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Fred Luter Honored

Fred Luter, 'Pastor of New Orleans'

BY MARILYN STEWART

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Fred Luter, pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, New Orleans, was honored by New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and Leavell College Oct. 12, with the announcement that a commemorative brick paver would be placed in his honor in the seminary’s Legacy Plaza reading “Fred Luter, the pastor of New Orleans.” Jamie Dew, NOBTS and Leavell College president, pointed to Luter’s wide influence and the impact he has made for God’s kingdom.

“[God’s] hand has been and is all over your life and your preaching and your ministry,” Dew said to Luter. “You are not just the pastor of Franklin Avenue, you are the pastor of New Orleans, and brother, we are grateful for you.”

The presentation coincided with Luter’s 35th anniversary as pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, New Orleans, celebrated Sunday, Oct. 17. Commemorative brick pavers placed at Legacy Plaza, the courtyard at Leavell Chapel, honor friends and loved ones of NOBTS and Leavell College.

Dew noted that Luter began as a street preacher on New Orleans streets, then stepped into the role of pastor for a “very small” congregation. Today, that congregation – Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, Luter’s only pastorate – numbers a membership in the thousands with satellite campuses in Houston and in Baton Rouge.

One of the seminary's most popular chapel speakers, Luter spoke to a full audience, drawing from Lamentations 3:22-23 to remind listeners of God’s faithfulness.

Noting that life is unpredictable, Luter quoted a phrase from the movie “Forest Gump” that compared life to a box of chocolates meaning “you never know what you’re going to get.” The lingering impact of Covid and today’s shifting culture and can make it seem that life is “like a box of chocolates,” Luter explained.

Jeremiah, the author of Lamentations, experienced the same discouragement and despair that many today feel, Luter said.

“But for the child of God, despair never has the last word,” Luter said. “Despair is not an option for the child of God … God, and God alone, is our hope.”

God’s children should not despair because the God who raised Jesus from the tomb is the God who shows unfailing compassion to His people, Luter said.

“One thing you never have to worry about is the faithfulness of God. One thing you can hold onto is the faithfulness of God,” Luter said. “Every day you wake up God gives us new mercies. They will never run out. They are never depleted. Great is His faithfulness.”

Despair is not an option for the child of God … God, and God alone, is our hope.

~ FRED LUTER

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NOBTS Caskey Center MARKS 50,000 GOSPEL CONVERSATIONS

BY MARILYN STEWART

Counting gospel conversations was never the end goal for New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and Leavell College’s Caskey Center scholarship program that requires students to share the gospel weekly. The point was to lead others to faith.

But seven years into the program, Caskey scholarship recipients recently crossed the mark of 50,000 gospel conversations.

Jeff Farmer, Caskey Center associate director and statistician, said each gospel conversation is the result of students becoming intentional in sharing.

“We’re now over 50,000 times that students have left their comfort zones and have contended for the faith,” Farmer said. “[The students] don’t count conversations with believers. These are all unbelievers. We celebrate that.”

The Caskey Center provides resources, including a designated number of scholarships, for bivocational and smaller membership church ministers in Southern Baptist churches in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama.

While 50,000 might seem impressive, Farmer pointed to a “more gratifying” statistic — the number who have come to faith in Christ.

“Each semester … we’ve seen approximately 12 percent of those conversations ending up with people coming to faith in Christ,” Farmer said. “That means there are over 6,000 new believers because of this evangelism requirement.”

Steve Kelley, a Leavell College student and Caskey scholarship recipient, logged the 50,000th conversation on September 20. Though Kelley’s conversation did not result in a profession of faith that day, he continues faithfully to share.

“The Lord does the saving. We do the sharing and He takes care of the rest,” Kelley explained.

Kelley, a Leavell College student and minister of evangelism at Highland Baptist Church, Gordo, Alabama, said sharing weekly did not feel natural at first. Prayer was the key, he added.

With gratitude, Kelley pointed to Caskey Center director Mark Tolbert’s encouragement to pray each Monday morning for opportunities that week to share and to ask for an alertness to the spiritual conditions of others.

“The most powerful thing we can do is pray,” Kelley said. “Everything we do spiritually starts there.”

