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Awake, Our Souls!

Jun 10 2025

This presidential column originally appeared in the Spring/Summer 2025 issue of The Bulletin.

By Rebecca J. Stoltzfus ’83, President of Goshen College

EDITOR’S NOTE: In January 2025, President Rebecca Stoltzfus wrote a white paper offering a contemporary vision for faith formation at Goshen College. Rooted in our commitment to Christ-centeredness and our Anabaptist-Mennonite faith tradition, the paper explores how we can faithfully navigate a changing cultural and institutional landscape while deepening our practices of faith. This is a short summary of the longer piece with reflections and recommendations. Read the full white paper here.

In the original words of Menno Simons, an early Anabaptist leader for whom Mennonites are named: “True evangelical faith is of such a nature it cannot lie dormant, but spreads itself out in all kinds of righteousness and fruits of love.” After persevering through a slow and fickle spring in Northern Indiana, all manner of dormancy is awakening, the daffodils, magnolias and serviceberries bursting forth, instructing and inspiring us to “awake, our souls!”

Rebbeca Stoltzfus headshot

True evangelical faith means faith in without-a-doubt, gotta-tell-you-about-it, really, really good news. This is the sort of good news that apparently struck the radical reformers of the 1500s when they read the gospels for themselves, and it transformed those early Anabaptists from farmers and townspeople into radical change-makers. The good news is that God is love in action. These people could no longer lie dormant, and they bloomed with a fierce beauty that is echoing again these 500 years later.

I wonder: What is the good news awakening in us and through us today?

When Jesus was asked: “Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” Jesus replied that the first and greatest commandment was: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”

As we crafted our mission statement in 2019, this Scripture emerged as essential for us. It was distilled into the final clause of this sentence:

Shaped by Anabaptist- Mennonite tradition, we integrate academic excellence and real-world experience with active love for God and neighbor.

Including the phrase “active love for God and neighbor” resonated as a reference to Matthew 22, and expressed concisely the synthesis of inner and outer commitments of our tradition.

As we awaken from dormancy in the springtimes of our lives, we are inspired by words from another radical reformationist, Ulrich Zwingli, the “people’s priest” who began to preach the Gospel of Matthew in the local German. John D. Roth ’81, professor emeritus of history and project director of the Anabaptism at 500 initiative, highlights and expands words of Zwingli’s for our time: “For God’s sake… do something courageous — have the courage to love — actively, imaginatively, vulnerably” and, as we say at GC, “rooted in the way of Jesus.”

May we be courageous, creative and compassionate leaders, with a faith that does not lie dormant. Awake, our souls!

  • Goshen College President Rebecca Stoltzfus headshot

    “More than a mind factory”

    This presidential column originally appeared in the Spring/Summer 2026 issue of Bulletin

  • Mayer Oyer in her living room playing a traditional African instrument and laughing at someone behind the camera

    What more can a prof do?

    No single course may better define Goshen College’s commitment to liberal arts education than Mary Oyer’s Fine Arts class, first introduced in 1945.

  • professional headshot of Dan Koop-Liechty

    Till we meet again

    My professional connection to Goshen College began in 1988, when Sociology Professor Emeritus J. Howard Kauffman hired me as a research assistant for his work on North American Mennonite beliefs and social patterns.