt for the bold leadership of his friend. Now, heās deeply involved in ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ, passionate about his faith, and ready to share it with others.
¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ at Michigan State is showing students like Tsen that anyone can have the potential to be a leader ā even those who might be unexpected. Through the ways theyāre raising up leaders, studentsā lives are transforming.
Leadership is Growth
Despite being a new Christian, Tsenās decision to attend How Christians Lead, MSU ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵās leadership training program, was an easy one.
āI am starving and am always hungry for Christ. Whenever there is an opportunity to serve, an opportunity to learn, an opportunity to do something more, I canāt think of a time Iāve said no,ā he said.
Every Friday for four weeks, he joined others to learn about spiritual disciplines, practice how to share his testimony, and be witnesses for Jesus.
To end the training program, students were sent out to prayer walk the campus. For Tsen, this meant getting out of his comfort zone. However, remembering that he wanted to go all in, he accepted the challenge.
āIf our faith isnāt challenged, then we wonāt grow,ā Tsen said.
When Tsen and his prayer partner went out, they decided to do something even bolder: they approached students on campus and asked if they could pray for them. To their surprise, they discovered that students, both Christian and non-Christian, were open to being prayed for!

Tsen and partner pray over a student on their prayer walk
Leadership is Small but Impactful
For Gracie, leadership was as simple as showing up each week to invest in who the Lord brought her.
While Gracie attended How Christians Lead, she had big aspirations for what her first Bible study would be like. She imagined a large, talkative group and a revival in her dorm.
But when only three shy students showed up, attending inconsistently and participating even less, Gracie wrestled with her discouragement.
āWhat am I doing wrong that people donāt want to come?ā she wondered.
Instead of wallowing in her disappointment, Gracie chose to encourage those three students to attend every week and created a space where they felt safe enough to participate. As she did this, her perspective on leadership changed.
āI realized over time that was the perfect environment for the group we had coming,ā Gracie said. āThey were shy, and in a larger group setting, they wouldnāt have been able to open up. They needed that space, even if it wasnāt what I was expecting initially.ā
By the end of that year, Gracieās Bible study, while small, was full of deep conversations and laughter. The students involved didnāt feel overlooked but instead had a close community they could rely on.
āI saw how to lay aside my expectations and trust that Godās provision āā who he introduces us to and opportunities that he does give us āā might not be what we expect, but itās always the perfect amount.ā

Gracie, after attending a friendās Bible study, follows up with two members to make sure theyāre plugged in
Leadership is Being a Servant
Before ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ, AāLvinia thought leaders had to be ātalk in front of peopleā kinds of students, and that leadership was something people pursued out of selfishness.
āI thought of leadership like an oppressive force. Because when you hear āleader,ā you hear āfollower,āā she said.
Through discipleship and How Christians Lead, AāLviniaās view on leadership began to change. She learned that leadership wasnāt about power, but instead was about laying yourself down to serve others. She realized leading was something she could do after all.

AāLvinia prays with a partner at How Christians Lead
"[Leadership] can be about being a servant leader, someone who just helps someone,ā AāLvinia said.
Now, AāLvinia is the president of MSUās Black Campus Ministry chapter, a position she holds with great humility.
āI'm a leader, but I'm going to help you [new students] grow into leadership,ā she said. āI'm going to give you everything you need to be successful, and then you can do that for the next person.ā
Leadership is Healing
God works through student leaders and those they serve, but he doesnāt stop there āā he also brings healing to the campus.
Michigan State is a big school, but Brad, an ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ campus staff, still sees a huge need for community on campus and leaders to nurture it. āThereās people on a campus of 50,000 that feel alone, and thatās heartbreaking,ā he said. āWe want to be a ministry thatās drawing people out of that and creating connection so people can feel known by others and ultimately feel known by God.ā
A few years ago, there was a shooting at MSU. Amid the fear, ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ student leaders stepped in to serve. They messaged out breath prayers that people could pray as they hid in different parts of campus.
āI think that was really impactful for a lot of people who didnāt know how to respond,ā Brad said. āStudents felt like their ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ community was a safe space in the midst of a campus that felt pretty unsafe.ā
Brad still tears up when he thinks about this, and he believes what happened then shaped the culture of campus even today.
āWe get to be a part of peopleās healing,ā he said. āAs we send people out to campus and into the world, we create a place that looks more and more like Godās kingdom.ā
Leadership is for Everyone
āWhen Jesus talks about āgo and make disciples,ā thatās leadership. Itās not something big and scary, itās not extravagant, itās not standing on a stage talking to 300 people. Leadership is meeting with someone for coffee and having a conversation and sharing the Gospel, pointing people towards the truth,ā Gracie said.
For Gracie, leadership looked like creating a space for just three shy students to feel like they had others to confide in. For Tsen, leadership looked like challenging himself to learn, grow, and try new things. For AāLvinia, leadership looked like becoming a servant and equipping others to do the same.

Tsen leads a Bible study icebreaker as a way of trying on leadership
And this, ultimately, is why student leadership is core to ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ at Michigan Stateās ministry and to ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ as a whole. When students are trained as leaders, they not only make a difference in the lives of others, but God transforms their lives as well.
āWe want to develop people who want to see Jesusā kingdom breakthrough in every part of our world,ā Brad says. āWeāre sending engineers, nurses, businesspeople⦠we want to develop leaders who [influence] places to reflect more and more of Godās kingdom and exemplify Jesusā love. The students who grow the most through their ¹ū¶³ŹÓʵ experience are the students who choose to lead.ā



