Author Jerry B. Jenkins to Speak at Bethel University’s 79th Commencement Ceremony May 2

Author Jerry B. Jenkins to Speak at Bethel University’s 79th Commencement Ceremony May 2

Bethel University is excited to welcome New York Times bestselling author Jerry B. Jenkins as the speaker for its 79th Commencement Ceremony on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Author of the Left Behind novel series and The Chosen novels (based on the TV series created by his son Dallas Jenkins), Jenkins has made a significant impact on Christian literature through his extensive body of work, which includes more than 200 books and 73 million+ copies sold.

“We are truly honored to welcome Jerry B. Jenkins as our commencement speaker this year,” says Dr. Dee McDonald, president. “Few writers have shaped Christian thought and imagination as powerfully or as faithfully as he has. His life’s work stands as a testament to courageous storytelling and unwavering conviction. I am confident our graduates will leave not only stirred by his journey but inspired to pursue their own callings with greater faith, creativity and purpose.”

Jenkins assisted Billy Graham with his memoir and has written the biographies of more than a dozen superstar athletes, including Hank Aaron, Walter Payton, Mike Singletary and Nolan Ryan. He is an inductee in the Colorado Authors Hall of Fame. He is also the former Vice President for Publishing at Moody Bible Institute, where he later served for 18 years as a member of Moody’s board of trustees, seven years as chairman. He is now a member of the board at Colorado Christian University.

The Jenkins family’s ties to Bethel run strong. Jerry’s wife Dianna grew up in the Missionary Church and served on Bethel’s Board of Trustees. Their son Chad played baseball for the Pilots and graduated from Bethel in 2002. Jenkins Stadium – the home for Bethel Pilots baseball – is named after the family because of a generous gift. And Chad’s son Isaac is a current freshman at Bethel. Jenkins was also awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Bethel in 2003.

“With so many long-term ties to Bethel,” Jenkins says, “it’s always a pleasure to be on campus. I’m honored to have been invited and very much look forward to reuniting with many old friends and helping launch a new generation into this new season of their lives.”

Bethel University expects more than 300 students to graduate in a single ceremony that will include traditional undergraduate, adult and graduate programs. Graduation day activities will begin with a nurse pinning ceremony at 10 a.m., in the Everest-Rohrer Auditorium and a traditional procession through Bethel’s campus at the start of the commencement ceremony, as well as a 50-year reunion for the class of 1976. The ceremony will begin at 2 p.m. and will be livestreamed on Bethel’s website, BethelUniversity.edu.

For more information about the weekend’s graduation activities, visit BethelUniversity.edu/Commencement.

About Our Speaker

Jerry B. Jenkins is the author of more than 200 books, including 21 New York Times bestsellers, with more than 73 million copies sold. He is most known for the Left Behind novel series and The Chosen novels, based on the TV series. Jenkins assisted Billy Graham with his memoir and has written the biographies of more than a dozen superstar athletes, including Hank Aaron, Walter Payton, Mike Singletary and Nolan Ryan. He is an inductee in the Colorado Authors Hall of Fame.

He is the former Vice President for Publishing at Moody Bible Institute, where he later served for 18 years as a member of Moody’s board of trustees, seven years as chairman. He is now a member of the board at Colorado Christian University.

Jerry and his wife Dianna, who grew up in the Missionary Church and once served on the Bethel University Board of Trustees, live in Colorado and have three grown sons, including Dallas — the creator of The Chosen; Chad, an alumnus of Bethel and sports information director at Mid-America Nazarene University in Kansas; and Michael, a graduate of Colorado Christian University.

Jerry and Dianna also have eight grandchildren, including Isaac Jenkins, a current student and soon-to-be sophomore at Bethel.

Commencement 2026

Commencement 2026

Join us for the 79th Commencement Ceremony!

There will be one combined ceremony this year. All events will be live-streamed from our main page (BethelUniversity.edu).

