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Just want to tell a story for no particular reason.
Don't know if anyone will even read this.
Life as an HAC student in the 2012-2013 school year...
News got out that Jack Schaap was in big trouble after Youth Conference 2012. People wondered why he didn't close out the conference.
If most of your friends were fundamentalist and had social media at that time, Facebook was crazy and full of debates for weeks. My pastor called to tell me the news and tried to convince me to still go to HAC. I was about to enter my junior year of college so I kinda wanted to finish what I started despite friends at church telling me how glad they were for not enrolling at HAC.
Many of us knew that a lot of students wouldn't return and some pastors would cut ties with FBCH/HAC. When I was a freshman in 2010, enrollment was at 1200 students so they say. When the 2012-2013 school year started enrollment was at about 500 students and would be the final year of the Jericho Plan, Schaap's free- college-for-2-years plan. A lot of teachers got laid off and there was a very pessimistic atmosphere in September and October.
Raymond Hancock was the preacher for opening day. In fact, we had a lot of guest preachers for Sunday nights too like Jack Trieber, Clarence Sexton, and some other big names who I forgot. Eddie Lapina was running the show on Sunday mornings.
The first Saturday for bus calling and soul winning was a nightmare. Many people in Chicago knew what had happened, so they would just laugh and slam the door on us.
On one of the chapel services on the second week of school, Ken Schaap was scheduled to preach. The whole chapel was so quiet you could hear a pin drop. I don't think anyone was asleep for this. Everyone thought he was going to mention his dad in his sermon or say something about the situation FBC is going through, but his sermon had no mentioning of that and he just gave regular sermon to everyone.
The dorms were dorms. Crazy HAC men doing crazy stuff like every school year. We were all prohibited from watching movies on our laptops but a lot of us did it anyways and no one would really tattle on us. It was a period when smartphones were on the rise and students would "take notes" on their phones during class.
The 2 most common topics in the dorms were...
1. Who will the next pastor be?
2. Will this be the final semester of HAC? If so, were will you go to college?
Some of us were talking about filling out applications for Crown College, Pensacola and West Coast. Some did end up leaving.
We also shared our thoughts on who the next pastor would be. All kind of names came up like Scott Gray, Rick Finley, Bruce Goddard, Jack Trieber, Ken Schaap, Freddy De Anda and etc.
HAC remained open for the spring semester. So a lot of us were happy.
It was a good school year for me personally, I slowly grew out of the fear of asking someone out. I had several dates that year. One date I had in particular was at a bus rally for the fall program. John Wilkerson was the guest speaker. I told my date that I think he will be the next pastor and she looked at me like I was crazy. Also in the bus ministry, things went well for me too. Our route set records that year and I never thought I had the skills to convince people to come to church. I wasn't so good at it during my freshman and sophomore years, but that year was exceptional.
Winter came around and people started getting impatient about who the next pastor would be. At church they kept giving us the same answer. The "pulpit committee" is still deciding.
A few weeks into the second semester, it was starting to leak that John Wilkerson was going to come to FBCH and preach as a candidate for pastor. Looking back it, I am not sure if candidate was the right word to use because there were no other candidates that came and spoke. They had their man.
The vote I believe was that same night after he had just finished preaching or maybe it was the following week (don't remember but it wasn't too long). It was supposed to be a vote for members of FBCH but I think a lot of non members voted too. They handed out the voting slips to everyone like candy. So that very night Pastor Wilkerson became the pastor I believe with over 90% of the vote and no other candidate to give it a shot. Maybe no one else wanted it.
Some people didn't like him because he doesn't shout like Schaap did in his sermons. Some students called him the Baptist Joel Osteen. I was more impressed he actually goes visiting and often talked about his experiences when he was out soul winning. He even said he has no problem driving the church bus to help out some bus captain in need.
My biggest struggle that year was paying my school bill. I picked up an overnight shift job and somehow managed to pay for my school and pass my classes. It was scary at one point because I was so broke, but there was plenty of overtime.
(This is getting long....I should end this soon)
They even lowered some dress standards for men. As long as classes were over for the day, men could walk around campus with no suit coat or tie. This included the dinning hall.
It was definitely the most unforgettable school year at HAC. It was amazing to see who left and who stayed. HAC stayed opened that school year and still is open today. What a crazy place...8400 Burr Street....still can't believe I remember that address....
