Authors Posts by Danielle Stotlz

Danielle Stotlz

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    Renowned evangelists, worship and baptisms remind students of their Spirit-empowered purpose

    For two days, classes were canceled and students and faculty prepared their hearts for spiritual renewal as ORU held its annual Fall Revival, Oct. 22 and 23.

    “I am always excited about our time of revival because it provides an opportunity to focus only on the Lord and His great love for us,” said Dr. Clarence Boyd, Dean of Spiritual Formation. “It also brings the ORU community together in a time of worship and seeking the face of God while we are exposed to some of the greatest speakers that God has raised up. This year was no exception.”

    The university welcomed world-renowned evangelists, Rev. Daniel Kolenda and Rev. Reinhard Bonnke to speak at the services.

    During the Wednesday session, Kolenda encouraged students to find a purpose worth giving their life to.

    “I pray that you give your life away for something that matters,” Kolenda said. “The greatest tragedy is a wasted life. Many people live dead.”

    Bonnke spoke at the Wednesday evening and Thursday morning sessions, and his message resonated with ORU senior Alejandro Cevallos.

    “What I liked the most was when Reinhard Bonnke stated that through the Holy Spirit we can move mountains and that nobody is more qualified than the next to access the Holy Spirit,” Cevallos said. “That opened my eyes and helped me realize that no matter what occupation I decide to go into, the Lord will be with me.”

    Baptism Chapel 1 copyThe event culminated with a baptism service that was open to all students.

    ORU senior Elandra Dabney had no intention of being baptized when she entered Christ’s Chapel that morning, but as she sat through the service and heard Dr. William M. Wilson speak, she was moved to participate.

    “During the week of revival God was dealing with my heart on drawing closer to Him and letting people in my life go. Once I came out of the water, I felt a burden being lifted off of my heart,” Dabney said. “Joy and tears filled my heart because at that moment I didn’t care what others thought. I didn’t care if I was going to be doing my spiritual walk by myself. All that mattered was it was me and God, and He is the best one to fulfill me.”

    Oral Roberts University was recognized as one of the best Regional Universities in the West by U.S. News and World Report.

    When ranking the university, U.S. News and World Report gathered data from nearly 1,800 schools around the country. ORU was evaluated on up to 16 indicators such as academic excellence, student life, campus services and campus safety.

    Regional universities and colleges are divided and ranked into four geographical groups: North, South, Midwest and West. U.S. News and World Report uses quantitative measures that education experts have proposed as reliable indicators of academic quality and is based on a researched view of what matters in education.

    The rankings allow readers to compare the relative quality of institutions based on widely accepted indicators of excellence including freshmen retention, graduation rates and the strength of faculty.

      With the arrival of the 50th freshman class, former and new students share why they’re drawn to ORU

      In April 1965, the road that led to Oral Roberts University was just two lanes. Dave Eland could only see trees as he and his family traveled down Lewis Avenue for the first time. But as the tree line cleared, the high school senior set his eyes on the campus—still undergoing construction in preparation to welcome its first class later that fall.

      The Denver, Colo. native had originally intended to visit ORU and then head to Illinois to visit Wheaton College. He and his family never made the second leg of their trip.

      “That was 50 years ago, but I do know with great clarity that it was a divine appointment that brought me here,” Eland said. “I was very interested in coming to a place where you could enrich your spiritual well-being, as well grow academically.”

      Eland not only enrolled in ORU’s first freshman class, but his father took a position with the school. His family moved to Tulsa, and Eland’s four siblings would also later attend and graduate from ORU.

      “I brought my family with me to college,” Eland said.

      Eland was one of 300 students to attend ORU in the fall of 1965, just two years after ORU was officially chartered, and begin a journey toward whole-person education, a founding principle at Oral Roberts University.

      ***

      Kishel Stubbs also came to Tulsa with her family. She moved from the Bahamas in August of 2013 with her two sisters and mother. Her oldest sister and mother are currently studying at ORU, and Stubbs is now a freshman there, as of fall 2014.

      The ORU Stubbs came to was very different from the one Eland arrived at in 1965. Nonetheless, just like Eland, Stubbs had a moment when she felt God drawing her to the university.

