OUR MISSION: EDUCATING LEADERS TO SERVE CHRIST , HIS CHURCH , AND HIS WORLD THROUGH BIBLICAL THOUGHT AND LIFE.
2023 PRESIDENT’S REPORT
The 2022–23 fiscal year has been one of the most difficult financial years in Welch College’s history because of the ongoing effects of the COVID pandemic on the college’s enrollment and giving. Yet in the midst of these difficulties, the Lord has been with us and has blessed us beyond measure: our core mission of spiritual and ministry formation has prospered, our basic quantitative measures have greatly improved from our COVID lows, and our qualitative measures of higher education excellence continue to break records.
MISSION-DRIVEN
In the midst of the hurdles we face, we are motivated by our mission to provide a faithful Christian higher education experience in an authentically Free Will Baptist context. This is so needed in our day of both secularization and “post-denominationalism.” Our students are responding.
This past year we saw signs of spiritual renewal on our campus, with more and more students coming to faculty and staff offices for prayer and spiritual guidance. In our Forum23 conference as well as in chapel, Wednesday evening worship services led by campus pastor Chris
Talbot, student-led revival meetings and chapel services, and our campus-wide Day of Prayer, we have been emphasizing the student body theme of 2 Peter 1:3–11. We have also been stressing the spiritual disciplines, humility, and repentance.
We emphasize the sufficiency of Scripture at Welch and the fact that God has given us everything necessary for life and godliness (2 Peter 1:3). This is for our spiritual lives as well as our lives together in the church and in witness and mission. In Scripture, God gives us what we need as He reveals Himself and His vision for us, the church, and the world. Twenty-first-century students can respond to this biblical vision just as much as students in the past—and they are!
For example, Jackson Watts, a member of the Class of 2023 from Pleasant View, Tennessee, said the following in a speech he gave at Commencement:
“I’ve come to see the importance of the ordinary means of grace we hear about so often here—the reading, singing, praying, preaching, and seeing (through the ordinances) of the Word—and why we hear about them so often. Because they are those things God has revealed to us in the only sufficient rule for our faith and practice,
the Scriptures. I’ve come to realize that the faculty and staff of Welch College are here because they have a passion for teaching our generation about how to live in this world for Christ. I haven’t gained mere head knowledge; my spiritual life has been directly impacted by the ministry of those who serve this institution.”
Jackson, one of our B.A.-to-M.Div. students who is currently pastoring an area church, is only one of scores of students whose lives are being transformed at Welch. This transformation results from the college’s emphasis on the teaching of Holy Scripture and its impact on our lives, the lives of other believers, and the lives of those whom the Spirit is calling to Himself who are “aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the world” (Ephesians 2:12).
This Scripture-shaped mission is what Welch is all about. It remains vibrantly at the center of our identity and our curriculum. And this is true whether a student is studying to be a pastor or missionary or whether he or she is preparing to be a teacher, nurse, dentist, businessperson, lawyer, counselor—or any other profession represented by the more than fifty programs of study we offer.
ENROLLMENT
This past year was the first year in an uphill climb out of COVID. The 2020–21 and 2021–22 fiscal years were COVID years, with roughly a 25% annual decrease in enrollment and gifts, which provide almost all of the college’s financial support. The challenge for small, academically open enrollment colleges is that we have to build back our enrollment one fall semester at a time.
The major plank of our recovery will be a building back to preCOVID enrollment numbers. This past year we began that enrollment rebound with a strong freshman class and a 15% increase in enrollment over the previous fall.
In the midst of these hurdles we face, we are motivated by our mission to provide a faithful Christian higher education experience in an authentically Free Will Baptist context.
This past year was our first build-back year. This coming year will be our second build-back year. By the fall of 2025, after both our low COVID freshman classes have cycled out, we project Welch will be completely back to pre-pandemic numbers. We predict that that year we will surpass the 36-year-record enrollment of 489 in the 2019–20 academic year.
IMPROVING QUALITY
This past year, Welch continued to increase its excellence in tangible ways in almost every measurable area. The Welch brand is still very new in terms of higher education branding and positioning. More importantly, every year we are becoming more competitive for students who desire an intentional Christian education in a Free Will Baptist setting that is regionally accredited and highly ranked. The new, beautiful, classic campus we have, compared with most small Christian college campuses, gives us a sizable competitive edge over most four-year private colleges.