Commencement Tassel Turn

Graduating with Honors

Graduates receiving a bachelor’s degree with a cumulative grade point average of 3.5 or greater, and have earned at least 45 credit hours at Bethel, will be awarded the following academic distinction:

  • Cum Laude – GPA of 3.5
  • Magna Cum Laude – GPA of 3.75
  • Summa Cum Laude – GPA of 3.9

More Info

If you have other questions about our commencement ceremony or other graduation events, please contact Kelly Amstutz at Kelly.Amstutz@betheluniversity.edu.

Bethel University’s 78th Commencement Set for May 3 | Rev. Rodney Arnold to Speak

Bethel University’s 78th Commencement Set for May 3 | Rev. Rodney Arnold to Speak

This year, 317 students will graduate from Bethel University. The 2025 commencement ceremony will be held Saturday, May 3, in the Wiekamp Athletic Center on Bethel’s campus. This single ceremony at 2 p.m., includes traditional undergraduate, adult and graduate programs. Rev. Rodney Arnold, President of the Missionary Church – Bethel University’s denominational school, will be the speaker. The event will also be livestreamed on Bethel’s website, BethelUniversity.edu.

“We are excited to celebrate the accomplishments of all of our graduates with their families and friends,” says Abson Joseph, Ph.D., Vice President for Academic Services. “This year’s class is unique as it includes one of the largest percentages of international students in Bethel’s history, with 50 students born outside the United States, representing 30 different countries. Our graduates are equipped to impact the world for Christ, which is a key part of the mission of Bethel University.”

Graduation day activities also include a nurse pinning ceremony at 10 a.m., in the Everest-Rohrer Auditorium and a traditional procession through Bethel’s campus at the start of the commencement ceremony, as well as a 50-year reunion for the class of 1975.

On Fri., May 2 at 5 p.m., Bethel University will hold a Senior Celebration for graduates and their families that begins with a Baccalaureate Chapel, followed by a celebratory dinner in the Dining Commons.

For more information about the weekend’s graduation activities, visit BethelUniversity.edu/Commencement.

About the speaker

Rev. Rodney Arnold is the current president of the Missionary Church, a position he’s held since 2023. In this role, he provides leadership to a network of 500 churches in the United States and more than 70 mission fields around the world, partnering with thousands of churches in more than 20 international Missionary Church denominations and networks.

He has been credentialed with the Missionary Church since 2009 and has been serving as Lead Pastor of OneLife Church in Knoxville, Tenn., since its founding in 2009. He has served on the GOC (General Oversight Council) of the Missionary Church since 2019, was vice president of the denomination from 2022-2023, and helped launch the Ignite Church Network. At 40 years old, his election to the presidency of the denomination in 2023 made him the youngest president ever chosen by the modern-day Missionary Church since its merger in 1969. His spiritual gifts include leadership, administration, and discernment; his strengths are competition, individualization, relator, and belief, and he is a creative/pioneer (5 voices).

Beyond his roles as pastor and President of the Missionary Church, he has leveraged his talents in public relations on a freelance basis to support a variety of initiatives, from rebranding, to event planning, to fundraising and more, for churches, businesses and organizations. He has also served the University of Tennessee, Knoxville for 19 years as a coach/support staff for their cheer, dance and mascot teams, focusing on communications, coaching and leadership development. Prior to that, Rodney began his career in NASCAR public relations, working with Speedway Motorsports, Inc., Bristol Motor Speedway, and Bristol Dragway.

Platinum Pilot Harold Rodgers ’74 Delivers 2024 Baccalaureate Address

Platinum Pilot Harold Rodgers ’74 Delivers 2024 Baccalaureate Address

Baccalaureate address (as prepared for delivery) by Harold Rodgers ’74 — at the 2024 Bethel University Baccalaureate on Friday, May 3, 2024.

