Welcome To Three Tips For Campus Survival

Three Tips For Campus SurvivalThree Tips for Campus Survival is the first book from Pastor Chuck Ryor, Teaching Pastor at Prism Church of Los Angeles.   In addition to his ministry at Prism Church, Chuck is an adjunct professor of preaching at Eternity Bible College.

Three Tips Ministries is a collaborative effort of experienced and passionate ministers to college students from around the country.  Along with providing guidance, advice, answers to tough questions and referrals to useful sources of information through this website, Three Tips Ministries conducts seminars across the country.  These “Three Tips” seminars and speaking engagements seek to challenge college students and high school seniors to adequately prepare for and face down the spiritual challenges of the campus.

Chuck Ryor likens the college experience to the thrilling opportunity to scale Mount Everest, the highest elevation on the planet. Recognizing the inherent dangers won’t ruin the adventure. Instead, it enhances the experience and enables you to live through it to tell the story to others. As a pastor to college students for nearly two decades, Chuck has seen students arrive on campus hoping to climb the “Mount Everest” of college experiences.

Unfortunately, most new Christian college students are totally unprepared for the challenges and dangers that they’ll face on their campus faith journey. Three Tips for Campus Survival was written by a voice of experience, and it creatively mixes contemporary stories with Biblical exposition to provide college students with clear direction as they embark on this adventure.

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Having trouble staying focused because the end of the semester is near? You're not alone.

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Christine Brooks
on’t be so sensitive! I heard these words so many times growing up, that I began to feel something was deeply wrong with me. Even today, I tell myself not to be a baby if I tear up over something that touches my heart. Most of my life, I believed I was overly sensitive and I needed to toughen up. It’s only been in recent years that I’ve come to see my sensitivity as a gift from God, strength rather than a weakness. Recently Amanda, a new friend of mine,

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Joe White
When Saint Paul called Jesus a humble servant who “made himself nothing” in A.D. 61 (Phil. 2:5-11), he was not simply reciting a cute poem. He was summarizing the very character of Jesus in his historical life, death, and resurrection. Indeed, if we like Paul, were to meditate on the depths of Jesus‘ condescension from a supreme heavenly reign to a life on earth caring for sick and dying people (physically and spiritually), we might also be awestruck by the reality that in Jesus Christ a...