MISSION STATEMENT
The mission of Greenville
College is to transform students for lives of character and service
through a Christ-centered education in the liberating arts and sciences.
HISTORY
For
more than a century Greenville College students have been receiving the
benefits of an education within the framework of an emphasis on
academic excellence and Christian character.
Accepting the challenge to provide higher education for women,
Stephen Morse moved to Greenville, Illinois, from New Hampshire
and founded Almira College in 1855. It was called Almira College
in honor of his wife, Almira Blanchard Morse. Two years after its
founding, the College was incorporated. For the next twenty-three
years, the school educated young women under the leadership of John
B. White a classmate of Morse at Brown University. When financial
reverses came, the property was sold to James P. Slade who conducted
a coeducational school.
In 1892, ministerial and lay leaders of the Central Illinois Conference
of the Free Methodist Church purchased Almira College, which was
at the time housed in a single building, to provide higher education
for young men and women under distinctive Christian influences.
The institution was reincorporated under the name of Greenville
College and authorized to confer the usual degrees. Since that time
the College has served its students with distinction and increased
its physical facilities as evidenced by our campus map. (Appendix
A)
PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION
Adopted by the Faculty on February 21, 1996
All
truth is God's truth. Our educational philosophy rests in our search
for truth, upon the authority of Scripture, as well as upon tradition,
reason, and experience. It is shaped by Biblical revelation and
informed by our theological presuppositions, and therefore includes the
following assumptions about reality, knowledge, humanness, and value.
Reality:
We understand God to be personal--the creator and ruler of an orderly,
dynamic universe. Through this universe God's eternal purposes,
meaning, creativity, and loving care are expressed.
Knowledge:
We learn about reality through observation, thought, and a scholarly
and disciplined search for truth. We then perceive reality's ultimate
meaning in and through God and through His creation. The fullest
information about God's person and purposes appears in God's
self-revelation in redemptive acts--in Hebrew history and in the
Incarnation, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ--as recorded and
interpreted in the Bible. God's dealings are always primarily
relational, first through God's choosing of a people and later through
the establishment of the church. God continues to be at work in the
world through His creation and through the instrument of the church in
the power of the Holy Spirit, calling people individually and
collectively into a saving experience. To learn, throughout our lives,
we must do more than gain knowledge. We must also integrate our
knowledge with the adaptive coping skills--skills that we develop
through our life experiences and temper by spiritual discernment. As we
watch our community's leaders and members integrating the outcomes of
their moral choices, we learn from our own faith-based choices. From
these people we can learn to serve by leading, and to lead by serving.
Their habits of heart and mind serve as models for our own. As we
create our unique spiritual, cognitive, and psychosocial synthesis, our
Christian learning community encourages and supports us. In such a
community, both the curricular and co-curricular experiences can help
us develop into servant leaders.
Humanness: We
humans are created in the image of God, and are therefore of
inestimable value. We further understand that this image is found
across cultures, ethnic and racial groups, and social class. But
because we are bound by sin, we have become estranged from God and
neighbor, and our lives are distorted. Yet God, out of infinite mercy,
offers us salvation and reconciliation in the atoning work of Jesus
Christ. As a result, all who that profess belief in Christ are called
to seek the fullness of the Spirit and to live lives of wholeness and
grace through the power of the Holy Spirit. As bearers of God's image,
humans retain certain qualities and responsibilities. These qualities
include complex rational capabilities, systematic and powerful skills
of investigation, and the capacity for compelling ethical and aesthetic
insights. And because we are social in both our nature and our
circumstance, we bear a responsibility to live as a functional part of
society in its diverse manifestations. This requires sensitivity to
culture, ethnicity, race, gender, religious tradition and practice, and
social class. In addition we should live redemptively, pointing others
to Christ, to the church, and to the Christian worldview.
Value:
We value righteousness, which we understand to be obedience to God and
His revelation. The essence of this obedience is captured in the
Christian ideals of character and calling. Regarding character, we
prize:
- commitment to God through a saving relationship with Jesus Christ,
- respect for all of creation,
- respect for persons as they have been variously created by God,
- personal
freedom and the acceptance of responsibility for the personal and
social consequences which result from the exercise of this freedom, and
- obedience
to the teachings of Christ and the apostolic tradition, and to the
Spirit of God at work in the life of the individual and the church.