Welch retains its high rankings in U.S. News and World Report’s Best Colleges. Out of the 106 colleges in the Regional Colleges—South category, Welch ranked 3rd highest in graduation rate, 6th highest in average ACT/SAT scores, and 7th highest in alumni giving. Our alumni giving rate has always been extremely high for a non-elite institution. But in other areas we have increased our competitiveness drastically.
For example, twelve years ago, when we were first numerically ranked in the first tier by U.S. News, we ranked 27th highest in average ACT/SAT scores; we have risen to 6th. That year, we were ranked 18th in graduation rate; we have risen to 3rd. These sorts of increases are remarkable among institutions with a low resource base like Welch.
We also remain competitive in our recruitment of children of alumni. This past year our percentage of students who are children of alumni was 2½ times the average enrollment of children of alumni in most Christian colleges. In the higher education industry, high alumni giving rates and rates of attendance of children of alumni are measures of alumni satisfaction, and our rates in these alumni areas are unusually high.
It is remarkable that our dedicated faculty and staff always use periods of budgetary challenge to continue improving the quality and excellence of a Welch education in tangible ways. I owe them a debt of gratitude.
ACADEMICS
Academic excellence continues to improve at Welch. Our percentage of earned doctorates on the faculty remains high and is improving every year as younger faculty earn their doctorates. That rate is currently 71%. Student evaluations of classroom teaching continue to improve, with students giving their professors high marks for combining classroom excellence with spiritual mentoring. Faculty performance is the most direct indicator of college student retention. And our retention is up again this year, nearing the 80% mark,
which is unheard of at schools like Welch that have an academically open enrollment policy, which tend to be closer to 50%, as we used to be.
Our new M.Div. program, under the able leadership of Dr. Matthew McAffee, Provost of Welch College and Dean of Welch Divinity School, is growing, and we are so impressed with the students enrolled in our B.A.-to-M.Div. program. Our denominational, donor, and alumni constituency appreciate the combination of excellence, forward-movement, and focus on ministry training represented by this degree, which is also increasing Welch’s reputation in the academic community.
The concern I shared with you a few years ago regarding the decrease in ministerial students is behind us. Our ministerial enrollment has continued to grow and was the only segment of our enrollment that continually
grew during the pandemic. Ministry enrollment has increased by 24% over these past four years! We are continuing to work to bring more young ministers to Welch to lessen the shortage of pastors in our denomination.
However, there is a cost to this, as I will discuss more below: the additional scholarships added to our budget. But, thanks be to God, that investment, though costly, is paying dividends in young men who are now able to attend Welch rather than going to free or nearly free community colleges.
This past year we initiated a new degree program, the M.A. in Humanities. This degree is intended to give students who want to go to graduate school in fields such as English, history, philosophy, psychology, and politics a strong Christian worldview foundation in these fields. The increasing sway of secular progressivism
This Scripture-shaped mission is what Welch is all about. It remains vibrantly at the center of our identity and our curriculum. And this is true whether a student is studying to be a pastor or missionary or whether he or she is preparing to be a teacher, nurse, dentist, businessperson, lawyer, counselor—or any other profession represented by the more than fifty programs of study we offer.
demands that we educate more individuals who can articulate a Christian worldview in the public square, and this M.A. will help us equip students for this calling.
Matthew Bracey is leading this program, and we have also hired a leading Christian scholar in the field of humanities as a part-time instructor who is teaching anchor courses in the program. His name is Tyler Flatt, and he holds a Ph.D. in Classics and Latin from Harvard University and teaches liberal arts and great books at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Please pray for this new degree program.
FINANCES
Fulfilling our mission requires financial resources. And with the downturn in income brought on by COVID as well as rising prices of almost everything it takes to run a college, finances are very tight.
In recent months dozens of colleges have closed. I have looked at the audits of several of these colleges, and what is very evident is that most of them were in a very poor financial condition before COVID hit, and the pandemic was the straw that broke the camel’s back.
For Welch, it was the opposite scenario. In the few years before COVID we were experiencing enrollment growth. We raised more funds than we had ever raised in the history of the institution, owing to relocation and construction and the fact that we sold the campus and built a new campus. Rather than losing several million dollars in net assets, we tripled our net assets and had $13 million in income surpluses. So the big picture looks very good and very promising. It is the short-term financial picture that is daunting. Let me explain.