While the Caskey scholarship made a seminary education financially possible for Kelley, it was the program’s emphasis on weekly evangelism that “made all the difference” to his ministry, Kelley said.

“It’s easy to get into the thought of, ‘You’re just wasting your time’ or ‘These people don’t care about the gospel.’ That’s the continual pounding in your ears from the enemy,” Kelley explained. “But when you can actually see that seed planted and come to fruition, it gives you an inner spark, an energy to continue going forward and make it a priority.”

Caskey students often lead their church members to commit also to sharing the gospel each week, Farmer said.

A gospel conversation is defined as a one-on-one conversation with an unbeliever that transitions to the gospel, Farmer explained.

“We try to emphasize that the only time you fail at evangelism is when you don’t speak up,” Farmer said. “Let the Holy Spirit do His job. My job is to share my story and how my life has been impacted by the gospel. God will do the rest.”

Farmer noted that all Caskey scholarship recipients serve at smaller membership churches, a focus that reflects the Southern Baptist Convention’s history.

“It’s our past but it can be our future,” Farmer said. “We are a small church denomination and small churches can make a big impact on the world for the cause of Christ. I anticipate that the next 50,000 [conversations] won’t take as long. I think we are gathering some steam here.”

DOES PREPARATION MATTER?ALUMNI NEWS

MCKEEVER DONATES COMICS AND SERMON ARCHIVES TO THE NOBTS

BY GARY D. MYERS

Dr. Joe McKeever (Th.M. '67, D.Min. '73) donated his extensive archive of cartoons, sermons and other writings to the John T. Christian Library at NOBTS earlier this year.

McKeever produced the cartoons, caricatures, sermons, articles, and posts during his illustrious 59-year career. His gospel ministry included 47 years as a local church pastor (including long tenures at First Baptist Church in Columbus, Mississippi, and First Baptist Church in Kenner, Louisiana), five years as an associational missionary in New Orleans, and a "retirement" period loaded with preaching engagements and conferences. For wider Southern Baptist audiences, McKeever is best known through his prolific cartoon ministry. His works have appeared in many state Baptist papers, church clip art book that sold over 300,000 copies in the 1980s, and other books. Baptist Press recently launched Your Daily Joe which distributes one of McKeever's comics each weekday as a part of the SBC Morning Briefing.

Drawing caricatures is an ongoing ministry for McKeever. Whether serving at the SBC Annual Convention, state Baptist gatherings, or schools, he sits for hours making free sketches of all who ask. Whenever McKeever draws, he draws a crowd. As McKeever draws caricatures, he gets to know each person and looks for ways to provide encouragement and engage in a gospel conversation.

McKeever began drawing at age five and took a mailorder drawing course as a teen. He has been drawing ever since. His "big break" came in the 1970s when Alabama Baptist editor Hudson Baggett started running his cartoons. He earned $1.50 per cartoon. Other papers picked up his work and McKeever eventually published multiple volumes of his comics, which often take a humorous look at church life.

His drawing ministry continues to innovate and grow. McKeever commonly posts a drawing on his Facebook page and asks followers to crowdsource the captions. The library will steward the archives and preserve McKeever's work so future generations can enjoy and learn from his work.

Will Spivey FORCED TO REPURPOSE AND REIMAGINE, COLLEGE MINISTRY FINDS FRESH FERVOR

BY MARILYN STEWART

Canceled events, repurposed service opportunities, and thinking outside the box — in one sense, Will Spivey’s (M.Div. ’19) first year on the job as college pastor at First Baptist Church, Opelika, Alabama could be summed up with those words.

But in another sense, there’s much more to the story.

Spivey stepped into the collegiate pastor position four months before the Covid-19 pandemic shuttered workplaces and tabled events. With his church located 15 minutes from Auburn University and five from Southern Union State Community College, the shutdown hit at a crucial moment for collegiate ministry — during spring break.

Despite the setbacks the pandemic delivered, the college ministry Spivey leads is today growing with a fresh passion for missions and community.

“I get really encouraged by this generation,” Spivey said. “We don’t have too many that are ‘cultural’ in their desires. It’s more of, ‘Christ is Lord of my life … I’m committed to his lordship over my life.’”