Congratulations class of 2024 from the class of 1974. How the times have changed. And yet, many things have remained the same.

You’re looking at a first-generation college student. No one before me in my lineage attended higher education. It was my father who encouraged me to attend Bethel due to the fact that it was nearby and was associated with the Missionary Church. All four years I commuted to classes. During that time, new friendships developed. And those friendships have turned into lifelong friends. I graduated with a major in Biblical Literature and a minor in Youth Ministry. While my career path never landed me in a ministry position, my education prepared me for the path that I would take. For twenty years, my career was in the social work field. It started out as a caseworker in what was known then as the “Welfare Department”. It was during those years that my interest in computing was sparked by a simple Star Trek game that I saw in a campus computer lab at the University of Michigan. Before long, I was the proud owner of a TRS-80 model 3 with 32k of memory and two single sided floppy drives. The purchase of such a fine piece of technology was justified based on my wife’s typing side hustle. Her printer was her IBM Selectric typewriter with a box of plungers sitting on top of the keyboard and connected to the computer with a cable. It would push down the appropriate keys as the computer instructed. As the years passed, my technological interest in computing took over my career. In 1995 I left my position of Administrative Analyst for the State of Indiana and came to work at Bethel in what would become the Director of Administrative Computing. This position was responsible for the hardware and software that ran the business side of Bethel; Admissions, Financial Aid, Business Office, Student Services, Institutional Advancement and Alumni. My wife Barb and I retired from Bethel five years ago at which time Barb was serving as the Administrative Assistant to the president.

How times have changed over the years. In 1974 we were using manual typewriters to write papers for our classes. Mistakes were corrected with “white out” or “white correction tape”. Research was done in libraries where card catalogs were the interface between you and the location of books containing the information you desired. You would pull out a drawer that was full of what looked like 3×5 cards in alphabetical order and thumb through them until you found the book you were looking for and it’s location on the shelves. You would then hope that the book was available and was not checked out by another student. In 1974, the two dorms, Shupe and Oakwood, had one phone per floor and a switchboard located in the entrance of Shupe.

Back then, the way students would message each other was to write their message on a piece of paper, fold it, write the recipient’s name on the outside and then tape it to the switchboard counter. If you saw a message with your name on it, you would pull it off and read it. It was such a message on that counter that led to my wife and I getting together. Her sister Joanne, a classmate of mine, would leave messages for me signing Barb’s name. Barb would see them and pull them off and dispose of them. Well, she missed one.

Writing letters was the most cost effective way of communicating with friends and family not in your immediate geographical location. The letters that Barb and I exchanged during her time back home before we were married are still in my desk at home.

Photos were taken with cameras that used film that had to be developed and the photographs printed. The process from taking the photo and getting it back would take days, weeks or even months depending on how long it took you to complete taking the 20 some photos that the film allowed.

Today, my smartphone is my library, address book, messaging medium, mailbox, camera and occasionally a phone.

Yet over the last 50 years, how many things have stayed the same. Humans still covet what others have, lie when it suits their interests and steal in creative ways.

There is still violence that tears away at the fabric of our society. Violence based in race, religion or identity. Nation against nation. For my generation it was our involvement in the Vietnam War. Today perhaps it is Russia and Ukraine or our involvement in the middle east.

In a world of violence and war, may we be the peacemakers.

In the 70s, the Sexual Revolution was changing our society in major ways. A popular slogan then was “Make love, not war”. Song lyrics were a major megaphone in spreading it’s philosophy. Looking back, it now seems tame in relation to what is now acceptable in movies and television.

In 1974, president Nixon resigns at the culmination of a scandal that future scandals would refer back to in their name. That scandal was Watergate. It pales in comparison to what politicians are getting away with today.

You, 2024 graduates of Bethel, are called to be different. You, are to be a light in a dark world. You are to be the salt of the earth.