Initially, we had budgeted nearly a $500,000 deficit for the 2022–23 fiscal year, following two COVID years of budgeted deficits of around $750,000 each year. Over those two previous years, we beat our budget projections, experiencing a cumulative increase in net assets of about $1.4 million. However, this past fiscal year, because of some very large gifts that we had budgeted for but did not materialize—one of which was received after the end of the fiscal year and another of which we still expect—we had a decrease in net assets of around $1.1 million.
In addition to that, we took a loss “on paper” for a parcel of land that we booked at appraised value last year but which we sold for nearly $1 million below appraised value this year. This brings our decrease on the books for the 2022–2023 fiscal year to a little over $2 million. This real estate transaction represents a positive financial opportunity for Welch. The college has self-financed the property and is leasing it back from the buyers, who plan to work with real estate professionals
to develop the land in a way that will greatly benefit the college’s cash picture in the future.
Since the onset of COVID, we have budgeted for cumulative deficits of approximately $2 million (about $750,000 each in the 2020–21 and 2021–22 fiscal years and about $500,000 this past year). However, our actual cumulative deficit from May 2020 to May 2023 has totaled less than a third of that—only $675,234. Still, because of this year’s large deficit, and in order to meet our budgeted deficit of $190,000 next year, we are engaging in the heaviest budget cuts since the fallout from the Recession after 2008. While difficult, this is necessary to shore up the college’s finances as we complete our postCOVID recovery over the next two years. We have been cutting expenses since the onset of the pandemic—not just recently—and that process continues even more intensely this year.
Monetary giving to Welch has increased from last year to this year, but it is still not enough to constitute a full recovery of pre-COVID gift income. We have initiated a new capital campaign, Light the Future, to complete the funding of the new campus and to raise funds for student scholarships and a needed new building on campus. We are also in the midst of a special drive this summer to raise funds for scholarships for needy students and ministerial students. Please pray for and give to these initiatives.
However, the big picture gives us confidence for the future. This picture includes our strong equity position (having gone from $7 million in net worth before relocation to more than $22 million now), the ability to recruit students to a beautiful new campus, the post-COVID recovery and growth trend we have seen in both enrollment and gifts this past year, and the strong freshman class we are anticipating this fall.
We need the support of our denomination and alumni more than ever as we weather this storm. Please pray for and support the Light the Future campaign and our summer initiative to raise money for student scholarships.
RECOVERY ONE STEP AT A TIME
Sometimes someone who has seen other nonprofits bounce back after the pandemic asks, “Why hasn’t the college recovered following COVID? It’s been over for two years.” However, colleges like ours depend on the enrollment of freshman classes, one fall semester at a time. And most families make their decision on where their high school senior will attend college eight to twelve months before fall enrollment.
With this timeline, Fall 2020 and 2021 entering classes (mostly freshmen, a few transfers) were drastically down
at Welch. In our business, it is “one fall freshman class at a time.” And, like other SACS-accredited colleges that rely mostly on dorm students from a distance for their revenue, it is going to take a full cycle of new, larger freshman classes to overcome these two classes that were extremely low owing to COVID. So, while Fall 2022 enrollment was up by around 15%, gross tuition revenues were still almost $750,000 less than they were before the pandemic.
Think of Welch as a farm with one primary crop produced each year. Preparation and planning for one crop are continuous, and so is the cost of production. Expenses for equipment, fuel, seed, fertilizers, labor, and storage are in a steady state of motion. But you only get one chance—only one harvest per year. You pray and plan for a great harvest. However, as it is with farming, anything can happen. When the crop goes through a drought, and next year another drought, your production is drastically reduced, as your income is. But your expenses are the same or higher.
Though “one fall freshman class at a time” is the main answer, there are a few other answers to the question “COVID’s been over for a while; why’s the recovery taking so long?” The first one is that capital campaign fundraising languished during the COVID years, and we need these funds to pay our debt on the new campus. During the first COVID year (most of 2020 and the first part of 2021), donors did not want us to visit them because of the pandemic. During the second year of the pandemic, our largely middle-income donor base, because of economic uncertainties, was leery of making new pledges or was having trouble fulfilling existing pledges. We are coming out of this—we received more capital campaign gifts this past year than in the two COVID years combined. But it is still not enough to get us back to pre-pandemic norms.
Furthermore, during the period immediately following COVID, inflation has driven up the cost of most of the things we spend our money on—food, maintenance, utilities, insurance, fuel, travel, and on the list could go. In just the last year, we have spent $350,000 more on these fixed costs than we did the year before.