While, in the end, God used Covid to advance His kingdom, the unexpected and unprecedented changes it brought were anything but welcomed or easy.

REPURPOSED

As the pandemic raged, the summer mission projects students had committed to around the world were canceled. Every event and activity had to be quickly repurposed and reimagined. Students who expected to be serving overseas were instead enlisted in new “service projects” such as checking in on shut-ins and delivering food to those in need.

Change came with a silver lining when a church family living on a 40-acre lot on Chadwick Lane two miles from Auburn University offered Spivey their home and property for outdoor gatherings. The sociallydistanced gatherings were popular as students were grateful to be together.

As fall came and restrictions continued, the reimagined outdoor meeting had to be reimagined, yet again. “Church on Chadwick” was born, an outdoor worship service using sound and musical equipment set up on a trailer. A worship service outside was a risk and Spivey wondered if students would come.

“Students came out of the woodwork,” Spivey said.

Soon, church members recognized the unique outreach opportunity Church on Chadwick presented and members got involved. New relationships were formed.

“And we saw God work in ways we never thought possible,” Spivey said.

REFOCUSED, BUT BETTER

As restrictions eased and meetings moved back indoors, the Church on Chadwick found a new home indoors with a renewed focus. The emphasis on reaching college students that birthed Church on Chadwick led to a multi-generational mid-week worship service that continues to build relationships and open doors.

The months of finding new ways to do ministry and outreach brought another change — an invigorated passion for missions.

“The coolest thing that’s happened is that we have grown in the right areas,” Spivey said.

Activities were reimagined and refocused once more to reflect a fresh commitment to missions and

Spring break, for college ministry, is counted on as a springboard for ministry and an accelerant “like jet fuel” for building community, Spivey said. Covid restrictions in 2020 changed all of that.

evangelism. Every other Wednesday night is dedicated to outreach through what is now 25 missional community groups, each having its own mission statement and intended target group such as internationals or freshman, and each with specific outreach activities.

A sharper focus on missions because of the reimagined activities during Covid and the close partnerships with NAMB and IMB that continue have made an impact. Spivey said 25 students are committed to following God’s call to missions.

“Covid gave us time to throw everything up on the board and evaluate everything we did,” Spivey said. “And it allowed us to rework what God has called us to do.”

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HAS SOMEONE MADE AN IMPACT in your ministry or helped you in your walk with God? Perhaps you remember studying under your favorite professor or the lifelong friendships you made with fellow students.

The Legacy Plaza brick program provides a tangible way to remember those times and honor those who have meant so much to you.

Purchase an engraved brick with your name, the names of family members, someone who helped you study at NOBTS, or pay tribute to the church that made seminary possible for you.

8” X 4” Brick - $250 ea. 8” X 8” Brick - $1,000 ea.