Tomorrow, in your procession, you will pass through the Krake Courtyard as you pass from Bethel’s campus to the world that awaits you. In that courtyard Ephesians 4:1 is displayed. “I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received”. Ephesians 4:2 & 3 expand upon the ways that a worthy life can be realized. “Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.”

Living a life worthy of the calling you have received will not be easy. But, your time here at Bethel has prepared you for that challenge. May you be found faithful. May you live a life worthy of the calling you have received.

Colorado Springs Mayor Blessing ‘Yemi’ Mobolade ’01 Delivers 2024 Commencement Address

Colorado Springs Mayor Blessing ‘Yemi’ Mobolade ’01 Delivers 2024 Commencement Address

Commencement address (as prepared for delivery) by Blessing ‘Yemi’ Mobolade ’01, Mayor of Colorado Springs, Co. — at the 77th Bethel University Commencement on Saturday, May 4, 2024.

President Barbara Bellefeuille, Bethel University leadership, Board of Trustees, faculty, staff, distinguished guests, alumni, family members, friends, and 2024 graduates of Bethel University. Greetings and welcome!

It feels good to be back home at my alma mater. Alma mater in Latin means “nourishing mother.” This special place, Bethel, my nourishing mother, helped raise this mayor. The 16th President of the United States and one of my all-time heroes, Abraham Lincoln, of whom I share a birthday with, once stated, “all l that I am, or hope to be, I owe to my angel mother.” That is the sentiment I feel towards Bethel University. I owe a debt of gratitude to the many Bethel staff and faculty members, mentors, friends, and “frientors” who had a profound impact on my personal, professional, and spiritual development.

My current kingdom assignment is serving as the mayor of the second-most populous city in the great state of Colorado and the 39th largest city in the country. With just over 500,000 residents, Colorado Springs is growing fast, and we are no longer a best-kept secret as for six consecutive years, we have ranked in the top 10 places to live in the United States by US News & World Report. Last year, Zillow ranked Colorado Springs as the No. 1 place to live for college graduates. Graduates, wink wink.

It’s been 11 months since I was sworn in as Mayor and I still can’t believe I get to do this job! It is an honor to go to bed every night and wake up every morning with the burden and the mission of advancing City flourishing. I am driven by the desire to make an impact and I carry great affection for the city of Colorado Springs, which makes being mayor a rewarding job.

As my family and I transition to this new identity of being in office. I am also getting used to the title of mayor in my own household. I am husband to an incredible woman, an ICU nurse and nursing educator, her name is Abbey. And we are both parents to three young kids, 10-year-old son, 7-year-old daughter, and a 4-year-old son. The struggle is real 😊

The other day, I pulled into the driveway and my wife walked over to my vehicle. The windows were down, and she came to speak with me through the passenger side. We were having a fairly important conversation, when my 7-year-old runs to the vehicle to try to get my attention. She exclaims, dad, dad, daddy, daddy. I ignored her because I was talking with Abbey my wife. However, she was persistent and kept calling, dad, daddy, dad, daddy. I kept ignoring her. She continued, dad, daddy, MAYOR, MAYOR, MAYOR. And you know what, I answered and said, “what do you need?” Apparently, I don’t answer to dad anymore, but I do answer to the title of mayor.

I still marvel at the story of my historic campaign and win as the first elected Black man and first immigrant mayor of a top 50 U.S. city. One of our local media partners called it a “seismic shift” in local politics. However, it is more than that.

My story is grounded in the story of God using ordinary people to do extraordinary things. I was born in Lagos Nigeria, in West Africa. I grew up as a misfit and had a challenging childhood experience. When I immigrated to the US to attend Bethel in 1996, I arrived as a lost, hurt, angry, and timid 17-year-old international student.

My story is a prime example and prime reminder that God is still in the business of using the most unlikely people to bring about His plan. This is my story. And it’s your story! If you are feeling like an “outsider” or believe you are “the runt of the litter.” You are the perfect candidate for Him.

