Our Christian foundation is what makes our university unique. This is the place to bring prayer requests, discuss theological issues and how to become better Champions for Christ.

Moderators: jcmanson, Sly Fox, BuryYourDuke

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By TallyW
Registration Days Posts
#84449
Instead of processing thoughts twice I figured I'd copy a post from my blog. You don't have to read it all... just getting it out there... It's a rough day.

I loved that man and his ministry.
It was not until I arrived at Liberty University and Thomas Road Baptist Church did I believe the local church could actually change the world. My view of church was very small and honestly my view of God was just as small. To this day I go over to Lynchburg, VA to get inspired. When you look around at all God has done through that man's ministry you can see the power of God. Throughout my entire time at Liberty and even working at Thomas Road and LCA (school) I couldn't believe the constant vision that came from this man. He never stopped moving the vision God had given him forward. He was truly larger than life.

People who only knew the Doc from his television appearances missed out on understanding the man. He was a pitbull when it came to fighting for what he believed but he was a gentle giant when it came to being around him in person.

He loved Jesus.
He always said that the smartest man in the world was the man who knew the bible best. He was thirsty for God's word. He taught all of the students at LU to rise early and be in God's word. He would tell us that he has read "My Utmost for His Highest" nearly every day of his life since his conversion.

He loved the church.
My sister-in-law passed away several years ago and it was Dr. Falwell who performed a Memorial service. He was extremely compassionate and loving to the family. His memory was as sharp as I'd ever seen. He wouldn't forget your name. During all of his years of national prominence he remained the Senior Pastor of T.R.B.C.

He loved Liberty University and it's students.
He's said over and over again that LU is his legacy. One of the biggest things I noticed as a student was that he sincerely loved us. He thought of us as grandchildren. You'd often see him interacting with students around campus or 4-wheeling in his Suburban across lawns or up the side of a hill from the baseball field to the Mansion where his office was. He loved Liberty University. Dr. Falwell had a few select lessons he preached every year. While to some it became a joke that he kept telling us about the founding of the church, how he met his wife or the founding of the University... he did it for days like today and tomorrow. When he wasn't there to tell us anymore.

He loved to laugh.
He had a handshake that would break down giants and during convocation he was known for bear hugging and picking up men larger than himself. More than once did he roll up behind me in his big S.U.V. with a huge smile on his face as he made you wish you had a diaper on. He was a jokester.

He loved his grand kids.
Many times around Thomas Road I would see him interact with his grand children. I remember seeing him come in for a fall harvest event where his grandchildren were jumping on the inflatable games we had brought in. He was so proud to sit next to the inflatables and play with his grandkids who were jumping around inside. They'd run out and jump up to grandpa's lap.

He loved his wife. He always said that Macel was his strength and that she kept him in line. His marriage is an amazing testimony. With all of the traveling and work she remained by his side and he to her. Dr. Falwell demonstrated a man who loved, respected and honored his wife. He gave guys like me an example of what could be if a man did it God's way.

He loved his children.
Dr. Falwell has three accomplished children. Jonathan and Jerry Jr. will take over TRBC and LU respectively while his third child, his daughter Jeannie is a Doctor. He often bragged about them and let them know publicly they were loved.

He loved humanity.
Dr. Falwell was a man who did something about injustices. While he may be known for controversial remarks on hot-button topics like homosexuality or abortion, Dr. Falwell is lesser known for being a man who started an inner-city ministry to the poor, a home for Alcoholics and drug addicts, a crisis pregnancy center for unwed (mostly teenage) mothers, an adoption agency, on and on. He came up in a time when conservatives needed a big time voice. Conservative Christians had lost their voice and allowed others to push forward an agenda contrary to scripture as Dr. Falwell saw it. He became a voice (a booming one at that) for those issues that were underrepresented in the public square.

He didn't run for office. He didn't go around naming buildings after himself. He leveraged his entire being to fighting injustices and spreading the cause of Christ. He leaves behind him a legacy that will not be fully known in the next 20 years. With the fastest growing Christian University (now over 10k on campus and 20k in distance learning) on the rise, the impact of Dr. Falwell will be known in the later part of this generation and in the future. While society will discuss Moral Majority and Dr. Falwell's entertaining quotes, people like me are impacted by how he loved his family and how he taught me that God can still use one man to change the world. Presidents were elected with the help of this man but I promise you janitors at Thomas Road have had their lives changed by him as well.

If I can be half the man that Dr. Falwell was, I would have been a great and God-honoring man.
By absturgill
Registration Days Posts
#84450
Dr. Falwell left an amazing legacy that's for sure. I remember if the fall of 1999, when I came to Liberty for College For A Weekend, during the Friday convocation, I wanted to, and was able to meet Dr. Falwell just for a few seconds. Liberty was and is a great school.