1940S WATKINS, JANELL (ATTENDED ‘45) 1950S ATKINSON, BARBARA (BRE ‘54) BAKER, BILL (BDIV ‘58) BAREFOOT, JOYCE (MRE ‘55) BAUMGARDNER, FRANCES (ATTENDED ‘57) BOHANNON, PAT (ATTENDED ‘56) BOND, CLAYTON (BDIV ‘52) CARLIN, GERALD (BDIV ‘58) CHAUDOIN, ROBERT (BDIV ‘59) CLARKE, POLLY (MRE ‘55) DONALDSON, BUCK (BDIV ‘57) DYSON, BERT (ATTENDED ‘53) ESTES, PAUL (BDIV ‘58) FLEMING, WILLIAM (BDIV ‘59) FOOD, RICHARD (BDIV ‘55) FOUNTAIN, WOODY (ATTENDED ‘54) GROSE, DAYLE (BSM ‘54, MSM ‘55) HAMRICK, DELLA (BRE ‘54) HARDIN, R.N. (ATTENDED ‘52) HEARD, BILL (ATTENDED ‘58) HOLCOMB, DANIEL (BDIV ‘59) KITE, JOE (BDIV ‘56, DMIN ‘84) KUMAR, PRASANTH (ATTENDED ‘56) LAWLESS, TERRELL (MRE ‘56) LINDAU, BURTON (ATTENDED ‘54) LORD, PETER (BDIV ‘57) MASON, BOB (MRE ‘58) MCCARTY, DORAN (ATTENDED ‘53) MCCARTY, PHILLIPS (BDIV ‘58, MRE ‘62, EDD ‘66) MCLARTY, MANCIL (MDIV ‘52) MOAK, ROBERTA (ATTENDED ‘50) NAIL, BERNARD (BDIV ‘59) ROBERTSON, ALINE (BRE ‘59) SHERROD, JOSEPH (BDIV ‘59) SMITH, DEWEY (ATTENDED ‘58) SPEARS, RAY (BDIV ‘58) SPENCE, BERT (ATTENDED ‘55) STEWARD, GEORGE (BDIV ‘59) STEWART, BOB (BDIV ‘54) TIDWELL, CHARLES (MRE ‘55) TIMBERLAKE, ROY (BDIV ‘57) TURNER, DONALD (MDIV ‘59) WHALEY, WILMA (MRE ‘50) WILLIAMS, GAYNELLE (BRE ‘55) WILLIAMS, DOROTHY (ATTENDED ‘57) 1960S ANTHONY, DELMUS (BDIV ‘61) BENNETT, PETE (ATTENDED ‘68) BLACKMON, ANNE (MRE ‘61) BOOTH, BILLY (ATTENDED ‘69) BOWICK, DON (THM ‘69) BROOKS, HOWARD (ATTENDED ‘67) BROWN, LLOYD (MRE ‘60) BRYANT, HOLLIS (MRE ‘63) BURCH, WARD (BDIV ‘62) COPPEDGE, DONALD (BDIV ‘61) COSSEY, CALARENCE (BDIV ‘61) CRANE, VIVIAN (ATTENDED ‘69) CRUTCHFIELD, ALBIN (MCM ‘68) CURRY, JERRY (BDIV ‘67) DALLALIO, JOHN (BDIV ‘60) DAYRINGER, JANET (ATTENDED ‘63) ESKEW, HARRY (MSM ‘60) FAIRCLOTH, RAYFORD (THM ‘69) FISHER, CAROLYN (ATTENDED ‘67) FOLLIS, JACK (MRE ‘67, THM ‘67, EDD ‘71) FRANKLIN, BOBBY (ATTENDED ‘60) FRASER, HOLLIS (DPRE ‘64, DPCM ‘65) HAIRE, JOEL (BDIV ‘60) HANBERRY, JACK (BDIV ‘62) HAYES, CHARLES (MCM ‘61) HIPP, JIMMY (BDIV ‘63) HOGAN, LELAND (MRE ‘68) INMAN, GARY (ATTENDED ‘66) JOHNSON, ANDREW (BDIV ‘62) KINGSLEY, ELIZABETH (ATTENDED ‘64) LEDLOW, BOB (BDIV ‘61) LINDERMAN, WAYNE (ATTENDED ‘69) LONG, WILLIAM (ATTENDED ‘67) LOTT, STAN (BDIV ‘61, THD ‘68) LYLE, EMERSON (THM ‘69) MARTINDALE, VERNON (MRE ‘67) MASSEY, PAUL (ATTENDED ‘62) MATHIS, GAIL (DPCM ‘62) MATHIS, GLYNN (BDIV ‘64, THM ‘66, THD ‘69) MAY, WILLIAM (BDIV ‘67, THMH ‘68, DMIN ‘73) MEADOWS, ANNIE (MRE ‘63) MELIAN, MIRIAM (DPRE ‘69) MITCHELL, SONNY (BDIV ‘62) PEARCE, BOB (THM ‘67, DMIN ‘76) POFF, CHESTER (BDIV ‘65) PRIDDY, DAVID (MRE ‘69) PYFROM, RANDALL (BDIV ‘60) READ, JOHN (MRE ‘63) REDMON, DON (BDIV ‘62) RICHARDS, ROGER (BRE ‘60) ROGERS, ROBERT (BDIV ‘60) SAILORS, RANELL (ATTENDED ‘69) STEWART, DON (BDIV ‘60, THD ‘65) SWANN, HOYT (BDIV ‘64) TEDDER, EMERSON (MRE ‘65) WALTERS, MILFORD (THM ‘68) WELLS, ERNEST (ATTENDED ‘63) WHITMORE, WARREN (BDIV ‘61) WOLFANGLE, GEORGE (ATTENDED ‘64) WOODALL, JOHN (BDIV ‘65) WOODFORD, PAUL (BDIV ‘65) WYRICK, BILL (ATTENDED ‘65) 1970S BAKER, BILL (ATTENDED ‘73) BEASLEY, JAMES (MRE ‘73) BRIDGES, RAY (MRE ‘73) CARTER, RICK (MCM ‘74) CLOUGH, JOHN (ATTENDED ‘78) COLWELL, RICHARD (ADPM ‘79) DAVIS, CAROL (MRE ‘74) DISON, DALE (ATTENDED ‘76) DOUGLAS, ANDREW (ATTENDED ‘76) EDWARDS, JAMES (DPPM ‘73) ENFINGER, RILEY (MDIV ‘76) ENTREKIN, GERALD (THMH ‘73) GROWDEN, JAMES (DPPM ‘73) HAILE, GEORGE (DMIN ‘75) HARPER, KATHRYN (MCM ‘79) HESTER, MARIE (ATTENDED ‘78) HIGHTOWER, JIM (EDD ‘79) JOHNSON, LOWELL (MDIV ‘77) LANIER, JOHN (MDIV ‘75) LOGES, NORMAN (MDIV ‘78) LOWRY, CHARLES (MRE ‘79) MONTGOMERY, VIRGINIA (ATTENDED ‘72) PIKE, HARRISON (DMIN ‘77) RAY, AARON (MDIV ‘77) RHINEHART, GLYNN (ATTENDED ‘76) ROBINSON, BOBBY (THM ‘71) STEPHENS, MIKE (MDIV ‘75) THOMAS, PHEROBA (EDD ‘75) THROWER, FRANCES (ATTENDED ‘74) WAHKING, HAROLD (DMIN ‘75) WETHERINGTON, DOYLE (DMIN ‘75) WHITFIELD, BILL (DMIN ‘78) WRIGHT, JAMES (MRE ‘78, MDIV ‘94) 1980S ALEWINE, ROGER (MRE ‘86) BAKER, MICHAEL (ATTENDED ‘89) BREWER, MARTHA (ATTENDED ‘86) CONSTABLE, MARI (MRE ‘88) CORN, CHARLES (ADPM ‘87) DAVIS, CHARLES (ATTENDED ‘81) DEAR, BUTCH (MRE ‘89) DEUEL, JAMES (DMIN ‘83) EDWARDS, JIM (ADPM ‘82) EFFERSON, JIM (MRE ‘83) GORDON, KEITH (MDIV ‘81, DMIN ‘86) HAGGARD, LARRY (MRE ‘89) HARRELL, CARL (MDIV ‘85) HILL, BILL (THD ‘88) HOY, DON (MDIV ‘85) JONES, LARKIN (ATTENDED ‘88) JONES, MICKEY (MDIV ‘86) KLUTTS, DANNY (ATTENDED ‘87) LEWIS, MICHAEL (MDIV ‘85) LOTT, MICHAEL (MCM ‘89) MAPLES, CHARLES (ADPM ‘83) MARTIN, HERBERT (ATTENDED ‘85) MCDOWELL, BILL (ADPM ‘82) MCLAIN, JAMES (MDIV ‘86) MCMILLAN, GIBBIE (MDIV ‘80) PACKARD, HYLAND (ATTENDED ‘87) PATTY, BOB (MDIV ‘80) RAGAN, ANDREW (ADPM ‘83) REHBERG, PALMER (MRE ‘81) SHEEHAN, DAVID (ATTENDED ‘89) SNEED, DAVID (ADPM ‘84, MDIV ‘16) STEVENSON, BILL (MDIV ‘85) STREET, JOHN (ADPM ‘82) SWICEGOOD, CARLTON (ADPM ‘81) TAYLOR, PATRICIA (MDIV ‘89)

