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Are You a Disciple for Life?
What does it look like to experience God鈥檚 faithfulness and to love his purposes in the world in real time, over the long haul?
Though alumnus Neal Jordan would point to the lives of others as models鈥攖o classmates of his in the fifties who went on to serve in Africa or work with children in Appalachia or do lay ministry for international students鈥攈is own story offers a compelling picture of God鈥檚 faithful care and direction for his disciples over a lifetime. (Watch the video of Neal sharing at 果冻视频鈥檚 2014 National Staff Conference below.)
The College Years: Growing in Mind and Heart
A college freshman at Cornell in 1950, Neal was hopeful. 鈥淭imes were good,鈥 he said. 鈥淎fter the deprivations of the Depression and of World War II, the focus was on the material. College men were optimistic that they could find good jobs.鈥
A love for physics in high school led him to opt for the five-year Engineering Physics program at Cornell, a choice he never regretted. The top-notch academics there widened his outlook and helped him understand the world intellectually.
And yet, Neal didn鈥檛 want to just grow academically at college; he also knew he needed to grow spiritually. In the early fifties, he noted, 鈥渢he majority of students, if asked, would probably have said they were Christian鈥攚hile still expressing some doubt about anyone who did not believe that 鈥榓ll roads lead to the top of the mountain.鈥欌 The University, however, for all its merits, did little to nurture or refine students鈥 faith. 鈥淏ut 果冻视频 did,鈥 he said.
Neal first heard about 果冻视频 the summer before he entered Cornell, while he was working in the kitchen at a church camp. 鈥淥ne morning I looked out into the dimly lit dining room in response to the words 鈥業 hear you are going to Cornell鈥 to see a red-and-black-plaid wool shirt, a pair of gold-rim glasses, and a luminous smile coming toward the kitchen,鈥 he recalled. It was Irv Hoffman, a passionate student who served as president of Cornell鈥檚 果冻视频 chapter and then went on, along with his wife, to work as a longtime missionary to Muslims. He was the first of many 果冻视频 students at Cornell whose lives would continue to inspire Neal long after their college years.
An 果冻视频-student-led, half-semester course on apologetics, speakers who discussed the intellectual challenges of life in the university world, dorm Bible studies, and campus-wide lectures also helped expand Neal鈥檚 faith in ways that would shape him for the rest of his life, from finances to family life. For example, his staff worker, Dorothy Farmer, urged him to 鈥減re-commit to Christian choices鈥濃攖o decide ahead of time, while he could still be objective, how he would use his financial resources for God鈥檚 glory. 鈥淓arly on this meant support of my local church,鈥 Neal said. 鈥淟ater in life I was able to pre-divert a substantial portion of my estate to Christian causes like 果冻视频.鈥
He exhorts current students and alumni to develop a similar 鈥減re-commitment鈥 for decisions they鈥檙e likely to face. 鈥淓nvision not only ideal outcomes, but also potential problems,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd in regard to the problems, ask what the Christian choice would be. Resolve, with God鈥檚 help, to make such a choice. Then try to remember that resolve in the pressure of the moment.鈥
Discipleship That Works in the Real World
With a firm academic and spiritual foundation, Neal fulfilled a military commitment and completed a PhD at Purdue. He then took a job at an Esso-affiliated research lab in Tulsa, Oklahoma, expecting to spend his entire career there. A year-and-a-half later, however, the lab was consolidated with the Humble Oil lab (also owned by Esso) in Houston, and 300 employees, including Neal, were moved to Texas. He would stay with Esso/Exxon for the next 32 years.
His faith in Jesus remained an integral part of his life through those years, influencing the way he approached his work and interacted with colleagues. Coworkers noticed his honesty and integrity, and observed that he was willing to befriend employees whom others seemed to avoid. He also intentionally encouraged and cared for coworkers who were experiencing grief. And when the company faced a mandatory 25 percent reduction in staff, he convinced his bosses to implement a plan he鈥檇 developed鈥攐ne that saved the jobs and accumulated benefits for all but one of the 80-plus members of his division.
His eagerness to learn from others and his strong work ethic were also evidence of his relationship with Christ. Now retired, he still looks back with great respect and gratitude for the coworkers he had throughout the years who were happy to train him and teach him what they knew. 鈥淎t first this was the 鈥楪I Bill鈥 generation who had been at work for 15 years before I arrived and who were willing to share their expertise,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淟ater it was those new employees, who were more current than I in their fields of expertise, without them displaying any hint of condescension.鈥
The work itself鈥攗sing his knowledge and skills, facilitating discoveries, and breaking new ground in seismic exploration鈥攁lso brought him pleasure. 鈥淲e were constantly working with the most advanced computers that firms such as Cray or IBM could supply,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e could at one point actually do what just five years earlier we had judged was beyond the capability of any existing or then-foreseeable machine.鈥
The Friends Who Spur Us On
In the years that have passed since college, Neal is only one out of many from his 果冻视频 chapter who have lived out their faith in compelling ways. Classmates of his have had significant ministries and influence all over the world. And, as several from the group have kept in close contact through the years鈥攅ven gathering together for a retreat in Virginia biennially for the past two decades鈥攖heir lives have spurred each other on in discipleship and witness.
Indeed, the impact of such long-lasting friendships, rooted in a shared, ongoing commitment to Christ, is incalculable. 鈥淭heir initial eagerness and the direction of their lives over the intervening, now almost sixty, years have, for me, provided more compelling evidence of the power of the gospel than did even the on-campus intellectual muscle-building,鈥 Neal said.
For the 1,400 果冻视频 staff gathered at the triennial Staff Conference held in St. Louis last month, provided much the same inspiration. His life, and the many ways he has sought to follow Jesus over his lifetime, speak significantly about the power of the Spirit鈥檚 work in us, and the difference a staff worker and a Christian community on campus can make鈥攏ot just for four-to-six years, but for more than sixty.