Remember the story of the Hebrew baby born in a time of trauma and chaos. Adopted and raised by a north African royal family, enslaving the people from his birth heritage. This prince had anger issues and in a moment of passion killed one of the Egyptian people.

He flees for his life as he is wanted for murder. Now homeless in the desert, he eventually finds refuge with a nomadic Arab culture and becomes a shepherd, one of the lowliest jobs of the time. Yet God chooses this third culture kid, with a speech defect to confront the most powerful political leader in the world, to set free and lead 600,00 Hebrews.

People laughed at Noah for building that ark for so many years. Joseph was sold into slavery by his brothers only to rise to second-in-command of all of Egypt. Gideon was cowering in fear from his enemies when God called him to lead the Israelites in battle. Friends, God is in the business of using ordinary people who have overcome great adversity and hardship to do extraordinary things.

You are more extraordinary than you realize. You are more extraordinary than you realize. Friends, you are more extraordinary than you realize. And leave you with three related truths to consider as you flip the page and begin your new chapter of extraordinary things.

1. Number One, know thy “WHY”

Know thy WHY. Congratulations to all the 2024 graduates. Now WHAT? That’s the obvious question isn’t. That’s what your family members and friends are asking of you. What are you going to do? Where are you going to work? What new job opportunity are you going to pursue? What promotion opportunity are you go after in your organization?

Friends, identifying WHAT you are supposed is okay, but I am here to tell you that knowing your WHY is not just more important, it is divine.

It has been said, that the 2 most important days of your life are the day you were born, and the day you find out WHY. Let me repeat that. The 2 most important days of your life are the day you were born, and the day you find out WHY. What is your WHY?

German philosopher Frederick Nietzsche once said,
“He who has a WHY can endure any HOW.” I would argue that “He who has a WHY can endure any WHAT.”

For example, people know I am mayor of Colorado Springs. That’s WHAT I do. But my WHY is that “I collaborate for the health, growth, and flourishing, of my beloved city of Colorado Springs.” With this purpose statement, the floodgates are now open in terms of how to accomplish this. So, I can serve as a pastor. I can work at a business. I can start a business. Or start a nonprofit that unites over 100 churches etc. All of it is inspired by my WHY.

Friends, we work so hard to find the perfect job and when we do, we are still not content. Perhaps its because we lack a WHY, we lack purpose.

Unlike animals, which are driven simply to survive, we humans, created in the image of the Most-High God, God’s DNA crave more from life than mere survival. We are created with a purpose. We are created to be purpose driven.

Matthew 5:13-14 (Message Version), “let me tell you WHY you are here. You’re here to be salt-seasoning that brings out the God-flavors of this earth… Here’s another way to put it: You’re here to be light, bringing out the God-colors in the world.” Hmm so good!

Friends, there is a glory about your essence, and your being. There is a beauty and greatness in each and every one of you. There is a genius about you. You’re here to bring about the God flavors and God-colors in the world.”

Know thy WHY! It will give you the reason to get up in the morning, kick butt during the day, and help you sleep at night.

Your WHY is your calling. Your WHY is your conviction. Your WHY is your purpose statement. Your WHY is the vision of your life and work. Your WHY is your core source of motivation. Your WHY is your reference point for all your decisions and actions. Your WHY defines who you are and what makes you productive.

Know thy WHY.

2.Tempus Fugit.

No, it’s not a swear word. Growing up, I remember my parents having a grandfather clock, that sat as a furniture piece in the house. Embossed on the top of the clock is the phrase, “Tempus fugit” which in English means “time flees” or “time flies.”

The gift came in a beautiful black square box. And with a beautiful black ribbon. I couldn’t wait to open it. The note that came with it said, from Harvard University Kennedy Leadership School and Bloomberg Center for Cities.