DAN HOLCOMB

Holcomb, whose knowledge and indepth class material earned him the nickname “Smoke’em Holcomb,” is remembered by colleagues and students as a kind and gentle man with a pastor’s heart.

A beloved professor whose tenure at NOBTS spanned 40 years, Holcomb was known as a scholar and a “Christian statesman” whose prayers before class moved students to remark that it was like “sitting at the feet of Oswald Chambers.” An ordained Baptist minister, Holcomb began preaching at age 15.

Holcomb held the John T. Westbrook Chair of Church History and served many years as the chair of the Theological and Historical Studies Division. His tenure was marked with sabbaticals at the University of Oxford, U.K., and at Yale and Vanderbilt Universities. Holcomb was regarded by students as a diligent teacher who expected much from his students but whose deep and abiding faith touched all.

TEAGUE, LUCKY (MDIV ‘83) WILLIAMSON, BOBBY (MDIV ‘85) WINDHAM, DONALD (ATTENDED ‘87) WORTHY, CHARLES (ATTENDED ‘84) 1990S BUTLER, DEBBIE (MACE ‘93) COLE, JERRY (MDIV ‘95) DOUGLAS, GREG (MDIV ‘98, DMIN ‘08) FARNHAM, ALICIA (MACE ‘96) HUFF, SANDRA (MACE ‘97) HUGHES, STAN (MDIV ‘95) HUMPHRIES, DOUG (ATTENDED ‘92) LEE, ROY (ATTENDED ‘91) LEWELLYN, GEORGE (MDIV ‘95, PHD ‘02)

WILLIAM L. HOOPER

Hopper’s tenure as a church music ministries faculty member, 196274, included eight years as dean/ division chair. A noted composer, Hopper’s instrumental and choral compositions were published by Concordia Press, Broadman Press, Word Music and Carl Fischer Music.

DAVID SNEED

David Sneed (D.Min. student) was known for his humble spirit and vibrant heart for the Lord despite life-long disabilities and health issues. Sneed preached and led Bible studies weekly in the homeless community, visited weekly for his church, and prayed daily by name for about 2,000 people. Sneed’s farreaching impact touched thousands of lives as he pursued his education despite obstacles, and shared his faith-story knowing that God would use his disabilities to open doors and warm hearts to the gospel.

LYONS, MARSHEILAH (MACE ‘97) NORMAN, KENNETH (ATTENDED ‘98) ONDERCHAIN, ALLAN (ATTENDED ‘92) PACE, JAMES (ATTENDED ‘95) PITTS, WESLEY (DMIN ‘91) POPE, RANDOLPH (ATTENDED ‘98) PRICE, RALPH (MCM ‘90) ROWLAND, WADE (ATTENDED ‘70) SHELL, MIKE (ATTENDED ‘92) STONE, JOE (ATTENDED ‘94) STULTS, BOBBY (BA ‘97, MDIV ‘00, DMIN ‘15) VOWELL, JENNY (BGS ‘96) WOLO, ELAINE (ATTENDED ‘98)

DON STEWART

For a quarter of a century, Stewart served in multiple capacities at NOBTS until his retirement in July 2003. Stewart returned to NOBTS, his alma mater, in 1978 to serve as the executive vice president under Landrum P. Leavell II. Later he would lead the seminary’s doctor of ministry program and the extension center system. Stewart served as professor of New Testament and Greek throughout his tenure at NOBTS and from 1997 to 2003, he returned to the classroom in a fulltime capacity.

The professor known for bringing a pastoral approach to the study of New Testament and Greek was elected as professor emeritus shortly after his retirement. For Stewart, ministry was never confined to the classroom, often giving pastoral encouragement to the staff members and students he met in the halls. He continued to encourage the seminary community long after his retirement during his frequent trips to campus.

2000S CARSON, BRENDA (CCM ‘06) DUNCAN, KEITH (MDIV ‘00) LAWSON, JASON (MDIVCE ‘03) MCKENZIE, BETTY (BACM ‘06) MCMELLER, ROSEVELT (ATTENDED ‘09) WERLINE, TERRY (BA ‘2000, MDIV ‘05) WRIGHT, TRAVIS (MDIVCE ‘02, THM ‘06, PHD ‘08) 2010S BANISTER, VELVIE (ATTENDED ‘15) O’CONNOR, KELLEY (CBT ‘11) SPRING, KYLE (ACM ‘16, BACM ‘16) 2020S SANSON, LUTHER (MDIV ‘21)

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Leavell College students worship together at Collective, the house system worship night.

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