âItâs easier to bring the truck to the hay than the hay to the truck.â Iâve heard more âcountry sayingsâ than I can shake a stick at, but Iâd never heard that one from my Missouri farmer father-in-law.Â
Growing up on an Iowa farm, I knew âgrinninâ like a possumâ meant happy, âmadder than a wet henâ meant unhappy, âmake a preacher cussâ meant frustrating, and âjust fell off the turnip truckâ meant not very smart. When my dad said, âDonât break your arm pattinâ yourself on the back,â I knew he meant donât get cocky. When we fixed a piece of house siding and my father-in-law said, âWell, a man riding by on a fast horse will never know the difference,â I knew he meant close enough is good enough.Â
When he said, âItâs easier to bring the truck to the hay than the hay to the truck,â he meant: work smarter, not harder. Iâd never heard that saying before, but Iâve never forgotten it.Â
As OCCâs graduate program launches this fallâa biblical education for those who already have an undergrad degreeâI need your help to âbring the truck to the hay.â More on that, but firstâŚ
Austin Williams might know a few âcountry sayings.â The 27-year-old Missouri farmer loves language. In middle school, he wanted to be an author, writing stories of dragons and knights (âcomplete with a Š symbol next to my name,â he says, smiling, âin case someone stumbled across my literary brilliance and tried to publish them under a pseudonymâ). But âlike most failed novelists,â says Austin, âI ended up teaching Englishâ to seventh graders.
Eventually he left teaching for farming and now manages 900 acres, 1,000 sheep, and 120 cattle. But as the new youth minister at his Boonville church, Austinâs real passion is ministryâcombining an authorâs word crafting, a teacherâs relational care, and a farmerâs patient work. All he needs now is biblical training, so Austin begins Ozarkâs new graduate program this fall. But he needs your help âbringing the truck to the hay.â
Tommy Don Smith has heard some âcountry sayings,â too. An Oklahoma good âol boy nicknamed âGrizzly Bear,â Tommy was a deputy sheriff and gun store owner. But God âhas been at work in my life,â says Tommy. Sensing a call to ministry, he quit as a deputy sheriff, sold his business, did a one-year residency at Sunnybrook Christian Church in Stillwater, and now pastors the Rockinâ M Cowboy Church. He enrolled in Ozarkâs new graduate program âto grow my biblical knowledge and pastoral skills,â but like Austin, he needs your help.
How can you âbring the truck to the hayâ for Tommy and Austin? Keep reading to find outâŚ
Weâve been encouraged by the response to OCCâs graduate program launch this fallâover 150 have already applied! Most live far from Joplin and have families and jobs, so the online format fits them perfectlyâa quality biblical education without having to relocate. Itâs for people likeâŚ
- Matthew Pannell in North Carolina, a microbiologist and dad to 8-year-old triplet boys! He loves teaching at his church, so his minister challenged him to study Scripture deeper.
- Debbie Mitchell in New Mexico, just retired from a CPA firm. She wants to grow her Christian leadership as she heads her churchâs missions team.
- Brandon Michel, a 26-year-old police officer near St. Louis. With the encouragement of one of his home church preachers, he wants to enter full-time ministry.
- Becky Brass, wife, mom, and staff member at Southland Christian Church in Lexington, Kentucky. She has always wanted a formal biblical education to undergird her ministry.
Hereâs the problem: We canât wait to teach these new graduate students, but as online learners, they wonât have access to Ozarkâs library. When researching assignments, on-campus students can walk into the Seth Wilson Library, pull books or journals off the shelf, and dig in. But not online students.
How will Austin and Tommy and Debbie and Brandon get that kind of learning experience? They canât drive to Joplin every time they write a paper. (Gas prices are enough to âmake a preacher cuss.â) That would be working harder, not smarterâlike lugging heavy hay bales a hundred yards to a waiting truck. A wise farmer uses technology and drives the truck to the bales.
How can we âbring the truck to the hayâ for our graduate students? We use technology to take the library to them!
A subscription service called Perlego provides an online digital library of 800,000 booksâincluding 65,000 biblical and theological texts. Students like Matthew or Becky can access those books without leaving home, dig into Godâs truth, take digital notes in the books, and keep those notes when they graduate.
Another subscription service called JStor provides journal and periodical articlesâanother valuable learning resourceâdigitally so students anywhere can âpull them off the shelfâ as they research and study Scripture.
To provide this digital library for our online graduate (and online undergraduate) students, the cost is $55,000. You didnât âjust fall off the turnip truck,â so you already know what Iâm going to ask: would you consider a generous gift to provide these digital learning resources for these online students?
This fall, âLord willinâ and the crick donât rise,â our grad program will launch, and your gift will prepare a whole new batch of kingdom leadersâmany we might not otherwise get to train. Those leaders will reach many with the gospel, which means your gift is fulfilling the Great Commission.
So, thank you for considering a gift to provide digital resources for our faraway students.
My father-in-law is in glory now, but as an early adopter of farm technology, heâd be âgrinninâ like a possumâ that weâre âbringing the truck to the hay.â And I think, just maybe, the Lord is too.Â
Yours in Christ,
Matt Proctor
President
P.S. Your gift would have me âhappier than a tick on a fat dog.â (If you didnât grow up in the country: instead of Wikipedia, you can find such sayings on Hickapedia.com.) Learn more about Ozarkâs graduate program at occ.edu/masters.Â