      “After being on campus and coming to chapel, I felt at home, like this is where I am supposed to be,” Stubbs said.”

      This fall, ORU welcomed another group of excited freshmen—including Stubbs and hundreds more—to the campus. Yet, these students will hold a special place in ORU history as the university’s 50th freshman class.

      As classes begin, the 50th class continues to pursue whole-person education and join thousands of other students who are fulfilling Oral Robert’s vision and going into every man’s world.

      The Chairman of ORU’s Alumni Board recalls what makes the campus feel like home to so many—and invites alumni to return this fall.

      My older brother Gary and I made the 90-degree left turn off what was then a narrow two-lane Lewis Avenue. In our 1952 cream and red Plymouth Valiant, the journey had been a little iffy. The car—complete with a Slant-6, 170-cubic inch dog of a motor and push-button automatic transmission.  I’m convinced that if a fair portion of our drive from Western Pennsylvania to Tulsa not been downhill, we might still be trudging across Missouri right now.

      We chugged through the Avenue of Flags and up toward the north parking lot—and our destiny. Moments of growth and learning, mistakes and dreaming, education and inspiration awaited us—but , I had a long way to go.

      I had been to ORU previously for a College Weekend around Thanksgiving, but this time, I wasn’t here for the sights; I was here to stay. This would be my new home. And my new home was 105 degrees of sweltering humidity. In the shade.

      Unlike our gasping Plymouth, ORU would be air conditioned, my brother assured me.

      “Even the classrooms?”

      “Yes.”

      “And the cafeteria?”

      “Yes.”

      I decided maybe I’d live through this.

      The surrealism of the campus, my new life as a quasi-adult, unlimited seconds at Saga… I was overwhelmed with a sense of adventure, as well as a sense of being completely freaked out. Still, the excitement won me over. What would the next four years hold? How would this adventure play out? Who would I be when I left?

      Freshman orientation started that night in Zoppelt Auditorium. Communion was scheduled, followed by the welcoming address from President Oral Roberts. It was my first experience eating the round white wafers, which felt like chewing paper. I was certain, however, that the grape juice was pure Welch’s.

      As President Roberts walked across the stage that night, with that purposeful, yet calming stride, Zoppelt fell into a hushed reverence. He was about to share his vision for ORU, and 199 other freshmen and I were awestruck.

      Speaking with eloquence and without a single cue card, President Roberts emptied his soul. I remember feeling, as I had at Thanksgiving, the surety of knowing I was exactly where God wanted me. I tracked word for word with everything he said—until this:

      “Everybody is hurting in some way.”

      Really? Everyone? I didn’t see that. I didn’t feel it either. I began thinking, “Surely not. Not everybody. I mean, I’m here. I’m healthy. I’m happy. I’m fortunate. Sure, I’m scared, but I’m not hurting. Being scared doesn’t count.”

      But it did. A lot of things counted, and over decades, I have observed that those words I once questioned and pondered are likely a universal truth: Everybody is hurting.

      President Roberts went on to say that ORU’s roots began in the healing ministry. What did that mean for us freshmen? It meant ORU would not be sending us out merely as educated graduates; it would be sending us out as healers.

      Beyond the obvious professions, President Roberts explained how teachers could be healers, lawyers could be healers, bankers, artists and musicians … Everyone, absolutely everyone, could be healers. So, from the outset, we understood that going into every person’s world would begin by walking through a doorway created by our education and degrees. And once through that door, part of our mission would be to heal others.

      Today, we have some 27,000 graduates and 40,000 alumni in professions and pursuits of all kinds.   And all of them are hurting in some way.

      This year, Homecoming has abandoned its frigid February location and moved to a new autumn address, in hopes of making it easier for more alumni to come home.

      Over the years, when visiting with alumni who have returned to the campus, some for the first time since their graduation, I’ve heard a similar story: They spoke of how coming home was a time of healing. Walking on campus, re-experiencing an ORU chapel service, talking to friends, visiting with former professors, hanging out at former haunts, all while being surrounded by a new generation of students… Dorothy said it best: “There’s no place like home.”

