Strategic Plan | FLBCS
Source: https://flbc.edu/strategicplan
Archived: 2026-04-23 17:14
Strategic Plan | FLBCS
2025-2028 Strategic Plan
A three-year rolling strategic plan developed by the FLBCS Board of Trustees.
Core Purpose
The mission of FLBCS is: E
stablishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His Kingdom.
The goal of this strategic plan is to provide increased quality of Bible education to FLBCS students, while standing strong against physical and spiritual pressures to the institution and its mission. Please refer to the
FAQ's section
for answers to commonly asked questions about this plan.
FREE LUTHERAN BIBLE COLLEGE
was founded in 1966 to see God transform young people through the teaching of His Word. It was of primary concern among the founders of the AFLC to establish young Christians in the Word of God and help believers be equipped for life and ministry in local congregations and communities.
FREE LUTHERAN SEMINARY
was founded in 1964 to train men to be servant pastors in the AFLC. The founders of the AFLC wanted pastors trained to handle the infallible and inerrant Word of God with respect and care, and to minister to their congregations with love and attentiveness, understanding the congregation as the right form of the kingdom of God on earth.
Institutional Objectives >
Word of God
Congregation
Spiritual Maturity
Great Commission Disciple Making
Core Values >
Equipping for Future Vocation
Integrity
Stewardship
Whole Life Discipleship
Life Together
Our Promise to Our Students
WE PROMISE THAT AT FREE LUTHERAN BIBLE COLLEGE
you will learn from great teachers to love Scripture and the Author of it. They will care for you, walk with you, and introduce you to the truth of the Bible. Here you will find a warm, encouraging community of people like you who want to know and follow Jesus more deeply. You will learn in great facilities on a beautiful campus that provides places to study, think, pray, and reflect. Here you will find a sure foundation for your life and be prepared for a lifetime of service in your congregation and calling.
WE PROMISE THAT AT FREE LUTHERAN SEMINARY
you will be mentored by professors who will care for you and prepare you to shepherd God’s people and preach the Word in the congregation with impact. Here you will be immersed in the Word of God and historic Lutheran doctrine and find fellowship with peers in a community that will pray for you, care for you, walk with you, and encourage you. You will leave here with ministry opportunities, little to no seminary student debt, and the confidence to fulfill God’s calling on your life and vocation.
Strategic Goals
The FLBCS strategic plan exists as three-year plan that is updated every year. This plan is a result of strategic planning, which exists at FLBCS because of regular strategic thinking. Every year FLBCS is in a new “year one” of a strategic plan, so the plan is never neglected, ignored, out of touch, or out of date.
Goal #1
Funding the Mission
By July 31, 2028, while operating with a balanced budget, FLBCS will have a positive net change for operational income for the previous three fiscal years, have established an endowment of $5M, a 3-month operating reserve, and reduced overall facility debt to under $2M. As of May 2025, we have a limited operating reserve, $5M in facility debt, and a $2.8M endowment. Some planned gifts will help in the near future, but a campaign of some kind, perhaps in concert with goal #3, below, is probable in the lead up to refinancing the Student Life Center in 2027.
Goal #2
Recruiting
By July 31, 2028, FLBCS will have expanded its reach through marketing its existing programs to an expanded audience while recruiting/retaining students across all its programs. FLS benefits from strong FLBC enrollment. FLBC already attracts a large percentage of AFLC-related students. As of May 2025, we are seeking sources of potential students outside the AFLC, especially in the Minneapolis/St. Paul area. There are many such potentials to be reached through invitation to campus and meeting with ministries in person on their turf. Fall 2025 will have 120+ undergraduates and about 22 seminarians.
Goal #3
Campus Capacity
By July 31, 2028, FLBCS will have additional affordable and flexible housing solutions for students and/or staff. Our current dorms hold about 160 students. We have 12 seminary housing units. We may have need for additional student capacity, but we need places for married students and/or staff members to live. The local housing economy is challenging for most of our employees, and the ability to host some of them on campus is attractive. As of April 2025, we are working with an architect to discern how best to use space on campus and what it would cost to make these plans happen.
Goal #4
Excellence in Bible and Ministry
By July 31, 2028, FLBCS will have graduated its fourth cohort of BA students, while further developing the BA in Bible and Ministry program to include offerings in Home and World Missions, Youth Ministries, and Worship leading. The first cohort of BA students graduated in May 2025, along with a second year Bible College class that now received an AA. Course modifications are underway to teach the program better and expand offerings to include the areas mentioned above. This will be mature by 2027.
What This Might Look Like
By Graduation 2028...
