Volume 25: Issue 10

Page 1

VOLU ME 25

ISSUE 10

CHAFFEY

B R E E Z E MONDAY + FEBR UAR Y 23, 2015

FEATURE

A&E

Kahn Academy Good Fortune, Tutor Extraordinaire Year of the Sheep

OPINION

Campus Preacher Provokes Debate

SPORTS

Student, Athlete and Scholar

Zealous Preacher Sparks Contention Among Students

Sebascian Bryan (left) argues with Anthony Arnold (right) over proper ways of sharing ones’ faith on Feb. 18.

Students were offended and upset when Sebastian Bryan preached in the center quad on February 19. Studetns of various faiths, beliefs, race, ethnicity and sexuality gathered in response, causing heated debates. Bryan, age 23, is the professed preacher. He associates himself with the religion of Christianity and claims to have one primary goal for his visit. “My sole purpose is to declare the goodness of the lord and to call [people] in to repent because their sins are leading them into hell,” Bryan said. “I don’t want them to know facts but to actually get to know him personally and hear his voice and walk in that.” Bryan was born in Texas but raised in Oklahoma. He claims to have heard God speak to him in his apartment while having intercourse with a woman, telling Bryan to read his Bible. “So I started doing that,” Bryan said. “And as I read it I came across versus that made me cry.”

Christian believer Eric Miler, believes the claim made by Bryan regarding people and their necessity to fear God is false. “He’s preaching the word wrong,” Miller said. “He’s bringing back the 18th century version of Christ when people were taught to fear God. Fearing God means you have a higher respect for him not an actual fear itself.” Psychology major and Christian believer Khalyah White was one of the students personally offended by Bryan’s delivery. “I was insulted by how he just came out calling us names,” White said. “There’s people with different beliefs. I get it. I respect you because you have your beliefs but you don’t force it onto people.” However Jeffery Hawks, computer science major and Christian believer, agrees with several things Bryan has stated. “I think a lot of people here are liv-

ing a double life,” Hawks said. “You can’t just honor God with your lips and have your heart somewhere else. You need to fully surrender.” Nursing major Al Williams believes that Bryan’s message was true, having read the Bible himself. “His delivery may be wrong but his message was absolutely on top of the game,” Williams said. “I don’t think anyone who is going to be told about their sin is going to like it.” Campus police officers were also present during the gathering. Being protected by the First Amendment and having properly filed his papers, Bryan was allowed to stay on campus grounds. Officers remained to keep students orderly and ensure nothing got out of hand. “It’s a freedom of speech issue,” Police Chief Darryl Seube said. “We’re here to protect everyone’s freedom, and anybody who wants to say something. Our job is to keep the peace.”

ASHLEY MARTINEZ Due to Bryan’s loud preaching, DPS students were interrupted during their tests. As a result, several students were moved to another facility where they continued their tests, while those who remained were given noise canceling headphones. Bryan was also seen preaching on campus Feb. 17 and 18 near the library as well as the center quad. He did so from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. preaching and debating aloud to students non-stop. He has traveled to different college campuses in different states. Bryan currently resides with his fiancé in Rancho Cucamonga. Whether or not he will return this week to continue his preaching is unclear as his job interferes with his availability.

JULLIAN AIDEN BRAVO @chaffeybreeze


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