I am lucky to be selected as one of 30 mayors to attend a Harvard Program for new mayors. The beautiful black square box was the follow-up gift they sent. When I opened it, and saw what was in it, at first, I was intrigued. Then I was puzzled as watched numbers count down. The timer said, 1,192 days. This was the number of days I had left in my administration. Then I sort of panicked and fairly sure my heart skipped a few beats as I watch the hours, minutes, seconds count down.

Now, when you look more closely you will see the printed words, “make everyday count.” Ouch! That’s good! This gift was intended to serve a reminder of the finite nature of my time as mayor, and that I need to make the most of it before time runs out. Because it will, whether my time as mayor is up or my time in life is up.

Graduates, tempus fugit, time is fleeing, the clock is ticking, make it count. Cherish each moment, seize opportunities, and live with intentionality and purpose. There’s that word again “purpose.”

Psalm 90:12 reads, “teach us to realize the brevity of life, so that we may grow in wisdom.” Another translation reads, “teach us how short our life is, so that we may become wise.”

There is wisdom from our knowledge of the brevity of life, and that our days are numbered and finite. Because of this truth, we are inspired to seize and live each day to the fullest.

The ancient Greeks had 2 words to describe time based on the two gods of time, Chronos which refers to sequential time. Getting from one time to get to the next. Chronos is clock time. This event started at 1:30pm and we wonder want time it will end. We also hope Yemi doesn’t speak for two long. The word for chronological comes from the chronos.

Kairos is the other word the ancient Greeks used for time. Kairos means an opportune or fitting time for action. Kairos means when you look at a moment in are in and you realize it is pregnant with opportunity. Kairos means when you look at a moment in are in and its full and bubbling of opportunity you have been given.

When you look at ancient text from this period in ancient Greek history, you would assume that everyday time Chronos is used more than Kairos. It is quite the opposite. For example, in the Bible, Chronos was used 54 times and Kairos used 86 times.

The ancient Greeks understood that time given in life is more than Chronos, routine seconds, minutes, days, months, and years but Kairos, pregnant with opportunities we have been given to build or act upon.

Today, your graduation is one of those Kairos moment in your life. Know thy why, seize each opportunity, live with intentionality and purpose. There’s that word again “purpose.”

Graduates! Tempus fugit. Your clock is ticking. Make everyday count. Last but not the least…

3. Chase the Lion

In the wild, human vs. Lion, the script ends the same way, every time. Lion chases human, human runs from lion. King of the Beasts outruns human and eats human for lunch. But in God’s economy, the script is flipped. We run to the roar!

Chasing the lion represent the pursuit of God-sized dreams, even in the face of fear, uncertainty, or obstacles. Chasing the lion is about daring to pursue something big, hairy, and audacious, something that may seem intimidating or beyond reach. Chasing the lion is being willing to take risks and overcome challenges in order to achieve it.

“Chase the Lion” is a radically different approach to life. When you stop fearing failure is then you truly live.

The lion I chased was running for mayor. This dream felt big, hairy, and audacious. It was intimidating. Campaigning is a blood sport. Its ruthless. It’s cutthroat. Being mayor is equally a hard job and thankless job. Was I afraid. Absolutely I was terrified.

And that’s just it, courage is not the absence of fear. To be afraid is completely human. Courage is acting in spite of fear. The value of courage lies in the ability to push out of one’s comfort zone, do what is right, when it’s not easy. The root of the word courage is the Latin word “cor” the Latin translated as “heart.” Cor-Rage. Hence the root meaning is a heart that is fierce. A brave heart.

I stepped into the political arena because, I knew it was not enough to complain about the state of affairs, I needed to be the change I wanted to see in the world. Therefore, I raised my hands and said, “here am I, send me.” My team and I ran a campaign full of hope, optimism, and what’s possible. We ran on unity, putting people over politics. We faced our fears. We dared to fail. We dared to be different. We became the hope we wanted to see in the world.