Growing enrollment approaching 160 undergraduates (AA and BA together)
Six future pastors annually from a seminary enrollment of 25
Mature emphases in worship music ministry, youth/family ministry, and cross-cultural missions
Three-month cash reserve, making line of credit use unlikely
Institutional debt under $2M (currently $5M)
Endowment of $5M (currently $2.8M)
Additional, flexible housing solutions on/near campus
Graduates influencing health of congregations both inside and outside the AFLC
Consistent, growing momentum for FLBCS programs
Strategic Plan FAQs
This list will be updated as new questions materialize.
The Strategic Planning Team consisted of six administrators, two alumni, and four board members. Most faculty members, many staff members, several alumni, and a handful of corporation and community members were consulted at various times through the process.
The Strategic Planning Team used a consultant to help move the process along. Scott Rodin of The Focus Group was the consultant that helped with Board Governance Training, so he understands the culture and needs of both FLBCS and the AFLC. The consultant helped the Strategic Planning Team avoid “echo chambers” and “group think” that makes institutions blind to their own blind spots. He also helped synthesize the team’s thoughts and led the team to a place of broad agreement around the mission, vision, and core values of FLBCS.
After significant development, checking, input, and revision, the Board of Trustees adopted this strategic plan at their January 2023 meeting, seeking to establish and strengthen the mission of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
The FLBC
Core Purpose
comes from some historic documents. This process has included examining the founding purposes of FLBC, including looking at early catalogs, practices, and documents. The FLS
Core Purpose
is a new purpose based on the assumed/understood purpose of the Seminary, which was the first program to exist at FLBCS.
The mission statement has been in use at FLBCS since about 2013, and it remains unchanged. The Strategic Planning Team came to understand that the mission statement is hard to measure: Just how does one determine if someone else has been established in God’s Word, at least in the near term? For this reason, the Strategic Planning Team spent significant time in defining terms and learning to measure inputs more than outcomes.
Most strategic plans would restate a “vision” that serves to “put legs on” the mission of the institution. Rather than develop a statement like that, the Strategic Planning Team chose to emphasize the well-developed institutional objectives of scripture, the congregation, spiritual maturity, and great commission disciple making. The full statement of these institutional objectives may be found
here
.
Core values are those concepts that are precious to an institution. They do not repeat or restate the mission or vision but expound upon it. One way of looking at core values is “how we treat each other.” The faculty and staff of FLBCS went through a process in 2018 that led to the current statement of core values. The full explanation of these values may be found
here
.
The promise statements are new to the Free Lutheran Bible College and Seminary and have been helpful. The current promise statements are written to prospective students. FLBCS cannot promise certain outcomes, but the promise statements tell prospective students what they can expect while on campus and what they can expect because of their time at FLBCS. Promise statements are valuable because they exist outside of the student and the institution, representing a desired experience that both student and institution pursue together.
The Three-Year Strategic Narrative is a statement of what FLBCS hopes to experience after three years pursuing this direction. The plan adjusts every year, so that narrative is never accomplished completely, but the reader gains a picture of what this desired future would look like if FLBCS stays the course and remains faithful to its mission.
A strategic goal is not an operational goal. FLBCS will continue as it has been, provided for by operational plans that keep the institution moving in the current direction. Strategic goals identify desired change and focuses the Board of Trustees and Administration to provide for that desired change. In this way the mission of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom
is more robustly fulfilled.
For more on each strategic goal read the
Strategic Plan
– and paragraphs of explanation– closely. Each goal is addressed specifically, below.
Strategic Goal 1: Successfully standing against the increased pressures of conformity and compromise
The mission of FLBCS is
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
The seminary trains future pastors and leaders for free and living Lutheran congregations. The Bible College trains young men and women for whatever comes next, teaching and modeling the foundation necessary for life in Jesus Christ. Everything within this plan is designed to fulfill that mission best. FLBCS realizes that such a mission will face internal and external challenges, and this strategic plan is designed to keep compromise and conformity far away.
Strategic Goal 2: Operating with a balanced budget and have established a $10M endowment and a 9-month operating reserve
The operating reserve is already about six months, so fulfilling this part of the strategic goal isn’t a stretch. Having an operating reserve reduces pressure and keeps the institution focused on excellence, not solvency.
In one sense, FLBCS already has a balanced budget, using funds from the balance sheet to make strategic investments like this strategic plan. This is necessary to get the institution where it needs to be in years two and three, with strong programs and growing enrollment. The past few years have been challenging for everyone on the expense side of the ledger. Year one may very well end in the black on the income/expense side, but the goal is year two and three for certain.