Lastly, just before COVID, our Board voted unanimously to help alleviate our denomination’s pastoral shortage by awarding a substantial scholarship to every Free Will Baptist ministerial student. We believed this was
important, because so many ministerial students go to free or nearly free community colleges with the intention of transferring to Welch later because they cannot afford all four years. Large numbers of these students never go through with their intentions to become Free Will Baptist ministers.
So this past year, our scholarships were up by about $200,000 from the year before. Was this a good decision? We believe it was. This strategic decision came at a cost. Yet ministry enrollment was the only area of enrollment that went up both years during the pandemic. Equipping young ministers is our top priority.
THANK YOU
I want to say thank you for your support of Welch College and its mission. Thank you for giving sacrificially to keep this vital ministry strong for the future. Thank you for sending us students for a life-changing higher education experience that is rooted deeply in biblical teaching and living. And thank you for your continued prayers for this Christian community of faith and learning. Your prayers, gifts, and referrals of students make an immediate impact that results in an eternal difference. We cannot do what we do without you.
In Christ, J. Matthew Pinson PresidentYour prayers, gifts, and encouragement of students to attend Welch make an immediate impact that results in an eternal difference.
REGIONALLY & NATIONALLY ACCREDITED TO OFFER ASSOCIATE’S, BACHELOR’S, & MASTER’S DEGREES
RANKED
& WORLD REPORT U.S. News TOP 20
BEST REGIONAL COLLEGES—SOUTH
#3 IN GRADUATION RATE
#6 IN AVERAGE ACT/SAT SCORE
#7 IN ALUMNI SUPPORT
PROGRAMS OF STUDY 50
REGISTRATION REPORT
*Multiple students pursuing multiple degrees.
**Pursuing Pastoral, Youth and Family, and General Christian Ministries.
***Includes all undergraduate and graduate teacher education students, including those pursuing secondary education, who are also counted in their respective programs of study.
The student body represents 22 states, 1 U.S. territory, and 7 other countries (Bulgaria, Canada, China, Dominican Republic, Japan, Panama, and Spain).
TOP GIVING CHURCHES
Thank you for giving sacrificially to keep this vital ministry strong for the future. And thank you for your continued prayers for this Christian community of faith and learning.
AND THY
O SEND OUT THY LIGHT
TRUTH
FOUNDATION GIFTS & CORPORATE DONORS
$100,000+
Kern Family Foundation
National Christian Foundation
$10,000 - $49,999
Free Will Baptist Foundation
Howard R. Price Trust
Leah Waddell Scholarship Fund
Newberry Family Foundation, Inc.
Pioneer College Caterers, Inc.
$1,000 - $9,999
AW Healthcare Management, LLC
BAC Construction, LLC
Basketball Destinations, LLC
Dollar General First Bank
Free Will Baptist Historical Commission
Free Will Baptist International Missions
Jacksonville First WAC
North American Missions Church
Extension Loan Fund
North Carolina WAC
White & Associates Management, LLC
Wilson Bank & Trust
Women Nationally Active for Christ
Under $1,000
Amazon Smile
The Benevity Community Impact Fund
Christian Brothers Automotive
Chuck Hooper Tile
Coker, Wolfe and Associates
Gallatin Chamber of Commerce
Home Missions NAFWB
Kroger Grocery Store
L & J Trucking
Living Sent Ministries
Network for Good
Roane State Community College
Rogers Group, Inc.
YourCause, LLC
TOP GIVING ASSOCIATIONS
WELCH FUND GIFTS
DONORS
FOUNDER’S CIRCLE
$100,000+
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Eskola
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip D. Faircloth
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Inbody
Tilden E. Parks, Jr. Estate
PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE
$20,000 - $99,999
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Beasley
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Bernui
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bryan, Jr.
