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STUDENTS WALKING AWAY FROM CHRISTIANITY
by Christina Quick
Allison Lynn grew up attending an Assemblies of God church
with her family. But when she moved from home to go to Texas
State University in San Marcos, she walked away from her
faith.
"I wanted to experience college life and all that went with
it," Lynn says. "I knew in my heart I couldn't do some of
the things [other college students] were doing and still
call myself a Christian. So I just decided I didn't want
anything to do with God."
The binge drinking, drugs and relationships Lynn pursued
didn't bring her the freedom she craved. Instead, she spent
much of her college career feeling as though something was
missing.
At the urging of her younger sister, Lynn started attending
Chi Alpha her junior year and eventually rededicated her
life to Christ. Now a senior at TSU, Lynn hopes to become a
youth pastor and help other young people avoid the mistakes
she made.
"I see a lot of students doing the same things," she says.
"They have a void in their lives that they're trying to fill
with the wrong things. I drank alcohol until I threw up.
What I really needed was God in my life."
Lynn's story is not unusual. An alarming number of college
students are severing ties with the church. Some, such as
Lynn, later return to the faith. Others walk away
permanently.
More than two-thirds of Protestant young adults exit the
church between the ages of 18 and 22, according to a recent
report by LifeWay Research, a branch of the Southern Baptist
Convention.
Among the chief reasons young adults gave for quitting
church - one in four mentioned the transition to college,
while 22 percent said they moved too far from church to keep
attending and 27 percent said they just wanted a break.
Another 23 percent named work responsibilities as the
primary factor.
"The years immediately following high school graduation
often determine the course of a person's life as decisions
are made about careers, lifestyles and spouses," says George
O. Wood, general superintendent of the Assemblies of God.
"It's a tragic loss when a young person walks away from the
body of believers during this crucial time. We must pray and
do our best to not let that happen."
Wood says approximately 60,000 AG youth are expected to
graduate from high school next spring. National statistics
indicate 50 to 70 percent will leave the faith within four
years. Among those who attend evangelical colleges, however,
the percentage is only about 5 percent.
"The temptations [on a secular campus] can be so strong
during the college years," says Dennis Gaylor, national
director of Chi Alpha campus ministries. "It's easy to fall
away if you don't connect with other Christians early."
Gaylor says the relationships that first-year college
students form during the initial weeks of school are often
the ones that continue to influence them during their entire
four-year stay. Those who are part of Chi Alpha try to make
connections quickly, even offering to carry students'
luggage as soon as they arrive on campus.
But those efforts aren't always enough to keep students
involved in church life, according to Dick Herman, Lynn's
Chi Alpha pastor at TSU.
"There are students who check out our campus ministry once
or twice and then we never see them again," Herman says.
"Ultimately, they're pulled away by other things and other
relationships."
To address the challenge, Chi Alpha is partnering with a new
organization designed to help students develop Christian
relationships on campus long before the school year begins.
Youth Transition Network operates a comprehensive Web site,
LiveAbove.com, that links students to campus ministries and
local churches as well as potential Christian roommates and
friends before they set foot on campus. Registered users can
peruse the database and Web links by entering a zip code or
the name of a city or university.
The site includes information on more than 4,300 campuses,
including community colleges.
"Our goal is to get them connected with people who can be
godly influences on their lives - before they ever leave
home," says Jeff Schadt, a former Campus Crusade for Christ
pastor and founder of YTN. "When they arrive on campus, they
could be met on the curb by a friend so they're not alone
that first day."
The organization operates a second Web site as well,
YouthTransitionNetwork.org. This site is designed to help
parents and ministry leaders equip students for the college
transition.
YTN is a coalition of numerous campus and youth ministries,
including Chi Alpha, Campus Crusade, The Navigators, Josh
McDowell Ministry, Baptist Collegiate Ministry, National
Network of Youth Ministries, and Youth for Christ.
Gaylor says the crisis of churches losing young people on
America's campuses has sparked the first time all the major
players in university ministry have cooperated to address an
overarching need.
"We've been very evangelistic when it comes to reaching the
non-Christians on campus," Gaylor says. "Now, with so many
of our own falling away, we're recognizing we have to be
more deliberate about reaching the church kids."

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