The current endowment of FLBCS is approximately $2.2M. Total debt is about $6M, and FLBCS also maintains an operating reserve. The $10M endowment goal would include scholarship endowments, endowed chairs, and operational endowments, with earnings from principal serving to reduce costs for all students in perpetuity.
Like anything, endowments can be poorly used. Higher education endowments infamously grow tax free and insulate institutions from accountability and oversight. Some such endowments are in the billions (with a “b”) of dollars. But the Christian Higher Education world is a different world. A modest endowment can make the financial future of the institution more sure and absorb the ebbs and flows of year to year changes.
Strategic Goal 3: Increased enrollment in the Bible College to 160 while maintaining its theological integrity and campus culture
Free Lutheran Seminary has 15 students, with 20 anticipated in next year’s student body. Bible College enrollment is at 108, which is higher than the recent past and lower than capacity. Someplace between 110-120 students are expected next year.
FLBC’s Bible and Ministry program is the largest of its kind. Most such programs are hybridized with other emphases, as the straight Bible/Ministry major is not popular. However, FLBC has growing interest in this unique, focused program.
The capacity of the current FLBC campus, per city of Plymouth, is 160. With additional dormitory construction 300 could attend. In the early 2000’s FLBC had 150-170 students for a few years, topping out at 189 in 2001-2002. This was over capacity for health and safety reasons. Full capacity is considered to be about 150, since the ratio between men and women is rarely exactly right.
The focus of FLBC is not quantity, but fulfillment of its mission. Faculty, staff, and administration have never been more focused. Even if the full campus capacity of 300 is reached, it is still small enough to offer the current program and services with excellence and integrity, allowing more students to be
established in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
Faculty, staff, and administration of FLBC focus on
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
This is accomplished through academic study, residential life, and intentional discipleship outside of the classroom. The entire purpose of the school is theological, spiritual, and academic focus.
Strategic Goal 4: Offer a BA and AA in Bible and Ministry
Diploma in Biblical Studies–
The current program at FLBC.
Associates of Arts in Bible and Ministry
– Building on the current program at FLBC, the AA will add general education requirements (*see below), either through transfer credits already earned by students, or by taking a few new classes offered by FLBC (**see below).
Bachelor of Arts in Bible and Ministry–
Building on the current program at FLBC, the BA will allow students to take more classes that FLBC offers or would like to offer, including a number of congregationally-focused emphases.
FLBC teaches in only one area (Bible and Ministry), so that is the only major that will be offered. FLBC is working on a number of congregationally focused emphases including seminary preparation, youth and family ministry (in cooperation with AFLC Youth Ministries), worship and music ministry, cross-cultural ministry, and church planting (in cooperation with AFLC Home Missions).
While there is nothing wrong with degrees other than Bible and Ministry, and one could certainly provide other degrees in the context of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom
, Bible and Ministry is all FLBCS does. It would be a stretch to do anything else, and the campus lacks capacity for more programs. Adding programs to gain students is an approach that doesn’t work. FLBC plans to keep the focus narrow and the standard high and expects to gain both quantity and quality by doing so.
AA and BA degrees must include a broad base of study. This contrasts with technical or professional training which is specific and narrow. In recent years general education requirements have shrunk in number, shifted in content, and become quite easy to obtain. Every system has different general education requirements, and you can find them listed on most college/university web sites. For TRACS-accredited institutions (FLBCS), general education must include at least three credits in each of four areas:
Communications
Mathematics and Lab Science
Social or Behavioral Science
Humanities and Fine Arts
AA students must have at least 15 total credits in these areas, while BA students must total at least 30. The other credits are major specific.
Many FLBC classes already fulfill general education requirements. Indeed, the first catalog of “Free Lutheran Bible School” in 1966 included composition, literature, public speaking, and typing as general education courses. FLBC will offer some additional courses (**see below) soon, but these courses are necessary for great education, not just to fulfill a requirement. Most FLBC classes fit under the “humanities and fine arts” label, so there is no problem achieving the total number of credits.
FLBC will be slow to transfer in major-specific courses, but about 2/3 of current FLBC students already have some general education credits completed before attending FLBC. This is due to AP, dual enrollment, and PSEO courses that are now offered by various state entities and secondary school curricula. For this reason, most students will be able to fulfill general education requirements with little change in the current FLBC program.
While this plan is still under development, FLBC plans to offer several courses that are desired or required for seminary admission, plus some other courses that would provide students a more robust education in Bible and Ministry. Courses are being developed not to satisfy requirements but to better
establish students in the Word of God for life in Jesus Christ.