With respect to calling, we embrace:
- the responsibility of each believer to live a life of full service in and through the church--the Body of Christ;
- the
wholeness of life and our dual obligations to affirm all that is True,
Good, and Beautiful and to exercise stewardship over all of creation;
- the
ethics of love and the responsibility for bringing good news and
personal relief to all, with special care for the poor and downtrodden,
and
- the necessity of the indwelling Spirit of
God if we expect our lives of ministry and service to have either
substance or effectiveness.
Based
on our assumptions about reality, knowledge, humanness, and value,
Greenville College pursues certain objectives. Our pursuit unifies both
spiritual and academic aims, in an effort to minister to the whole
person.
THEOLOGICAL ASSUMPTIONS
Adopted by the Faculty on December 13, 1995
Greenville
College is a Christian College of the liberal arts and sciences founded
by the Free Methodist Church and committed to the following description
of our theological character.
As Christians, we
believe that God exists and is presently and actively engaged in the
lives of people. Though we employ terms such as wonderful, powerful,
righteous, loving, all knowing, merciful, and holy to describe God,
none of them alone, or even in total, can completely capture the
identity of God. Because that identity must be both experienced and
learned, we commit ourselves to a living and learning environment that
nurtures the whole person. We affirm that, as God's creatures, persons
are endowed with the ability to respond to, and ultimately to know and
achieve intimacy with God. This intimacy with God results in life
growing ever more harmonious with God's nature, which can be described
in terms of goodness, beauty, truthfulness, freedom and love. Because
these qualities transcend all cultural, historical, and ethnic
boundaries, Greenville College seeks to do the same.
We
have seen that humanity does not live in harmony with God, and we seek
to understand why. We believe that God is helping us to gain this
knowledge, both through revelation and by discovery in that which God
has done in history and has made in creation. Refusal to embrace this
revelation and to begin the journey of discovery is at the root of
humanity's problem. This problem has traditionally been defined as sin
and can be best understood in terms of its consequences: alienation in
all relationships, captivity to sin, and a darkened heart and mind.
Death is the ultimate experience of this alienation and darkness. We
understand that the person of Jesus Christ is the revelation of God,
and the work of Christ redeems all creation, dispels the darkness of
ignorance, frees people from captivity to sin, and restores all
relationships. All this is mediated through the ministry of the Holy
Spirit, holding the hope of redemption and life for humankind.
These
affirmations lead us to embrace a Christianity that is best defined as
Orthodox. Orthodox Christianity, holding to what might be described as
a central consensus among Christians of all times and cultures affirm
that:
We believe in God the Father
Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; and in Jesus Christ His only Son
our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary;
suffered under Pontius Pilate: was crucified, dead and buried. He
descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead; He
ascended into heaven, and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father
Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
We
believe in the Holy Ghost; the holy catholic church, the communion of
saints; the forgiveness of sins; the resurrection of the body; and life
everlasting.
We are confident that affirming the Apostles' Creed is completely necessary and adequate for one to claim to be fully Christian.
In order to define how we at Greenville College have and are working
out our faith in practice, it must be understood that we are the
willing, and sometimes unwilling, inheritors of a number of religious
impulses and traditions including Orthodox Christianity, the Enlightenment,
the Reformation, the Puritan ethos, an Evangelical tradition, the
Anglican/Methodist tradition, the Pentecostal/Holiness impulse,
and American Revivalism. As such, let it be understood that we embrace
the Bible as the authoritative rule for faith and life, the historic
forms and rituals of the church, the evangelical missionary impulse
which preaches the gospel of Jesus, the continuing search for truth
in all arenas, the affirmation of the good, the preeminence of Jesus
Christ, the active ministry of the Holy Spirit in the lives of all
people, the beauty of holiness and the holiness of beauty, the ministry
of love through works of service and mercy as the goal of Christian
practice, the struggle for freedom and justice in all parts of the
earth, and the necessity of an individual encounter with and commitment
to God in Christ.
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