Just to share another couple of good Jery stories. My freshmen year I am studying in the fine arts fountain area and Jerry comes up behind me and puts his hands on my shoulders and scares me good. Another time, I was coming from Target backt o campus by the Sonic and I am coming up and a car is coming down the up ramp. I toot my horn for a quick sec, and what do I hear but the General Lee horn. It was jerry and Macel with a salmon colored shirt man in the back seat. come to find out, that was Mel Gibson!!

Here's to Dr. Falwell. The angels are giving a good L-U chant right now.
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By PAmedic
Registration Days Posts
#84451
well said, Tally.
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By jcmanson
Registration Days Posts
#84452
Very nice Tally.
By 4everfsu
Registration Days Posts
#84454
Tally well put, may God use you and your ministry greatly
By backintheday
Registration Days Posts
#84457
Having attended Liberty from '76-'80 and now having a child attending there, I have had the opportunity to see Jerry's amazing perseverence and the tremendous progress toward fulfillment of his vision. In this, he is an example to all of us. I, too, agree with those who have noted his integrity even in the face of many who tried to ruin his reputation and implicate him in scandal. The thing that I appreciated most about him was his genuine love for the kids at the school and his ability to be just "Jerry". And, of course, his love for Christ. It is truly a sad day for the Liberty and TRBC family.
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By PAmedic
Registration Days Posts
#84458
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/obitu ... DLINES_NAT
Jerry Falwell, Leading Religious Conservative, Dies at 73

By PETER APPLEBOME
Published: May 15, 2007
Jerry Falwell, the fundamentalist preacher who founded the Moral Majority and helped bring the language and passions of religious conservatives into American politics, died today shortly after he was found unconscious in his office at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va. He was 73 years old.
By magnolialeague
Registration Days Posts
#84463
Condolences to the Liberty family from the Tribe and Commodore Nation.
Last edited by magnolialeague on May 15th, 2007, 4:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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By PAmedic
Registration Days Posts
#84464
thanks so much.

we truly appreciate it.

please continue to pray for his wife and family.

God bless
By 4everfsu
Registration Days Posts
#84465
Thanks PAMedic for sharing that article, it was very well written
By lawyerchik1
Registration Days
#84466
....y'know, that's all there is to say: finally home.

Best Dr. Falwell memory: Liberty University basketball games circa 1987, Dr. Falwell sitting in the top row of the old gym with a necktie tied around his head like a bandana, banging on the air ducts!! :)

The vision he had of young champions for Christ is a reality - if you think about it, that is an amazing legacy: the influence he had on so many people, young and old, for the Lord. The impact Liberty students have had and will have on the world has yet to be determined, but it started with his vision of what could be. One man's willingness to be used of God and his desire to make a difference in the world because of his faith in the living God - that's a powerful example.
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By PAmedic
Registration Days Posts
#84467
(hoping SLY allows a little latitude here)

last 2 paragraphs were great, too:
Mr. Falwell’s positions on some issues evolved over time. He surprised some critics by becoming more tolerant on gay issues in later years. But at his core, he remained through his career precisely what he was at the beginning — a preacher and moralist, a believer in the Bible’s literal truth, with firm beliefs on religious, and social issues rooted in his reading of Scripture that never really changed.

So there was no distinction at all between his view of the political and the spiritual when he wrote in his autobiography: “We are born into a war zone where the forces of God do battle with the forces of evil. Sometimes we get trapped, pinned down in the crossfire. And in the heat of that noisy distracting battle, two voices call out for us to follow. Satan wants to lead us into death. God wants to lead us into life eternal.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/obitu ... DLINES_NAT
By SuperJon
Registration Days Posts
#84469
lawyerchik1 wrote: Best Dr. Falwell memory: Liberty University basketball games circa 1987, Dr. Falwell sitting in the top row of the old gym with a necktie tied around his head like a bandana, banging on the air ducts!! :)
That is absolutely hilarious. I got here in 06, and I can see him doing that in my head.


Image
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By Fumblerooskies
Registration Days Posts
#84470
My memory...actually two:
1. Seeing him passed through the crowd at LU basketball games...as a visiting team at the time...I was amazed at what a normal guy he was.

2. My son (7th grade at the time), walking in front of his tank...and having the loudest horn on earth blown at him. The good Rev even motioned for him to cross the street before he blasted him. My wife was shocked, "Who was that...that was rude." I was laughing my butt off...and she did too when I told her it was Dr. Falwell. I think that is my son's lasting memory of him, too.
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By 01LUGrad
Registration Days Posts
#84471
Wow. I can hardly believe it. Like everyone else on here, I never really thought this day would come. We are saddened, but think of how happy he is right now! Something tells me we are going to see some pretty crazy plays go our way on the football field this year!