This includes more history than is already taught, a formal composition class to teach students how to write better, and classes that will study great Christian literature. Additionally, FLBC is working on a way for students to take an
introduction to logic
class from a world class instructor, thus satisfying the math/science requirement. We also envision an introduction to Biblical counseling class and a congregational lay leadership class that would build on what students learn in Principles of Congregational Life. Areas of emphasis will have specific congregational application, including (potentially) some internship/residency requirement. Finally, FLBC students will be able to take Greek, Hebrew, a full hermeneutics course, an introduction to philosophy, and potentially even Norwegian.
Currently, students graduating from FLBC receive a Diploma in Biblical Studies, something that means a lot to many alumni, but very little in the context of degree completion and/or credit transfer. A reasonably sized portion of FLBC graduates go on to finish a major in Bible and Ministry at other institutions, often using their courses from FLBC as the bulk of that major, taking generals and electives at the transfer institution.
Very few modifications are necessary, in part because over half of enrolling students bring general education credits with them as they matriculate at FLBC. Several FLBC courses would fulfill general education requirements, and other courses are necessary as FLBC teaches students to read, write, think, speak, and listen, or to do so better than they already do. Many do not know that the original catalog at FLBC included speaking, composition, literature, and typing. Doing all of this (maybe not typing) is an essential part of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
Students will need to complete someplace between zero and nine credits beyond what they already take at FLBC, and for doing so they will gain a degree that is more recognized and transferable, and thus valuable.
Another significant opportunity identified in the process of strategic planning is the ability to teach the rest of a Bible and Ministry degree to those students seeking the same. While this directly affects men preparing for seminary, other students will benefit as well. This comes with many benefits: Graduates do not have to depend on the faithfulness of another institution; Recruiters will focus on the FLBC program rather than answering how credits will or may transfer; Students will have more exposure to AFLC congregational settings and instructors from the AFLC; Students will benefit longer from the discipleship learning community experience on campus at FLBC.
FLBC believes that the best way to accomplish the mission of
establishing students in the Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom
is to teach the full scope of the Bible and Ministry curriculum at FLBC. A growing number of students want more of what FLBC offers. Some go elsewhere to finish Bible and Ministry degrees, taking classes that FLBC would gladly teach if offered more time. This is true especially in the seminary, where FLS staff coaches students on how best to prepare for a future seminary education, when those classes could be offered in an AFLC setting and context.
As campus can hold additional students, building out this program will help costs through economy of scale. Tuition, room, board, and fees rose recently in response to significant inflation but not in relation to this program. BA students will pay what all students pay and will have access to dorm and food service facilities just like current FLBC students.
Students with no prior general education credit will either need to take more classes or reduce elective credit to make room for general education credits. As nearly 60% of classes at FLBC are exegetical Bible classes, this could cost a student one or two Bible classes. The tradeoff is that at the same time these students will be taught to read, write, think, speak, and listen, making their remaining Bible classes more effective and their education more enduring. For many students there will be no change. BA students will receive much more Bible instruction than in the current FLBC program.
The vast majority of students will attend two years at FLBC, “starting here, going anywhere, grounded in God’s Word.” For those inclined to study Bible and Ministry, FLBC is a great place to continue studying in the one area it offers. The initial plan is that about 15% of students will pursue a BA at FLBC. Many will accomplish that in under four years.
One reason to consider this development is to mitigate government involvement. Non-degree-granting institutions tend to receive higher scrutiny from government entities, and non-accredited entities even more so. The language of AA and BA is easier to communicate with governmental entities. There are no guarantees, and institutions such as ours are often targeted, as studies in Bible and Ministry are seen as superfluous– even evil– by some. FLBC works closely with other institutions and the Alliance Defending Freedom to monitor potential threats. Through the current strategic plan, FLBCS works diligently to identify threats, preserve the character, and maximize the effectiveness of the Bible and Ministry program.
There will be some course development, some hiring of adjunct professors, a little bit of marketing and recruiting, some fundraising, and a whole lot of updating with accreditation. FLBC will wait to do most of this until after April, when the five-year reaffirmation of accreditation is received from TRACS.
Strategic Goal 5: Implement at least three new outreach emphases and practices, employing the values and skills of students and graduates to impact the AFLC
Current students already serve in gospel teams and summer teams, alongside serving in local congregations as members. There is room for this to grow, and for students to learn to love the city even if they are more comfortable in more rural areas.
All of this is hypothetical, but includes youth sports, urban ministry (perhaps in a Christian school in an urban area), or service at a pregnancy resource center.