Mr. Zenis R. Childress
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Pittman
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Sass
Dr. Chris Snoddy Estate
June Trimble Estate
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Wieting
LEGACY CIRCLE
$10,000 - $19,999
Dr. Fay Forlines
Mr. and Mrs. Barney D. Hicks
Mr. Fred T. Keifer, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. McVay
Mr. and Mrs. J. Wayne Salyer
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Linwood Taylor
Mrs. Lissie Turnage Estate
HERITAGE CIRCLE
$5,000 - $9,999
Ms. Vicki L. Cherry
Mrs. Christine L. Daniel
Dr. and Mrs. Timothy F. Edwards
Capt. and Mrs. E. Blant Ferguson
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Frazier
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy L. Holley
Dr. and Mrs. Paul G. Ketteman
Mr. John F. Mouser Estate
Mrs. Rosemary Paske
Mr. Mike Patterson
Dr. Robert E. Picirilli
Mr. Nolan E. Purcell
Ms. Bettie Russell
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Solon
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Spickler
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton C. Waller
Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wright
EXECUTIVE CIRCLE
$2,500 - $4,999
Mrs. Janie Aldridge
Rev. and Mrs. Terry Beck
Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Belesky
Congressman Diane and Dr. David Black
Ms. Janice M. Caudill
Chaplain and Mrs. Robert P. Cooper
Mr. Jim Czerwinski
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Douglas
Rev. and Mrs. William W. Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin S. Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Ferrell
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gorrell
Mr. Jules Hancart
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Harvey
Dr. Irvin Hyman Estate
Col. and Mrs. Mark Johnson
Chaplain and Mrs. Tracy Kerr
Mr. and Mrs. Jason King
Mr. and Mrs. James Maute
Mr. James and Dr. Bethany McBride
Rev. and Mrs. Wayne Miracle
Drs. Greg and Etta Patterson
Dr. and Mrs. J. Matthew Pinson
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Pinson
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Richardson
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Southerland
Rev. and Mrs. David Williford
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Zubor
LEADERSHIP CIRCLE
$1,000 - $2,499
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Allen
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Ashby
Rev. and Mrs. Billie Charles Barlow
Mr. Edwin L. Beem
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell M. Beverly
Miss Debra J. Broyles
Mr. and Mrs. Preston F. Bryan
Ms. Gale Cales
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Carr
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Carter
Miss Mary V. Carter
Mr. T. Ross Clark
Rev. and Mrs. Russell Clouse
Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Crabtree
Dr. Stan M. Culpepper
Lt. Col. and Mrs. Larence R. Cusick
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Dallman
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey D. Day, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Day
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Dean
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Edgil
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Ezell
Rev. and Mrs. Gregory R. Fawbush
Dr. Milton B. Fields
Mr. Darrell L. Fulton
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Futrell
Mrs. Lena T. Golding
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Goodfellow
Mr. and Mrs. Watson Hall
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon W. Hart
Ms. Carolyn F. Head
Mrs. Betty Hill
Rev. and Mrs. Edward Hodges, Jr.
Mrs. Rudene J. Hucks
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Hunter
Rev. and Mrs. Bobby R. Jackson
Rev. Roy S. Jensen
Ms. Lenore Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Joyce
Mr. Gerald R. Kirby
Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Lee
Dr. and Mrs. C. Thomas Malone
Mrs. Joyce Mayo
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Z. Moore
Rev. and Mrs. James C. Mullen, Jr.
Mrs. Juanita S. Nicholson
Rev. and Mrs. Jerry Nunes
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Oster
Rev. and Mrs. Tim D. Owen
Rev. and Mrs. F. Todd Parrish
Rev. and Mrs. Thurman M. Pate, Sr.
Mrs. Shannon S. Pavnick
Mr. and Mrs. George Phillips
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wayne Pleasant
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Powelka
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Price
Rev. and Mrs. James R. Puckett
Rev. and Mrs. Brad Ryan
Mr. and Mrs. Leon M. Sandifer
Mr. Walter R. Scott
Mr. Thomas L. Slamans
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Slater
Mrs. Karen M. Sparks
Mrs. Brenda Spruill
Mr. and Mrs. Greely D. Stafford
Chaplain and Mrs. Roy C. Swisher
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tart
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor E. Watts, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Williams
Dr. Melvin Worthington
Dr. and Mrs. Milton Worthington
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Yerby
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney N. Yerby
FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE
$250 - $999
Mr. and Mrs. Willie V. Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Aldridge
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Allen
Rev. and Mrs. Derek Altom
Ms. Janice Anderson
Mr. John J. Aranda
Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Armstrong
