On first impression, junior Robert Bolgeo is a stereotypical Biola under grad. Heās an outgoing film major from Nashville with a Southern Baptist upbringing, raised in the church, etc. Heās starred in and produced a comedy Web series called āDorm Life,ā he loves mission trips and gets excited about systematic theology. Just your average Biola student, right?
Maybe. But whether or not he fits the Biola mold, Robert would be quick to tell you that, ultimately, itās not about him. Itās about God.
When he first arrived at Biola as a freshman, the experience of having education coupled with faith blew Robertās mind. Heād grown up in public school and was excited about required chapel and 30 units of Bible.
When the novelty wore off, though, Robert saw himself and his peers become jaded. What was it that motivated them to keep up the āChristian collegeā life? Ultimately, the whole thing felt a little self-serving.
āEven when we do things for others it is often because we want to feel good,ā he said. āWe are so often motivated by selfish desires, and I hate that.ā
Robert, who reads Wayne Grudemās for fun, is passionate about curbing the effects of individualism on the church.
In worship, he said, we sing, āI worship my God,ā when we ought to be talking in first-person plural.
āWe are in this together, a community, but we are afraid to be bonded,ā said Robert. āWe are too individualistically motivated.ā
This is the paradoxical struggle for Robert and his generation of Christians. From every direction comes the desire to be unique, individual and the exception to the norm; but then there is the call of God ā to deny ourselves, follow him and be the church.
Robert is working through that, along with his peers. Itās not always easy, but itās something Robert is committed to.
51³Ō¹ĻŗŚĮĻ