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2025-2028 Strategic Plan
A three-year rolling strategic plan developed by the FLBCS Board of Trustees.
Core Purpose
The mission of FLBCS is: E
stablishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His Kingdom.
The goal of this strategic plan is to provide increased quality of Bible education to FLBCS students, while standing strong against physical and spiritual pressures to the institution and its mission. Please refer to the
FAQ's section
for answers to commonly asked questions about this plan.
FREE LUTHERAN BIBLE COLLEGE
was founded in 1966 to see God transform young people through the teaching of His Word. It was of primary concern among the founders of the AFLC to establish young Christians in the Word of God and help believers be equipped for life and ministry in local congregations and communities.
FREE LUTHERAN SEMINARY
was founded in 1964 to train men to be servant pastors in the AFLC. The founders of the AFLC wanted pastors trained to handle the infallible and inerrant Word of God with respect and care, and to minister to their congregations with love and attentiveness, understanding the congregation as the right form of the kingdom of God on earth.
Institutional Objectives >
Word of God
Congregation
Spiritual Maturity
Great Commission Disciple Making
Core Values >
Equipping for Future Vocation
Integrity
Stewardship
Whole Life Discipleship
Life Together
Our Promise to Our Students
WE PROMISE THAT AT FREE LUTHERAN BIBLE COLLEGE
you will learn from great teachers to love Scripture and the Author of it. They will care for you, walk with you, and introduce you to the truth of the Bible. Here you will find a warm, encouraging community of people like you who want to know and follow Jesus more deeply. You will learn in great facilities on a beautiful campus that provides places to study, think, pray, and reflect. Here you will find a sure foundation for your life and be prepared for a lifetime of service in your congregation and calling.
WE PROMISE THAT AT FREE LUTHERAN SEMINARY
you will be mentored by professors who will care for you and prepare you to shepherd God’s people and preach the Word in the congregation with impact. Here you will be immersed in the Word of God and historic Lutheran doctrine and find fellowship with peers in a community that will pray for you, care for you, walk with you, and encourage you. You will leave here with ministry opportunities, little to no seminary student debt, and the confidence to fulfill God’s calling on your life and vocation.
Strategic Goals
The FLBCS strategic plan exists as three-year plan that is updated every year. This plan is a result of strategic planning, which exists at FLBCS because of regular strategic thinking. Every year FLBCS is in a new “year one” of a strategic plan, so the plan is never neglected, ignored, out of touch, or out of date.
Goal #1
Funding the Mission
By July 31, 2028, while operating with a balanced budget, FLBCS will have a positive net change for operational income for the previous three fiscal years, have established an endowment of $5M, a 3-month operating reserve, and reduced overall facility debt to under $2M. As of May 2025, we have a limited operating reserve, $5M in facility debt, and a $2.8M endowment. Some planned gifts will help in the near future, but a campaign of some kind, perhaps in concert with goal #3, below, is probable in the lead up to refinancing the Student Life Center in 2027.
Goal #2
Recruiting
By July 31, 2028, FLBCS will have expanded its reach through marketing its existing programs to an expanded audience while recruiting/retaining students across all its programs. FLS benefits from strong FLBC enrollment. FLBC already attracts a large percentage of AFLC-related students. As of May 2025, we are seeking sources of potential students outside the AFLC, especially in the Minneapolis/St. Paul area. There are many such potentials to be reached through invitation to campus and meeting with ministries in person on their turf. Fall 2025 will have 120+ undergraduates and about 22 seminarians.
Goal #3
Campus Capacity
By July 31, 2028, FLBCS will have additional affordable and flexible housing solutions for students and/or staff. Our current dorms hold about 160 students. We have 12 seminary housing units. We may have need for additional student capacity, but we need places for married students and/or staff members to live. The local housing economy is challenging for most of our employees, and the ability to host some of them on campus is attractive. As of April 2025, we are working with an architect to discern how best to use space on campus and what it would cost to make these plans happen.
Goal #4
Excellence in Bible and Ministry
By July 31, 2028, FLBCS will have graduated its fourth cohort of BA students, while further developing the BA in Bible and Ministry program to include offerings in Home and World Missions, Youth Ministries, and Worship leading. The first cohort of BA students graduated in May 2025, along with a second year Bible College class that now received an AA. Course modifications are underway to teach the program better and expand offerings to include the areas mentioned above. This will be mature by 2027.
What This Might Look Like
By Graduation 2028...
