montreat happenings Meet Don Shepson by Lindsey Migliori Many of you have seen him around campus with his tame pony-tailed fro and his Pee-Wee Herman bow-tie. His speech is always light and his words softly spoken. He dominates the ulti mate frisbee field and can often be spotted causing a ruckus in the cafeteria at student tables, but few really know the man behind the bow-tie. Don. Shepson is the newest addition to the Montreat College Bible and Religion Department. Don was bom on February 19, 1968. The Northern Illinois native grew up a country boy right outside of Chicago. Don only has one younger brother, Doug, who is “both smarter and better looking”. After graduating from Woodstock High School (filming _ location of Ground Hog Day) Don went on to get his undergraduate from Whea ton College in Sociology with a minor in Camping Ministry and received his Masters of Divinity from Gordon-Conwell Seminary. Don is currently working on his PhD in Christian Education at Biola University in California and plans to have his disserta tion completed by summer of 2007. His dissertation topic: The Factors that Influence a College Student’s Spiritual Formation. Don met his future wife Sarah, while working at Honey Rock Camp in Northern Wisconsin. As the logistics leader there, Don made sure that he was doing the logistics for Sarah’s group. Don and Sarah never really dated because they were always sepa rated by distance. A few years of getting to know one another through letter-writing, eventu ally led to the couple’s engage ment. While Sarah served as a missionary in Mexico for about a year, Don flew down to Mexico and asked Sarah to be his wife. The couple married in August of 1998 and now have three children Emory, 4, Tabby, 3, and Wyatt, 5 months. The Shepson’s found their way to Montreat quite ironically. After Don was rejected from an opening in the OE depart ment (because of his lack of specialized qualifications) Lloyd Davis, a member of the hiring committee, remembered Don’s resume when an opening arose within the Bible & Religion Department. From there phone interviews led to face-to-face interviews, and Don was on the fast track to becoming Montreat College’s Assistant Professor of Bible & Christian Education. “Because the department and the college itself are in such a state of transition,” Don state’s, “it really is a neat time to be here.” He explains how excited he is to be a part of the process of “figuring out and settling in to who we are as individuals, a department and a college.” Don has had a lot of experience with OE and wilderness journey style adventures. Wheaton offered a program to its students called Freshman High-Roads much like Montreat’s Discovery, though it was only offered to incoming freshman. Influenced by his father, Don reluctantly agreed to go on the wilderness expedition. Don claims, “I really hated the trip due to eight hungry guys with too little to eat, but upon reflection I appreciated the experience so much.” In fact, Don returned to Camp Honey Rock to be a wilderness leader every summer and one winter after that. After serving in the pastoral ministry for awhile, Don dis covered his spiritual gift was teaching. He then found that a combination of teaching in the classroom and inviting students into his life were foundational aspects of a growing passion for Congratulations! Anthony Moore (adjunct faculty in music) and his wife Dawn would like to announce the birth of Anna Kirby Moore, born 6:40 pm on December 20, 2005. She weighed 7 pounds, 15 ounces, was 20.5 inches long, and has red dish hair. ■ i "T| ' ^ ^ his life’s ministry. Because of Don’s background in experiential education, he had a pretty broad perspective of teaching methods and knew that the majority of learning occurred outside of the classroom. All of this explains why Don is seen all over campus and off campus, constantly interacting with students. “I use higher education as a tool to do ministry,” claims Don. “My job is really about the importance of building relationships with stu dents. It’s an opportunity for me to be involved in students lives and do some character building, shaping, and encouraging. All of that happens on the ultimate field, during dodge ball and over lunch.” Don has a few hobbies that occupy his time. Other than being a family-man he enjoys reading, road biking, mountain biking, camping, hiking, rock climbing, skiing, racquetball, and flight instructing. When asked about his greatest talent, Don responded lightheartedly with, “I am a jack of all trades; I do a lot of things well but noth ing with excellence.” When asked about his crazi est adventure, Don told a tale of fright. He said, “Most of my adventures are planned; this one wasn’t. I was teaching a friend and new student to fly in a Cessna 150 which is basi cally a lawnmower engine with wings. We were at 3,500 feet and practicing maneuvers which are called stalls. All of a sudden, right in the middle of a maneu ver the engine completely shut off. This had never happened to me before and as I watched the propeller eome to a stop, I thought, ‘This is definitely not a good thing.’ My student was not aware that this wasn’t normal and he looked at me with a ‘what next?’ look. As the sound of a loud engine slowly died and all we could hear was the air over the wings, I looked at my buddy with eyes as big as saucers and said, ‘You fly the airplane; I’ve got to restart this thing!’ What felt like hours was really only like seven seconds as I restarted the engine and we turned the plane around to put it back on the ground.” So Montreatians, as you see this outwardly calm, seemingly collective man walking around campus, know that despite his every effort to fool you, Don Shepson is an enthusiastic, exhilarating, spontaneous man seeking adventure at every turn. Mar. 2,2006, Page 3 The Whetstone