Don't know if anyone will even read this.
Life as an HAC student in the 2012-2013 school year...
News got out that Jack Schaap was in big trouble after Youth Conference 2012. People wondered why he didn't close out the conference.
If most of your friends were fundamentalist and had social media at that time, Facebook was crazy and full of debates for weeks. My pastor called to tell me the news and tried to convince me to still go to HAC. I was about to enter my junior year of college so I kinda wanted to finish what I started despite friends at church telling me how glad they were for not enrolling at HAC.
Many of us knew that a lot of students wouldn't return and some pastors would cut ties with FBCH/HAC. When I was a freshman in 2010, enrollment was at 1200 students so they say. When the 2012-2013 school year started enrollment was at about 500 students and would be the final year of the Jericho Plan, Schaap's free- college-for-2-years plan. A lot of teachers got laid off and there was a very pessimistic atmosphere in September and October.
Raymond Hancock was the preacher for opening day. In fact, we had a lot of guest preachers for Sunday nights too like Jack Trieber, Clarence Sexton, and some other big names who I forgot. Eddie Lapina was running the show on Sunday mornings.
The first Saturday for bus calling and soul winning was a nightmare. Many people in Chicago knew what had happened, so they would just laugh and slam the door on us.
On one of the chapel services on the second week of school, Ken Schaap was scheduled to preach. The whole chapel was so quiet you could hear a pin drop. I don't think anyone was asleep for this. Everyone thought he was going to mention his dad in his sermon or say something about the situation FBC is going through, but his sermon had no mentioning of that and he just gave regular sermon to everyone.
The dorms were dorms. Crazy HAC men doing crazy stuff like every school year. We were all prohibited from watching movies on our laptops but a lot of us did it anyways and no one would really tattle on us. It was a period when smartphones were on the rise and students would "take notes" on their phones during class.
The 2 most common topics in the dorms were...
1. Who will the next pastor be?
2. Will this be the final semester of HAC? If so, were will you go to college?
Some of us were talking about filling out applications for Crown College, Pensacola and West Coast. Some did end up leaving.
We also shared our thoughts on who the next pastor would be. All kind of names came up like Scott Gray, Rick Finley, Bruce Goddard, Jack Trieber, Ken Schaap, Freddy De Anda and etc.
HAC remained open for the spring semester. So a lot of us were happy.
It was a good school year for me personally, I slowly grew out of the fear of asking someone out. I had several dates that year. One date I had in particular was at a bus rally for the fall program. John Wilkerson was the guest speaker. I told my date that I think he will be the next pastor and she looked at me like I was crazy. Also in the bus ministry, things went well for me too. Our route set records that year and I never thought I had the skills to convince people to come to church. I wasn't so good at it during my freshman and sophomore years, but that year was exceptional.
Winter came around and people started getting impatient about who the next pastor would be. At church they kept giving us the same answer. The "pulpit committee" is still deciding.
A few weeks into the second semester, it was starting to leak that John Wilkerson was going to come to FBCH and preach as a candidate for pastor. Looking back it, I am not sure if candidate was the right word to use because there were no other candidates that came and spoke. They had their man.
The vote I believe was that same night after he had just finished preaching or maybe it was the following week (don't remember but it wasn't too long). It was supposed to be a vote for members of FBCH but I think a lot of non members voted too. They handed out the voting slips to everyone like candy. So that very night Pastor Wilkerson became the pastor I believe with over 90% of the vote and no other candidate to give it a shot. Maybe no one else wanted it.
Some people didn't like him because he doesn't shout like Schaap did in his sermons. Some students called him the Baptist Joel Osteen. I was more impressed he actually goes visiting and often talked about his experiences when he was out soul winning. He even said he has no problem driving the church bus to help out some bus captain in need.
My biggest struggle that year was paying my school bill. I picked up an overnight shift job and somehow managed to pay for my school and pass my classes. It was scary at one point because I was so broke, but there was plenty of overtime.
(This is getting long....I should end this soon)
They even lowered some dress standards for men. As long as classes were over for the day, men could walk around campus with no suit coat or tie. This included the dinning hall.
It was definitely the most unforgettable school year at HAC. It was amazing to see who left and who stayed. HAC stayed opened that school year and still is open today. What a crazy place...8400 Burr Street....still can't believe I remember that address....