Growing enrollment approaching 160 undergraduates (AA and BA together)
Six future pastors annually from a seminary enrollment of 25
Mature emphases in worship music ministry, youth/family ministry, and cross-cultural missions
Three-month cash reserve, making line of credit use unlikely
Institutional debt under $2M (currently $5M)
Endowment of $5M (currently $2.8M)
Additional, flexible housing solutions on/near campus
Graduates influencing health of congregations both inside and outside the AFLC
Consistent, growing momentum for FLBCS programs
Strategic Plan FAQs
This list will be updated as new questions materialize.
The Strategic Planning Team consisted of six administrators, two alumni, and four board members. Most faculty members, many staff members, several alumni, and a handful of corporation and community members were consulted at various times through the process.
The Strategic Planning Team used a consultant to help move the process along. Scott Rodin of The Focus Group was the consultant that helped with Board Governance Training, so he understands the culture and needs of both FLBCS and the AFLC. The consultant helped the Strategic Planning Team avoid “echo chambers” and “group think” that makes institutions blind to their own blind spots. He also helped synthesize the team’s thoughts and led the team to a place of broad agreement around the mission, vision, and core values of FLBCS.
After significant development, checking, input, and revision, the Board of Trustees adopted this strategic plan at their January 2023 meeting, seeking to establish and strengthen the mission of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
The FLBC
Core Purpose
comes from some historic documents. This process has included examining the founding purposes of FLBC, including looking at early catalogs, practices, and documents. The FLS
Core Purpose
is a new purpose based on the assumed/understood purpose of the Seminary, which was the first program to exist at FLBCS.
The mission statement has been in use at FLBCS since about 2013, and it remains unchanged. The Strategic Planning Team came to understand that the mission statement is hard to measure: Just how does one determine if someone else has been established in God’s Word, at least in the near term? For this reason, the Strategic Planning Team spent significant time in defining terms and learning to measure inputs more than outcomes.
Most strategic plans would restate a “vision” that serves to “put legs on” the mission of the institution. Rather than develop a statement like that, the Strategic Planning Team chose to emphasize the well-developed institutional objectives of scripture, the congregation, spiritual maturity, and great commission disciple making. The full statement of these institutional objectives may be found
here
.
Core values are those concepts that are precious to an institution. They do not repeat or restate the mission or vision but expound upon it. One way of looking at core values is “how we treat each other.” The faculty and staff of FLBCS went through a process in 2018 that led to the current statement of core values. The full explanation of these values may be found
here
.
The promise statements are new to the Free Lutheran Bible College and Seminary and have been helpful. The current promise statements are written to prospective students. FLBCS cannot promise certain outcomes, but the promise statements tell prospective students what they can expect while on campus and what they can expect because of their time at FLBCS. Promise statements are valuable because they exist outside of the student and the institution, representing a desired experience that both student and institution pursue together.
The Three-Year Strategic Narrative is a statement of what FLBCS hopes to experience after three years pursuing this direction. The plan adjusts every year, so that narrative is never accomplished completely, but the reader gains a picture of what this desired future would look like if FLBCS stays the course and remains faithful to its mission.
A strategic goal is not an operational goal. FLBCS will continue as it has been, provided for by operational plans that keep the institution moving in the current direction. Strategic goals identify desired change and focuses the Board of Trustees and Administration to provide for that desired change. In this way the mission of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom
is more robustly fulfilled.
For more on each strategic goal read the
Strategic Plan
– and paragraphs of explanation– closely. Each goal is addressed specifically, below.
Strategic Goal 1: Successfully standing against the increased pressures of conformity and compromise
The mission of FLBCS is
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
The seminary trains future pastors and leaders for free and living Lutheran congregations. The Bible College trains young men and women for whatever comes next, teaching and modeling the foundation necessary for life in Jesus Christ. Everything within this plan is designed to fulfill that mission best. FLBCS realizes that such a mission will face internal and external challenges, and this strategic plan is designed to keep compromise and conformity far away.
Strategic Goal 2: Operating with a balanced budget and have established a $10M endowment and a 9-month operating reserve
The operating reserve is already about six months, so fulfilling this part of the strategic goal isn’t a stretch. Having an operating reserve reduces pressure and keeps the institution focused on excellence, not solvency.
In one sense, FLBCS already has a balanced budget, using funds from the balance sheet to make strategic investments like this strategic plan. This is necessary to get the institution where it needs to be in years two and three, with strong programs and growing enrollment. The past few years have been challenging for everyone on the expense side of the ledger. Year one may very well end in the black on the income/expense side, but the goal is year two and three for certain.