Great memories:

One of my first "mall loop" warm-up laps with the cross country team in '97. All of the upper classmen scatter as a black suburban jumps the curb and almost sends me to meet Jesus before the big guy. I laughed for over a mile.

Big snow in early 2000. Classes were canceled and we are all goofing off in the white stuff. Along comes the black suburban again. This time, the door opens, out steps Dr. Falwell. We wave, he throws a snowball at us and nails my roommate. Priceless.
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By El Scorcho
Registration Days Posts
#84473
SuperJon wrote:
lawyerchik1 wrote: Best Dr. Falwell memory: Liberty University basketball games circa 1987, Dr. Falwell sitting in the top row of the old gym with a necktie tied around his head like a bandana, banging on the air ducts!! :)
That is absolutely hilarious. I got here in 06, and I can see him doing that in my head.
It is hilarious, and I wouldn't mind seeing neckties tied around the heads of our fans at basketball games for a long time to come. Or in full-on suits. He was a self-proclaimed sports nut, so it would only be fitting if the rest of us sports nuts payed tribute to him somehow.
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By PAmedic
Registration Days Posts
#84476
http://www.liberty.edu/index.cfm?PID=13208&NewsID=180
Falwell, Founder of Liberty University, Dies
May 15, 2007

Contact: Dr. Ronald S. Godwin

LYNCHBURG, Va. — The Rev. Jerry Falwell, Founder and Chancellor of Liberty University and Founder and Pastor of the historic Thomas Road Baptist Church, died today. He was 73.

Rev. Falwell was found unconscious in his office around 11:30 a.m., by members of his staff and received immediate resuscitation efforts there, again in the ambulance and at Lynchburg General Hospital. He was officially pronounced dead at 12:40 p.m.

Rev. Falwell’s family, including his wife Macel and sons Jerry Falwell, Jr. and Jonathan Falwell, were with him at the hospital at the time of his death.
Ministry officials called a special 2:00 p.m. meeting in the Thomas Road Baptist Church auditorium and on less than an hour's notice over 6,000 faculty, staff, students and church members attended the announcement of the passing of their Pastor and Chancellor.

Rev. Falwell established the Thomas Road Baptist Church in 1956 where he pastored for over 50 years. He founded Liberty University in 1971 and oversaw its rise to prominence as the largest evangelical University in America.
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By JDUB
Registration Days Posts
#84477
just now getting an email from the school
it is almost identical to what medic just posted
By cheerbren
Registration Days Posts
#84479
My heart is happy he is home, my mind is sad my kids will never know him. My prayers for the kids and grandkids as they suffer this loss. May God surround them!
By kel varson
Registration Days Posts
#84481
His picture is now on the university site as well.
By Tracey
Registration Days Posts
#84482
I have cried all afternoon. My roomie from Freshman Year called me and she and I agreed it felt as if we should rally the troops. I read most of the posts here and would like to add that the "Jerry"chant was probably started again by LUers that are already in Heaven. I bet graduation on Saturday is going to be very odd and sad.

I too am praying for his family, the staff, and everyone who went to LU. He DID have a great memory. I saw him about 5 years ago at Homecoming and when I went over to say Hello, he said "here she comes" and I thought, he says that to everyone. Then he called me by name. Amazing! I attended LU from '89 to '95, Bachelors and Master's.

I am truly saddened.
By Tracey
Registration Days Posts
#84483
Just rememberred a funny clip from my LU memories. Seeing the video of Dr. Falwell bunjee-jumping! Chapel was never so funny as it was that day.
By kiltsareitchy07
Registration Days Posts
#84485
Y'all and your university have all our prayers at bluehosesports.com.
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By Fumblerooskies
Registration Days Posts
#84486
For all you 07 grads out there...
...there might be no better tribute than to break out into a "Jerry. Jerry" chant at some point in the initial ceremony in the stadium.
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By flameshaw
Registration Days Posts
#84487
I could tell 100 stories about this great man. My wife's grandfather Garland Carey was the one who led Jerry to the Lord that night at Park Avenue. He has been a family friend since before he and Macel were married. There have been many people who have spoken ill of Jerry, but I don't know of one who has done it after spending some time with the good Reverend and getting to know his heart.
Right now, I am just too upset to focus on much of anything. A couple of things that have been said today I will always remember: SJ asking if Peter and Paul and some of the other big boys might be doing the Jerry chant, I could just visualize that and evrytime I do, I cry and laugh at the same time. El Scorhco recommending that we do something at every sporting event to remember Jerry. I had thought of that already, but could not think of a fitting tribute. We need to all think of something that be approprite and unique. We have talked in the past of having an eternal flame as a symbol of our sports program, maybe it is time to unite that thought with honoring the life of a man who loved sports, but loved those who competed with the LU on the jerseys even more.
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