4Jhe Daily Tar HeelTuesday, October 30, 1 990 Student churchgoers self-motivated to rise earlv SnnrW mnrninos By MARA LEE Staff Writer 'God said to attend church pretty explicitly, and when I look at the reasons why I go to church, I can see why it's good," Cord Hamrick said. Helping Yourself While Helping Others Is Always A Treat! Earn a $5 bonus on your first donation with this ad Call Today 942-0251 Hours: Closed Mon. expires 110390 T & Th, 1 0-6, W & F, 1 0-4, Sat 9-3 nS SERA-TEC BIOLCGICALS ' - if- v vv 1 1 i M aw tr. jm mm m 109 V2 E. FRANKUN ST. (above RiteAid) 942-0251 1 Building Positive Media Relationships - The North Carolina Press Association is offering a one-day profes sional development workshop for professional public relations prac titioners. The goals are to sharpen skills, improve understanding and create a better working relationship between two closely allied groups. Thursday, November 8 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Marriott Crabtree Valley Raleigh. NC Sessions include a panel discussion featuring leading editors from across the state offering practical advice on what works and what editors would like to see more of in dealings with PR people; writing news releases; small group critiques on either writing or design. The topic of responding to the press in a time of crisis also will be covered. For more information on registration or the workshop, contact: North Carolina Press Association 4101 Lake Boone Trail. Suite 201 Raleigh. NC 27607 1 Hamrick, a sophomore music major from Marietta, Ga., is one of many college students who wake up early Sunday morning to attend church. Though rarer than the sleep-in student, churchgoers have representation on campus. These regulars have differing faiths, backgrounds and motivations. Some regular attendees, like sopho more history major Angela Crisp, con sider themselves only moderately reli gious. Crisp, a United Methodist from. Gastonia, said religion wasn't a daily concern for her. She explained she wasn't certain what dogma her church holds, saying, "I'm not typical of most Methodist youth, or maybe I am, and that 's why the United Methodist church is losing members. "I'm kind of glad that I don't depend on the church to tell me what I believe and when to believe it." In contrast, David Lanning, a junior Frenchpre-med major from Raleigh, said, "I consider myself to be really spiritual. Basically everything I believe comes from thought formulated on scripture, not personal opinion. With out proof, belief is nothing." Lanning said he was a Christian with no particular denomination, though his evangelical church here de-emphasized details of theology and ritual and un- KG A IP fsl Presents LIVE MUSIC and $ 1 .00 DRAUGHT PINTS Every Tuesday and Thursday evening I 1 Late night menu Served until 1:00 am nightly r University Square Lower Level 143 W. Franklin St. Chapel Hill 929-1551 derlined the necessity of taking Christ as a personal savior. "Man does not reach salvation through good works but through belief in Jesus Christ as the crucified son of God," Lanning said. "The relationship between man and the Trinity sets Christianity apart as the one true faith." However, spirituality does not nec essarily equal certainty. Ross Cooper, a junior religious studies major from Boone, said, "I'm going through a transitional period of formulating what I think is my essential religious aware ness. I've always been interested in religious issues. "Being a religious studies major re ally makes you come face to face with how much you accept doctrine. Any belief worth holding is worth being challenged. "You may not intellectually, histori cally believe in the virgin birth, but still be able to get symbolic meaning from that," Cooper said. "Transcendent truth is far more important than the literal truth." Although Cooper hasn't gone to church in the last month, he most re cently attended an Eastern Orthodox church. He said its tenets included a belief that one can appeal to saints as intermediaries because the bond is not broken by death. "Eastern Orthodoxy is not legalistic. It's a mystery," he said. Cooper said they didn't stress doc trines of original sin, a personal savior or a literal devil. "There's no 'my own personal phone line to God.'" Despite their differences in doctrinal and personal beliefs, churchgoers tended Lanning said, "I have gone to church to echo the same reasons for attendance, regularly since I was three years old. Crisp, who only this year began at- and that didn't change when I came tending a local United Methodist church, here. Up until two or three years ago I stressed its liberality compared to her went because I really felt I should home church. "The sermons are very positive how the Scripture can apply to my life." Crisp finds church a break in mate rial routine. "It's a time where I have to stop and think a time to slow down," she said. Hamrick agreed that his time in church was renewing, but also under lined the sense of community. Hamrick, a Christian with no particular denomi now it's desire. Cooper is a major exception. Raised liberally Protestant, he went to church sporadically until high school, when he became a Catholic. He attended regu larly as a Catholic, and then later as a member of the Eastern Orthodox church. "My mother is religious, but not in a strict dogmatic kind of way. My father claims he's an agnostic," he said. None of the churchgoers felt atten- nation, sees faith as a central and daily dance made a good Christian, but their panoinisnte. it s sort ot a communion ideas of morality and Christianity di- with God of a different sort than when verged there. For instance, Hamrick you're just saying your prayers," he said the essence of Christianity is to be said- godlike with assistance. "The help of "Fellowship it's real neat to be the Holy Spirit an ongoing relation- around people who have the same re- ship with God is most important," he lationship to God that you do. At this said. point it turns like an AA meeting. Hamrick added that morality was Sometimes even regulars can feel built on loving God, the golden rule and organized religion isn't helping. Cooper watching out for pride, said he hadn't been getting much out of Lanning also emphasized the per- church recently. "Even if I'm unsure sonal relationship with the Trinity, but what I believe, ideally it should provide as a source of spiritual peace rather than a sense of connectedness with other as a tool for ethical behavior. "Without people, with all of creation, with Christ, real life is not possible," he said, somethingbeyond that gives meaning "There is a need in human beings to be to all of it," he said. subservient to something. It comes from Almost all of the attendants were the whole idea of original sin. At the brought up in religious homes. Crisp, base of it all, there is no such thing as a for instance, went to church 75 percent good human we are evil, awful, ter- ot the time until her senior year, when rible and bad by nature she went half the time, and then her freshman year she didn't go at all 1991 BSN STUDENTS. Enter the Air Force immediately after gradua tion without waiting for the results of your State Boards. You can earn great benefits as an Air Force nurse officer. And if selected during your senior year, you may qualify for a five-month internship at a major Air Force medical facili ty. To apply, you'll need an overall 2.50 GPA. Get a head start in the Air Force. Call USAF HEALTH PROFESSIONS 919-850-9549 STATION-TO-STATION COLLECT Ultimately, Cooper said Christianity could not be reduced to a bumper sticker idea. "It's a whole way of life, rather than any one belief, any one practice." 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