The current endowment of FLBCS is approximately $2.2M. Total debt is about $6M, and FLBCS also maintains an operating reserve. The $10M endowment goal would include scholarship endowments, endowed chairs, and operational endowments, with earnings from principal serving to reduce costs for all students in perpetuity.
Like anything, endowments can be poorly used. Higher education endowments infamously grow tax free and insulate institutions from accountability and oversight. Some such endowments are in the billions (with a “b”) of dollars. But the Christian Higher Education world is a different world. A modest endowment can make the financial future of the institution more sure and absorb the ebbs and flows of year to year changes.
Strategic Goal 3: Increased enrollment in the Bible College to 160 while maintaining its theological integrity and campus culture
Free Lutheran Seminary has 15 students, with 20 anticipated in next year’s student body. Bible College enrollment is at 108, which is higher than the recent past and lower than capacity. Someplace between 110-120 students are expected next year.
FLBC’s Bible and Ministry program is the largest of its kind. Most such programs are hybridized with other emphases, as the straight Bible/Ministry major is not popular. However, FLBC has growing interest in this unique, focused program.
The capacity of the current FLBC campus, per city of Plymouth, is 160. With additional dormitory construction 300 could attend. In the early 2000’s FLBC had 150-170 students for a few years, topping out at 189 in 2001-2002. This was over capacity for health and safety reasons. Full capacity is considered to be about 150, since the ratio between men and women is rarely exactly right.
The focus of FLBC is not quantity, but fulfillment of its mission. Faculty, staff, and administration have never been more focused. Even if the full campus capacity of 300 is reached, it is still small enough to offer the current program and services with excellence and integrity, allowing more students to be
established in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
Faculty, staff, and administration of FLBC focus on
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
This is accomplished through academic study, residential life, and intentional discipleship outside of the classroom. The entire purpose of the school is theological, spiritual, and academic focus.
Strategic Goal 4: Offer a BA and AA in Bible and Ministry
Diploma in Biblical Studies–
The current program at FLBC.
Associates of Arts in Bible and Ministry
– Building on the current program at FLBC, the AA will add general education requirements (*see below), either through transfer credits already earned by students, or by taking a few new classes offered by FLBC (**see below).
Bachelor of Arts in Bible and Ministry–
Building on the current program at FLBC, the BA will allow students to take more classes that FLBC offers or would like to offer, including a number of congregationally-focused emphases.
FLBC teaches in only one area (Bible and Ministry), so that is the only major that will be offered. FLBC is working on a number of congregationally focused emphases including seminary preparation, youth and family ministry (in cooperation with AFLC Youth Ministries), worship and music ministry, cross-cultural ministry, and church planting (in cooperation with AFLC Home Missions).
While there is nothing wrong with degrees other than Bible and Ministry, and one could certainly provide other degrees in the context of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom
, Bible and Ministry is all FLBCS does. It would be a stretch to do anything else, and the campus lacks capacity for more programs. Adding programs to gain students is an approach that doesn’t work. FLBC plans to keep the focus narrow and the standard high and expects to gain both quantity and quality by doing so.
AA and BA degrees must include a broad base of study. This contrasts with technical or professional training which is specific and narrow. In recent years general education requirements have shrunk in number, shifted in content, and become quite easy to obtain. Every system has different general education requirements, and you can find them listed on most college/university web sites. For TRACS-accredited institutions (FLBCS), general education must include at least three credits in each of four areas:
Communications
Mathematics and Lab Science
Social or Behavioral Science
Humanities and Fine Arts
AA students must have at least 15 total credits in these areas, while BA students must total at least 30. The other credits are major specific.
Many FLBC classes already fulfill general education requirements. Indeed, the first catalog of “Free Lutheran Bible School” in 1966 included composition, literature, public speaking, and typing as general education courses. FLBC will offer some additional courses (**see below) soon, but these courses are necessary for great education, not just to fulfill a requirement. Most FLBC classes fit under the “humanities and fine arts” label, so there is no problem achieving the total number of credits.
FLBC will be slow to transfer in major-specific courses, but about 2/3 of current FLBC students already have some general education credits completed before attending FLBC. This is due to AP, dual enrollment, and PSEO courses that are now offered by various state entities and secondary school curricula. For this reason, most students will be able to fulfill general education requirements with little change in the current FLBC program.
While this plan is still under development, FLBC plans to offer several courses that are desired or required for seminary admission, plus some other courses that would provide students a more robust education in Bible and Ministry. Courses are being developed not to satisfy requirements but to better
establish students in the Word of God for life in Jesus Christ.