Friends, as you flip the page and begin your new chapter of extraordinary things, stop running. Chase the lion. Take a leap of faith. Don’t settle. Take the road less traveled. Go big or go home.

Pastor and author Mark Batterson has written extensively on this subject. He put together a Lion Chaser’s manifesto and I have a 30 x 40 canvas copy of it in on wall that I read almost everyday to serve as a reminder that “I want to see God do things in me and through me that I am absolutely incapable of, so I can’t possibly take credit for them.” I am going to read this over you.”

The Lion Chaser’s Manifesto

Quit living as if the purpose of life is to arrive safely at death.
Run to the roar.
Set God-sized goals.
Pursue God-given passions.
Go after a dream that is destined to fail without divine intervention.
Stop pointing out problems and become part of the solution.
Stop repeating the past and start creating the future.
Face your fears.
Fight for your dreams.
Grab opportunity by the mane and don’t let go!
Live like today is the first day and last day of your life.
Burn sinful bridges.
Blaze new trails.
Live for the applause of nail-scarred hands.
Don’t let what’s wrong with you keep you from worshiping what’s right with God.
Dare to fail.
Dare to be different.
Quit holding out.
Quit holding back.
Quit running away.
Chase the lion.

Watch the full ceremony here

Bethel University’s 77th commencement set for May 4 – Blessing ‘Yemi’ Mobolade to speak

Bethel University’s 77th commencement set for May 4 – Blessing ‘Yemi’ Mobolade to speak

This year, 323 students will graduate from Bethel University. The 2024 commencement ceremony will be held on Saturday, May 4, in the Wiekamp Athletic Center on Bethel’s campus. This single ceremony at 2 p.m., includes traditional undergraduate, adult and graduate programs. Alumnus Blessing ‘Yemi’ Mobolade, mayor of Colorado Springs, Colo., will be the speaker. The event will also be livestreamed on Bethel’s website.

“We are greatly looking forward to celebrating all of our class of 2024 graduates,” says Barbara K. Bellefeuille, Ed.D., president. “This class includes 27 students from our extension studies program, BU-X. They are the first four-year class to graduate through this program and represent 11 extension sites in eight states around the country.”

Graduation day activities also include a nurse pinning ceremony at 9 a.m., in the Everest-Rohrer Auditorium and a traditional procession through Bethel’s campus at the start of the commencement ceremony, as well as a 50-year reunion for the class of 1974.

On Fri., May 3 at 5 p.m., Bethel University will hold a Senior Celebration for graduates and their families that begins with a Baccalaureate Chapel, followed by a celebratory dinner in the Dining Commons.

For more information about the weekend’s graduation activities, visit BethelUniversity.edu/Commencement.

About the speaker

Blessing ‘Yemi’ Mobolade is a 2001 graduate of Bethel University. He is the first Black man and immigrant to be elected mayor of Colorado Springs and one of the youngest. He was sworn in as the 42nd Mayor of Colorado Springs on June 6, 2023. He was named Bethel University’s Alumnus of the Year for 2016.

Mobolade was born in Nigeria to two bi-vocational pastors. His father was in finance and his mother was a secondary education teacher. At age 17, he immigrated to the United States, following in the footsteps of his brother to pursue the American Dream through education. He has bachelor’s degrees in business administration and computer information systems from Bethel University and master’s degrees in management and leadership from Indiana Wesleyan University (Marion, Ind.) and theology-intellectual leadership from the A.W. Tozer Theological Seminary, part of Simpson University (Redding, Calif.).

Mobolade moved from Indiana to Colorado Springs in 2010, where he started a church as part of the Christian and Missionary Alliance. After identifying a need in downtown Colorado Springs for cultural gathering places, he became one of the first entrepreneurs to invest in downtown after the Great Recession when he co-founded The Wild Goose Meeting House in 2013.