      Our alumni need to come home. To be renewed. To be restored. To be reconciled. Many alumni have suffered the hard pains of life—situations like divorce, the death of children, bankruptcy, disillusionment, depression, rejection, confusion, gnawing fear. On and on, the hurts come. Many alumni are at the peak of their professions, while others wonder what went wrong.

      To all of you I say, “Come home.”

      Bring your heart for a visit this Nov. 13-16 as our Alumni Nation gathers from every uttermost part of the earth to migrate back home, back to Tulsa, back to our alma mater. Stroll the campus with the newest healers-in-training, some from ORU’s 50th freshman class. Let the rising and infectious spirit at ORU touch you once again.

      It’s the right time, and it’s the right season.

      Chris Busch, ‘73

      Chairman, ORU Alumni Board

        Last fall, ORU welcomed its 50th class and also celebrated the sixth straight year of enrollment growth with 3,565 students. Freshman retention remained strong at over 80 percent for the fifth consecutive year.

        “In today’s competitive higher education environment, I am excited to see the number of non-traditional, online learners joining our ranks,” said ORU President William M. Wilson. “We are deeply committed to continuing to create avenues for future students from around the world to gain access to our unique whole person education.”

        This school year, ORU has student representation from 84 countries and all 50 states. That count is up from the previous year by 11 nations. This year’s enrollment includes students from nations new to ORU, including: Albania, Bolivia, Bulgaria, Denmark, Dominica, Estonia, Faroe Islands, Greece, Haiti, Malawi, Mongolia, Romania and Spain.

          An ORU alumnus and Arab-Palestinian pastor is committed to the city of Bethlehem

          The word Bethlehem is translated “House of Bread.” Yet, in this city of more than 25,000, there are people starving spiritually—men, women and children in desperate need of the Bread of Life. One ORU alumnus is answering the call to feed those who hunger and thirst in this historical city.

          Fadi Zoughbi, an associate minister at House of Bread Church in Bethlehem, says he has been called to the people of his hometown. Through that calling, he also desired to pursue his post-baccalaureate degree.

          After completing bible college, Zoughbi’s father, who was familiar with the ministry of Oral Roberts, encouraged him to apply to ORU. He was accepted to the university, but that was only a small step along Zoughbi’s journey.

          When he arrived in Tulsa, Okla. in 2003, he found the scholarship he received was not nearly enough to cover his tuition. He took a part-time job on campus, working and trusting God through school.

          “It was a journey of faith. I was always late on payments, but the Lord was always faithful to provide, and I was always able to make the payment.”

          Finances were not his only obstacles. With English being his second language, Zoughbi recalls struggling to acclimate to his classes and his surroundings.

          “Everything was new to me. It took me some time to adjust to new people and a new method of life. It was not easy at the beginning, but I feel that it was a time to grow in the Lord and grow in his Word.”

          His peers, along with his relationship with the Lord, ultimately pulled him through the difficult transition.

          “I am glad I had good friends in the class. We were always encouraging each other. And also in the dormitory, I had good friends. We always prayed together and lifted each other up in prayer. So I’m glad for those years.”

          In 2005, Zoughbi received his Masters of Arts in Missions. About three years later, he returned to Tulsa to earn his doctorate in ministry.

          “I knew that the One who began a good work in us is faithful to accomplish it,” he said. “Therefore when I began this course, I put that goal to finish it and complete it and get it done.”

          “I knew that the One who began a good work in us is faithful to accomplish it,” he said. “Therefore when I began this course, I put that goal to finish it and complete it and get it done.”

          Zoughbi graduated from ORU in 2011. His journey then led him back to Bethlehem—a city the Arab-Palestinian Christian describes as peaceful, but difficult.

          “There has been a huge Christian immigration from Bethlehem, to find a location that would promise them prosperity, peace and a future, because of the political turmoil and the things that have been going on.”

          It is because of this turmoil in the land that Zoughbi believes God has brought him to Bethlehem to minister to His children, working alongside his parents and three siblings at House of Bread Church.

          “I always had the desire and calling to be here in Bethlehem and to share the light of Christ in our country. I appreciate if God opens any door for me to go and preach His Word anywhere else. But I feel that my main calling is here in the Bethlehem area.”