This includes more history than is already taught, a formal composition class to teach students how to write better, and classes that will study great Christian literature. Additionally, FLBC is working on a way for students to take an
introduction to logic
class from a world class instructor, thus satisfying the math/science requirement. We also envision an introduction to Biblical counseling class and a congregational lay leadership class that would build on what students learn in Principles of Congregational Life. Areas of emphasis will have specific congregational application, including (potentially) some internship/residency requirement. Finally, FLBC students will be able to take Greek, Hebrew, a full hermeneutics course, an introduction to philosophy, and potentially even Norwegian.
Currently, students graduating from FLBC receive a Diploma in Biblical Studies, something that means a lot to many alumni, but very little in the context of degree completion and/or credit transfer. A reasonably sized portion of FLBC graduates go on to finish a major in Bible and Ministry at other institutions, often using their courses from FLBC as the bulk of that major, taking generals and electives at the transfer institution.
Very few modifications are necessary, in part because over half of enrolling students bring general education credits with them as they matriculate at FLBC. Several FLBC courses would fulfill general education requirements, and other courses are necessary as FLBC teaches students to read, write, think, speak, and listen, or to do so better than they already do. Many do not know that the original catalog at FLBC included speaking, composition, literature, and typing. Doing all of this (maybe not typing) is an essential part of
establishing students in the eternal and inerrant Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom.
Students will need to complete someplace between zero and nine credits beyond what they already take at FLBC, and for doing so they will gain a degree that is more recognized and transferable, and thus valuable.
Another significant opportunity identified in the process of strategic planning is the ability to teach the rest of a Bible and Ministry degree to those students seeking the same. While this directly affects men preparing for seminary, other students will benefit as well. This comes with many benefits: Graduates do not have to depend on the faithfulness of another institution; Recruiters will focus on the FLBC program rather than answering how credits will or may transfer; Students will have more exposure to AFLC congregational settings and instructors from the AFLC; Students will benefit longer from the discipleship learning community experience on campus at FLBC.
FLBC believes that the best way to accomplish the mission of
establishing students in the Word of God for a life of faith in Jesus Christ and faithful service in His kingdom
is to teach the full scope of the Bible and Ministry curriculum at FLBC. A growing number of students want more of what FLBC offers. Some go elsewhere to finish Bible and Ministry degrees, taking classes that FLBC would gladly teach if offered more time. This is true especially in the seminary, where FLS staff coaches students on how best to prepare for a future seminary education, when those classes could be offered in an AFLC setting and context.
As campus can hold additional students, building out this program will help costs through economy of scale. Tuition, room, board, and fees rose recently in response to significant inflation but not in relation to this program. BA students will pay what all students pay and will have access to dorm and food service facilities just like current FLBC students.
Students with no prior general education credit will either need to take more classes or reduce elective credit to make room for general education credits. As nearly 60% of classes at FLBC are exegetical Bible classes, this could cost a student one or two Bible classes. The tradeoff is that at the same time these students will be taught to read, write, think, speak, and listen, making their remaining Bible classes more effective and their education more enduring. For many students there will be no change. BA students will receive much more Bible instruction than in the current FLBC program.
The vast majority of students will attend two years at FLBC, “starting here, going anywhere, grounded in God’s Word.” For those inclined to study Bible and Ministry, FLBC is a great place to continue studying in the one area it offers. The initial plan is that about 15% of students will pursue a BA at FLBC. Many will accomplish that in under four years.
One reason to consider this development is to mitigate government involvement. Non-degree-granting institutions tend to receive higher scrutiny from government entities, and non-accredited entities even more so. The language of AA and BA is easier to communicate with governmental entities. There are no guarantees, and institutions such as ours are often targeted, as studies in Bible and Ministry are seen as superfluous– even evil– by some. FLBC works closely with other institutions and the Alliance Defending Freedom to monitor potential threats. Through the current strategic plan, FLBCS works diligently to identify threats, preserve the character, and maximize the effectiveness of the Bible and Ministry program.
There will be some course development, some hiring of adjunct professors, a little bit of marketing and recruiting, some fundraising, and a whole lot of updating with accreditation. FLBC will wait to do most of this until after April, when the five-year reaffirmation of accreditation is received from TRACS.
Strategic Goal 5: Implement at least three new outreach emphases and practices, employing the values and skills of students and graduates to impact the AFLC
Current students already serve in gospel teams and summer teams, alongside serving in local congregations as members. There is room for this to grow, and for students to learn to love the city even if they are more comfortable in more rural areas.
All of this is hypothetical, but includes youth sports, urban ministry (perhaps in a Christian school in an urban area), or service at a pregnancy resource center.
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