Seeing a greater need for collaboration within the faith community, Mobolade began working as director of outreach and engagement at First Presbyterian Church, where he would go on to co-found COSILoveYou, a nonprofit that unites more than 100 area churches under the common mission of serving the Colorado Springs community.

In 2017, Mobolade co-founded Good Neighbors Meeting House in the Patty Jewett neighborhood to provide an additional gathering place in the downtown area. He also began to leverage his success as an entrepreneur and business owner and began working as the vice president of business retention and expansion at the Colorado Springs Chamber & Economic Development Corporation. There he was instrumental in caring for local employers and attracting new companies during a period of record job growth for Colorado Springs.

In 2019, Mobolade served the City of Colorado Springs as a small business development administrator. In this role, he established tools to assist entrepreneurs with starting a business, COSOpenForBiz.com and Permit Partner, and led many collaborative efforts across the community’s public and private sectors. Mobolade stepped down from this position in March 2022 to officially launch his mayoral campaign.

He lives in Colorado Springs with his wife, Abbey, a nurse and nursing educator, and their three young children.

Bethel University’s 76th Commencement Set for April 29 | The Rev. Dave Engbrecht to Speak

Bethel University’s 76th Commencement Set for April 29 | The Rev. Dave Engbrecht to Speak

This year, 327 students will graduate from Bethel University. The 2023 commencement ceremony will be held Saturday, April 29, in the Wiekamp Athletic Center on Bethel’s campus. This single ceremony at 2 p.m., includes traditional undergraduate, adult and graduate programs. The Rev. Dave Engbrecht, Pastor at Large of Nappanee Missionary Church in Nappanee, Ind., and Bethel University Trustee, will be the speaker. The event will also be live-streamed on Bethel’s website, BethelUniversity.edu.

“We can’t wait to celebrate the accomplishments of all our graduates of the class of 2023. This is the first four-year class to graduate from Bethel University, since its name change from Bethel College in 2019,” says Bradley Smith, Ph.D., vice president for academic services.

Graduation day activities also include a nurse pinning ceremony at 10 a.m., in the Everest-Rohrer Auditorium and a traditional procession through Bethel’s campus at the start of the commencement ceremony.

On Fri., April 28 at 5 p.m., Bethel University will hold a Baccalaureate Service for graduates and their families, followed by Reunion Zero at 6 p.m., a dinner and celebration in the Dining Commons.

For more information about the weekend’s graduation activities, visit BethelUniversity.edu/Commencement.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Dave EngbrechtDave Engbrecht serves as Pastor at Large of Nappanee Missionary Church, Nappanee, Ind., which is part of the Missionary Church, Inc.

Previously, Dave served as Senior Pastor of Nappanee Missionary Church for 41 years before changing roles to work with local, regional and global partners along with being a part of the teaching team at Nappanee Missionary Church, which is in rural Northern Indiana. The church has been called “the miracle in the cornfield.” Dave’s vision is to make fully committed disciples through healthy local churches led by gifted leaders.

One of Dave’s passions is to pour himself into leaders and organizations with whom Nappanee Missionary Church has partnerships. He currently serves as Chairman of both the Sammy Tippit Board of Directors (San Antonio, Texas) and the World Gospel Mission Board of Directors (Marion, Ind.). Along with many other organizations, he also serves on the Bethel University Board of Trustees. Along with his team, Dave has planted and restarted numerous churches across Northern Indiana.

He has spoken at numerous retreats, leadership and business training events, conferences and camps in North America as well as in India, Haiti, Puerto Rico, Bolivia, Mexico, Honduras, Pakistan, Jamaica, Kenya, Russia, Romania, and Armenia.

Born in South Bend, Ind., Dave earned a bachelor’s degree from Vennard College in University Park, Iowa and a Master of Education degree at Concordia University in Seward, Neb. He has done doctoral studies at Temple Baptist Seminary in Chattanooga, Tenn. He and his wife, Christy, reside in Nappanee and are the parents of two married children and five grandchildren.