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Truly, Truly: Helping Students See What鈥檚 Real

Dr. Darla Rakes, Ambassador to Students and Donors

In the Gospel of John, there鈥檚 a phrase Jesus uses again and again鈥攐ne that signals He鈥檚 about to speak truth with weight and urgency:
鈥淭ruly, truly, I say to you鈥︹
Or in the original Greek: 鈥淎men, amen, I say to you.鈥

John includes this double affirmation 25 times. It鈥檚 not filler language. When Jesus says 鈥淎men, amen,鈥 He鈥檚 inviting His listeners to wake up鈥攖o lay down misconceptions and see things as they really are. It鈥檚 a call to reality, especially when the heart has settled into fiction.

The first time Jesus uses this phrase is in John 1:51, during a moment that seems almost ordinary. Jesus is gathering His first disciples. Philip, excited by his discovery of the Messiah, rushes to find Nathanael. Skeptical at first (鈥淐an anything good come from Nazareth?鈥), Nathanael approaches Jesus and is immediately disarmed by what Jesus knows of him:
鈥淏efore Philip called you, I saw you under the fig tree.鈥

This small statement moves Nathanael to belief. Jesus then replies, essentially: 鈥淵ou believe because of that? Just wait.鈥 And then Jesus says:
鈥淭ruly, truly, I say to you, you will see heaven open and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man.鈥 (John 1:51)

In that moment, Jesus reframes the miracle. The true wonder wasn鈥檛 that Jesus saw Nathanael under the fig tree鈥攁 place often associated with quiet prayer and reflection on Scripture. The greater miracle was that Nathanael would gain spiritual sight to recognize who Jesus really is: the One who bridges heaven and earth, the ladder between the divine and the human, the way for all of us to connect with God鈥檚 higher purposes.

This is the same miracle we long to see in our students.

At our Christian university, education is never just about information. It鈥檚 about transformation. Our hope is that, like Nathanael, every student comes to see Jesus for who He is鈥攁nd, in doing so, discovers who they are in Him. We want students not only to sharpen their minds but to awaken their spirits, to live not by trends or opinions, but by eternal truth.

Your prayers, your generosity, and your encouragement make this possible. You help create the space where students sit under their own 鈥渇ig trees鈥濃攚restling, praying, asking questions鈥攁nd where Jesus meets them with clarity, calling, and compassion.

And when they hear Him say, 鈥淭ruly, truly鈥︹濃攖hey鈥檒l know to listen.