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Ashcraft
Miss Molly Barker
Mr. and Mrs. James Barnes
Mr. and Mrs. Billy W. Barr
Rev. and Mrs. Joseph W. Beckon
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Black
Mrs. LaDonna Blades
Rev. and Mrs. Ronnie Blanks
Mrs. Verla Blowe
Mr. and Mrs. Max Bolin
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney D. Bowen
Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Bowers
Hilda J. Boyd
Mr. Matt and Dr. Sarah Bracey
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Breedlove
Mr. and Mrs. Burl Brewer
Mr. and Mrs. James O. Brewer
Mrs. Patsy Brooks
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Brown
Mrs. Elaine Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Brown
Mr. Joe C. Brown
Ms. Kay F. Brown
Miss Mindy Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar J. Brumfield
Mr. John Wayne Bryan, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry N. Bryan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Bryan
Rev. and Mrs. Randall A. Bryant
Rev. and Mrs. Paul R. Bryant
Dr. and Mrs. Seldon Buck
Mr. Jerry Burden
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burroughs
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buttry
Rev. and Mrs. Timothy G. Campbell
Mrs. Betty Capps
Mrs. Gwen Carraway
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carter
Mr. Manuel Casarez
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Castile
Rev. and Mrs. Jeffrey L. Caudill
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis A. Chamberlin
Miss Doris J. Chamberlin
Mrs. Donna Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Gary F. Clark
Mrs. Elaine P. Coates
Dr. and Mrs. Jeff Cockrell
Mr. and Mrs. John Curtis Collins
Rev. and and Mrs. Chris Compton
Paul and Jody Corley
Dr. and Mrs. James Cox
Ms. Rhoda Creech
Mr. Gregory Croxton
Mrs. Marjorie June Crutcher
Mrs. Margaret Daniels
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Dawson
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Deaver
Ms. Gwen Dismuke
Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Drake
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Driggers
Mr. and Mrs. Brenton Driscoll
Mr. and Mrs. Laron L. Dye
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth P. Eagleton
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Easley
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Edington, III
Dr. and Mrs. Mike Edwards
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Waymon Fields
Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Folsom
Rep. Johnny Garrett
Mr. and Mrs. Horace G. Gaskins
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lee Gilliam
Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Gillin
Mr. and Mrs. Alan R. Gober
Rev. and Mrs. Walter E. Gragg
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Carl Gregory
Rev. and Mrs. Shiloh C. Hackett
Ms. Debra R. Haddock
Mr. Harold B. Hall
Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Hall
Mr. Thurman B. Hall, II
Miss AnnaGee C. Harris
Mr. Charles Hayes
Ms. Doris Henderson
Mrs. Judy Herring
Rev. and Mrs. Gary Hill
Rev. A. L. Hines
Rev. and Mrs. Edward L. Hodges, Jr.
Mr. Thurman Holcomb, Jr.
Ms. Carol D. Holland
Ms. Barbara Jean Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Zachary A. Howell
Ms. Charity D. Humbles
Mr. and Mrs. Brian T. Hurst
Mrs. Marian V. James
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie A. Jones
Rev. and Mrs. Jonathon S. Justice
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin M. Justice
Dr. and Mrs. James Kilgore
Mr. and Mrs.Charles Kimbrough, Sr.
Mr. Robert Kowalke
Mrs. Betty Jean Lambert
Rev. and Mrs. Earl R. Langley
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Lauthern
Mr. Kevin Lawson
Ms. Shirley Lee
Mrs. Carolyn Hasty Lemaster
Miss Allison Lewis
Rev. and Mrs. Ernie L. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy E. Lewis
Rev. and Mrs. Doug Little
Rev. Duane Littlefield
Rev. Thomas A. Lovett
Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Maness
Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Manning
Dr. and Mrs. Matthew J. McAffee
Mr. and Mrs. Roland L. McBride
Mr. Carl D. McCabe
Mr. and Mrs. John M. McCall
Mr. Bill F. McKinney
Mrs. Olena McLain
Mrs. Frances King Metcalf
Mr. Larry Miley
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Mitchell
Mrs. Sammie Montgomery
Mr. and Mrs. Hamlee H. Moon
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip T. Morgan
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Morris
Mrs. Velma Moseley
Ms. Debra Motte
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Mouser
Rev. and Mrs. Steve Nichols
Mr. John E. O'Neal
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin E. Ormerod
Mr. and Mrs. Jared A. Owen
Rev. and Mrs. Frank Owens, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Jesse F. Owens
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua R. Owens
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parrish
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Penn
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Peterson
Rev. and Mrs. Judson Phenicie
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy L. Pierce
Mr. Daniel A. Plunkett
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Pool
Rev. and Mrs. Joseph P. Postlewaite
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Rackley
Rev. and Mrs. Jerry L. Rackley
Mr. Scott Ramsey
Mr. and Mrs. Skeeter Redmon
Mr. Andrew Reid
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Richardson
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Riddle, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Rigdon