          Zoughbi said Chris Tomlin’s song “God of the City” encourages him as he prays for his country.

          “‘Youre the God of this city Greater things are yet to come. Greater things are still to be done in this city.’ We have a promise from God, and yet we have a responsibility to pray and to intercede on behalf of our nation. So I would also ask believers to pray for our country and especially to pray for Bethlehem.”

            The Texas Ranges Select...

            Infielder Jose Trevino (’14) was selected by the Texas Rangers in the 2014 MLB Draft.

            “I was taught a lot at ORU, especially by the baseball staff. They taught me a lot about baseball, but also about life,” Trevino said. “It’s exciting to know I am in the system. I’ve got a lot of work to do, but this should be a lot of fun.”

            Trevino spent the last half of the season in an instructional league playing for the Spokane Indians in Washington State. Trevino is the third Golden Eagle baseball player in three consecutive years to be drafted by the Rangers. ORU has had at least one player drafted in the major leagues each season since 1995.

              ORU recently welcomed its newest members of the Board of Trustees, Angela Evans and Michael Cardone III.

              Evans.Angela.2014.02 copy

              Evans is president and chief executive officer of Crenshaw Christian Center in Los Angeles, California, which was founded by her father, Frederick K. C. Price. Under her leadership, Apostle Frederick Price Ministry Training Institutes have been established in Tema, Ghana, Windhoek, Namibia and Los Angeles.

              Evans is married to A. Michael Evans, Jr., and they have two children, Alan and Adrian Evans, and three grandchildren.

              Cardone.Michael III 3x4 copyCardone is president of CARDONE Industries, Inc. of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a leading global supplier of automotive products for 42 years. He also serves on the board of directors for two nonprofit organizations, WorldServe International and the Cardone Foundation.

              Cardone is a graduate of ORU and holds an MBA in International Management from Thunderbird School of Global Management. He and his wife, Alexandra (’94), live in Philadelphia with their three children.

                Bernadett and Dorottya Balla find a new home at ORU, on and off the basketball court.

                As globalization sweeps through the ORU campus, you’ll find talented students from around the world on the rosters of the 16 Golden Eagle athletic teams. Two of these remarkable athletes are Hungarian sisters Bernadett and Dorottya Balla, who suit up for head coach Misti Cussen’s on the women’s basketball team.

                Hailing from Pecs, Hungary, just a few miles from the Croatian border, Bernadett came to ORU in the summer of 2011 after a decorated international youth career. Her impact on the Golden Eagle team was immediate. She scored in double figures nine times as a freshman and was named to the Summit League All-Newcomer Team.

                Bernadett’s influence on the ORU team was even greater in her sophomore year. She scored 26 points against Arkansas and 17 against Nebraska that year. Bernadett helped lead the Golden Eagles to a Southland Conference Tournament Championship and earned a bid to the NCAA Tournament, where ORU faced the nationally ranked University of Tennessee team.

                Still, a piece of Bernadett was missing in her first two collegiate seasons; her younger sister and longtime international squad teammate had stayed behind in Hungary and finished her high school career. But that situation was remedied in the summer of 2013, when Dorottya moved across the pond and joined the ORU roster.

                Reunited for the first time in two years, both Balla sisters played the best basketball of their lives last season. Bernadett set career highs in scoring and rebounding, while Dorottya registered the best individual performance by a Golden Eagle in 2013-14, with a whopping 30 points in a Mabee Center win over Houston Baptist.

                Balla-BBallaUCA5 copy

                Both Balla sisters say they could not see themselves learning and playing anywhere else than at ORU.

                “ORU is the perfect place to reach my personal goals on and off the court,” Dorottya says.

                Both sisters are active throughout the university’s community. They are members of ORU’s Fellowship of Christian Athletes chapter and eager participants in outreach activities each fall and spring.

                Though the adjustment from Hungary to the United States is a tough one, the Balla sisters are grateful they have each other and the tremendous ORU community to help them along their journey.

                “It’s been a great experience for me to learn about new cultures, mentalities and lifestyles,” Dorottya adds. “I am very thankful for this opportunity.”

                Golden Eagle fans can see the sisters in action when basketball season begins in early November.

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