Prominent philanthropist and arts patron Roberta Green Ahmanson addressed graduates Friday, Dec. 16 at 黑料历史鈥檚 fall commencement. Biola president Barry H. Corey conferred degrees to the more than 400 students 鈥 232 students received their bachelor鈥檚 degrees at the undergraduate ceremony and 208 students received degrees at the graduate ceremony.
Ahmanson is the University鈥檚 visionary-in-residence for Biola鈥檚 鈥淵ear of the Arts鈥 for the 2011-12 school year. Focusing on the theme of the Year of the Arts: Sanctuary and Sacred Space, Ahmanson spoke on the need for Christians to reclaim the prophetic heavenly vision of the New Jerusalem in her address, titled 鈥淟ooking for the City.鈥
Ahmanson provided honest wisdom to the graduates emanating from her own life experiences. She urged the graduates to find sacred space in their relationship with God casting away any other false idols in their life and embracing the vision for the New Jerusalem. 聽
鈥淐hristians in the past understood that they were citizens of two countries: this world and the New Jerusalem,鈥 said Ahmanson. 鈥淎nd, as C.S. Lewis wrote, those who understood that best did the most for this world.鈥
Painting a realistic picture of today鈥檚 society, Ahmanson contrasted the secular and worldly behaviors with those of light and biblical vision through the use of photographs and paintings splashed on a screen above her at commencement.
Ahmanson and her husband Howard were listed in 2005 among the 25 鈥渕ost influential U.S. evangelicals鈥 by Time magazine, under the headline 鈥淭he Financiers.鈥 Their foundation, Fieldstead and Co., supports a variety of causes in education, the arts, health and science, public policy, relief and development.
Ahmanson, the subject of a lengthy 2011 profile in Christianity Today titled 鈥淐onnoisseur for Christ,鈥 chairs the board of the Museum of Biblical Art (MOBIA) in New York City and belongs to the Collectors Committee at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. She and her husband have sponsored a number of art exhibitions in the United States and Great Britain, including at the National Gallery in London.
A former reporter for the Orange County Register, Ahmanson lectures and writes frequently and is the co-author of聽Islam at the Crossroads (2002) and a contributor and co-editor of聽Blind Spot: When Journalists Don't Get Religion (2008).
Purchase a DVD of the commencement ceremonies including Roberta Ahmanson's address.
Written by Jenna Bartlo, Media Relations Coordinator. Jenna can be reached at 562.777.4061 or jenna.l.bartlo@biola.edu.