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College coffeehouse provides safe space for race conversation

 


Cal Poly students envision a healthier community

By Paul Seebeck | Presbyterians Today

Cal Poly students in front of Front Porch

Front Porch, a coffeehouse and 1001 worshiping community in San Luis Obispo, California, has encouraged Cal Poly students to recognize each other’s humanity first, as a prerequisite for listening to and appreciating their differences. Courtesy of Front Porch

When racially insensitive photos surfaced at Cal Poly University in the spring, Front Porch, a coffeehouse and 1001 worshiping community in San Luis Obispo, California, began engaging students — many of whom were disgusted by what they saw.

An Instagram photo showed Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity members flashing gang signs while dressed as gangster stereotypes. In another photo, a student was in blackface. Ten days later, another photo surfaced of Sigma Nu members holding Corona bottles and wearing clothes that apparently were meant to impersonate Hispanics.

Front Porch, which is owned by Santa Barbara Presbytery, is next to the entrance of Cal Poly. Thousands of students walk by Front Porch every day, with some 500 dropping in for free coffee and conversation.

“We became the place for students to process and grieve,” said Front Porch ministries director Joel Drenckpohl.

Those discussions spilled over to Wednesday nights, where more than 250 students came together for a meal. The only requirement was that they get to know each other and discuss hard topics. As the conversations about race deepened, the students began to grasp that they wouldn’t truly be able to listen and celebrate each other, or their differences, until they recognized each other’s humanity.

According to enrollment data, Cal Poly is the “whitest public university” in the state. Nearly 55 percent of the 20,000 students are white, 16.7 percent are Latino and less than 1 percent are black. For the first time, many Cal Poly students were coming to grips with “white privilege,” which the Cambridge Dictionary defines as “the fact of people with white skin having advantages in society that other people do not have.”

“So many people don’t understand how huge this issue is in our country,” Drenckpohl said. “More and more students at Front Porch are saying, ‘I need to care and learn about this.’ ”

Drenckpohl says it isn’t just the African-American community on campus that feels as if they’re not known, or being heard, but also the Latino community — and those in other categories.

With Drenckpohl being invited into a wider university conversation regarding the future of spirituality on Cal Poly’s campus, Front Porch is beginning to dream about how they might further influence the campus to become a healthier community.

Opened as a state-of-the-art ministry facility in 2004, it was originally envisioned as a place where students at Cal Poly who identified as Christians could create community with Presbyterians. It even had living quarters — the hope was a Christian worldview would be grown by wrestling with the big ideas of faith. But when Drenckpohl arrived at Front Porch in 2013, only around 30 people were using it — and fewer than 100 on campus knew it existed.

The first thing Drenckpohl did was push a new vision with the core group of students who were using it.

“The gospel should never be just for Christians,” he said. “It should benefit everyone — regardless of whether they’re going to build their lives around it or not.”

Gradually, Drenckpohl’s philosophy of ministry began to reshape Front Porch. Instead of talking about big theological ideas, they started paying attention to those walking past them every day. The goal was to build relationships — not because they had an agenda to convert people, but because they were fellow human beings loved by God.

Five years later Front Porch has a core group of 120 volunteers — of both faith and non-faith backgrounds. Most consider themselves spiritual, but do not necessarily identify as religious. And Front Porch’s donor base is no longer primarily Presbyterian. “Forty percent is from church giving,” Drenckpohl said. “The rest is individuals. Parents, students, some of their friends — and people from other faith congregations.”

Now, Front Porch more fully represents the journey Drenckpohl has been on — out of the ghetto of Christianity and into a place of awareness that recognizes the humanity of one’s neighbors.

“This generation is fed up with religion,” he said. “They’re tired of how God has been presented to them, which seems to be opposite of who Jesus was.

“Daily, I have students — Christian, Jewish, atheist and Muslim — tell me Front Porch is the most life-giving thing they’ve ever been a part of.”

Paul Seebeck is a communications strategist for the Presbyterian Mission Agency.


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