Rev. and Mrs. Nathan L. Ruble
Rev. and Mrs. Ivan L. Ryan
Mr. Darryl Scott
Rev. and Mrs. Theron B. Scott
Ms. Ramona Kaye Sessoms
Mrs. Lynn Seymour
Rev. and Mrs. David Shores
Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Simpson
Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Smith
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Stanley
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Stephens
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stephens
Mr. and Mrs. Terry L. Stephens
Dr. and Mrs. James Stevens
Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Tackett
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Talbot
Mr. and Mrs. Jim B. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Teague
Mrs. Dianne Tippett
Ms. Von Tolbert
Mr. and Mrs. Margarito Torres
Mr. and Mrs. Danny J. Trail
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Trotter
Mr. Wesley Turner
Ms. Patsy Vanhook
Mr. Stanley L. Wall
Ms. Velma Wallace
Rev. and Mrs. Fred M. Warner
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Watkins
Dr. and Mrs. W. Jackson Watts
Miss Pamela B. Westerman
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Wheeler
Mr. Phillip J. Wheeler
Mr. and Mrs. Dewayne White
Ms. Barbara Williams
Mrs. Donna Williams
Miss Marjorie L. Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Williford
Ms. Betty J. Willis
Mr. and Mrs. H. Douglas Willis
Mr. and Mrs. Joey D. Wilson
Rev. and Mrs. Eugene Workman
Mrs. Linda C. Wrightson
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
DR. WILL BEAUCHAMP
Vice Chairman
Pastor, First Free Will Baptist Church of Tampa
Seffner, Florida
MR. RUSTY CAMPBELL
Head of School, Pleasant View Christian School
Ashland City, Tennessee
REV. TIM CAMPBELL
Pastor, First Free Will Baptist Church
Walnut Ridge, Arkansas
DR. JEFF CRABTREE
Chairman
Instructor, Ohio Bible Institute
Etna, Ohio
REV. SHILOH HACKETT
Pastor, Bethlehem Free Will Baptist Church
Ashland City, Tennessee
REV. WAYNE MIRACLE
Secretary
Pastor, New Life Fellowship Free Will Baptist Church
Statesboro, Georgia
REV. BRAD RYAN
Pastor, Ina Free Will Baptist Church
Ina, Illinois
REV. THERON SCOTT
Pastor, Horse Branch Free Will Baptist Church
Turbeville, South Carolina
REV. CHRIS TRUETT
Pastor, Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
Kinston, North Carolina
A CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY OF FAITH AND LEARNING
A TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE . A FUTURE OF OPPORTUNITY.
TORCHBEARER CLUB
Mr. and Mrs. Willie V. Adams
Mrs. Janie Aldridge
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Allen
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Allen
Rev. and Mrs. Derek Altom
Alvy's Auto Electric
Ms. Janice Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Ashcraft
Rev. and Mrs. Leonard C. Ball
Miss Molly Barker
Rev. and Mrs. Joseph W. Beckon
Mr. Edwin L. Beem
Mr. and Mrs. Jason Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L Black
Mrs. LaDonna Blades
Rev. and Mrs. Ronnie Blanks
Mr. and Mrs. Max Bolin
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney D. Bowen
Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Bowers
Mr. Matt and Dr. Sarah Bracey
Mr. and Mrs. Burl Brewer
Mrs. Patsy Brooks
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Brown
Mr. Joe C. Brown
Miss Mindy Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar J. Brumfield
Mr. and Mrs. Larry N. Bryan
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Bryan
Rev. and Mrs. Paul R. Bryant
Rev. and Mrs. Randall A. Bryant
Dr. and Mrs. Seldon Buck
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burroughs
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buttry
Ms. Gale Cales
Rev. and Mrs. Timothy G. Campbell
Mrs. Betty Capps
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Carr
Mrs. Gwen Carraway
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Castile
Rev. and Mrs. Jeffrey L. Caudill
Miss Doris J. Chamberlin
Mrs. Donna Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Gary F. Clark
Mr. T. Ross Clark
Rev. and Mrs. Russell Clouse
Mrs. Elaine P. Coates
Dr. and Mrs. Jeff Cockrell
Rev. and Mrs. Chris Compton
Cove City Free Will Baptist Church (NC)
Ms. Rhoda Creech
Mr. Gregory Croxton
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Dean
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Deaver
Decatur First Free Will Baptist Master's Men
Ms. Gwen Dismuke
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Douglas
Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Drake
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Driggers
Mr. and Mrs. Laron L. Dye
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth P. Eagleton
Ebenezer Free Will Baptist Church (FL)
Dr. and Mrs. Mike Edwards
Rev. and Mrs. William W. Evans
Rev. and Mrs. Gregory R. Fawbush
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Ferrell
Dr. Milton B. Fields
Mr. and Mrs. Waymon Fields
Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Folsom
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Futrell
Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Gillin
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Goodfellow
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gorrell
Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Gregory
Rev. and Mrs. Shiloh C. Hackett
Ms. Debra R. Haddock
Mr. Harold B. Hall
Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Hall
Mr. and Mrs. Watson Hall
Mr. Jules Hancart
Miss AnnaGee C. Harris
Ms. Carolyn F. Head
Mr. and Mrs. Barney D. Hicks
Rev. and Mrs. Gary Hill
Rev. and Mrs. Edward L. Hodges, Jr.
