Community Building
Looking at the various commitment levels of members in a group can help you plan more wisely.
The Chapter Building Task Force met in 2004-05 to understand and describe the essential components of growing InterVarsity fellowships. Seven primary factors were identified.
Your closest and most supportive campus friendships don't need to stop with graduation.
Authentic relationships and redemptive communities.
Inwardly strong fellowship begins with an outward focus.
Students rake yards to serve their community.
God works in more ways than just organized meetings; he works in the events of our everyday lives.
Commuter campuses present a challenge to InterVarsity chapters and leaders. Here is help.
Encouraging witnessing stories from a graduate student on a community college campus
Don't apply the "cheap and easy" mentality of consumerism to relationships with God and each other.
Cliques: Are they a problem in your chapter?
Even the close-knit communities that seem to have it all together may be carrying around a lot of hurt underneath it all. How can the past hurts be put aside and be replaced with intimacy?
What do you do when your chapter grows and grows--and the older students don't like the disturbance in their pre-existing community?
Building community on a lonely campus
What do you do when someone surprises you with harsh words of correction?
Having friends and being friends are two very different things.
Sidebar to "The Art of Friendship"
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