Ms. Carol D. Holland
Mrs. Betsy Horner
Rev. and Mrs. Russell D. Houske
Ms. Barbara Jean Howard
Ms. Charity D. Humbles
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Hunter
Mr. and Mrs. Brian T. Hurst
Mrs. Marian V. James
Col. and Mrs. Mark Johnson
Rev. and Mrs. Jonathon S. Justice
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin M. Justice
Dr. and Mrs. Paul G. Ketteman
Dr. and Mrs. James Kilgore
Mr. Gerald R. Kirby
Rev. and Mrs. Earl R. Langley
Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Lee
Ms. Shirley Lee
Mrs. Carolyn Hasty Lemaster
Rev. and Mrs. Ernie L. Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy E. Lewis
Rev. and Mrs. Doug Little
Rev. Duane Littlefield
Rev. Thomas A. Lovett
Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Maness
Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Manning
Dr. and Mrs. Matthew J. McAffee
Mr. James and Dr. Bethany McBride
Mr. and Mrs. John M. McCall
Mr. Bill F. McKinney
Mrs. Olena McLain
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. McVay
Mrs. Frances King Metcalf
Rev. and Mrs. Wayne Miracle
An education at Welch College changes the lives of the students. It also changes the lives of the people they influence for years to come. Welch College students, alumni, and faculty carry the commitment to serve Christ beyond our campus by reaching people in our community, nation, and the farthest points on the globe.
Mrs. Sammie Montgomery
Mr. and Mrs. Hamlee H. Moon
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip T. Morgan
Mrs. Velma Moseley
Ms. Debra Motte
Rev. and Mrs. Steve Nichols
Mrs. Juanita S. Nicholson
Rev. and Mrs. Jerry Nunes
Mr. John E. O'Neal
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Oster
Mr. and Mrs. Jared A. Owen
Rev. and Mrs. Tim D. Owen
Rev. and Mrs. Frank Owens, Jr.
Rev. and Mrs. Jesse F. Owens
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua R. Owens
Rev. and Mrs. F. Todd Parrish
Drs. Greg and Etta Patterson
Mrs. Shannon S. Pavnick
Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Penn
Rev. and Mrs. Judson Phenicie
Dr. Robert E. Picirilli
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy L. Pierce
Miss Anna Pinson
Dr. and Mrs. J. Matthew Pinson
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Pinson
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Pool
Rev. and Mrs. Joseph P. Postlewaite
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Powelka
Mr. and Mrs. Brandon Presley
Mr. Nolan E. Purcell
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Rackley
Mr. and Mrs. Skeeter Redmon
Rev. and Mrs. Brad Ryan
Rev. and Mrs. Ivan L. Ryan
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Sass
Mr. Darryl Scott
Rev. and Mrs. Theron B. Scott
Mr. Walter R. Scott
Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Simpson
Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Smith
Mrs. Karen M. Sparks
Mrs. Brenda Spruill
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Stanley
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Stephens
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stephens
Mr. and Mrs. Terry L. Stephens
Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Tackett
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Talbot
Mr. and Mrs. Jim B. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Teague
Mrs. Dianne Tippett
Mr. and Mrs. Danny J. Trail
Ms. Patsy Vanhook
Mr. Stanley L. Wall
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Watkins
Dr. and Mrs. W. Jackson Watts
Mrs. Donna Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Williams
Rev. and Mrs. David Williford
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Williford
Ms. Betty J. Willis
Rev. and Mrs. Eugene Workman
Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Wright
Mrs. Linda C. Wrightson