LCU holds spring revival
βYou cannot live in the freedom of Christ until youβre open about who you are and who He is.β Kirk Jones delivered messages about being βOpen and Freeβ at Louisiana Christian Universityβs annual Spring Revival series this week.
Jones, the president of the Louisiana Baptist Convention, is pastor of Fellowship Church in Prairieville.
Speaking from Romans 12:1-2, Jones spoke to students and staff on the mercies of God and learning to live in those mercies.
Trying to live a perfect life is not what God is trying to teach us, he said.
Simply, he said, do what God has told you to do. βThe better we know His will, the more we do His will,β Jones said. βJust start where you are with the thing you know, and trust He will lead you.
And when you are faithful with the little things, He will give you more. βHe who is faithful is given much,β he said.
βThe will of God is not as tricky as we think it is. He isnβt trying to trick us. But itβs harder to find Godβs will when we are far from it. The closer we get, the easier it is. Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you.β
Drawing from Proverbs 3:5-6, Jones said, we all live with a lean, whether thatβs into Christ or into the world. He asked attendees what or who they are leaning on.
βTrusting is leaning,β he said. βWhen I trust the Lord, I lean into His truth even when I donβt understand why itβs the truth.β
He challenged students to begin each day in Godβs Word.
βTrusting is not testing,β Jones said. βWe trust the Lord with everything, or we trust the Lord with nothing. Knowing the Lordβs will comes from knowing the Lord.β
Trusting the Lord does not mean answers to all your questions will come immediately, he said. βIf you donβt know what God wants you to do next, keep doing what He told you to do last.β
Following Christ wonβt always be easy, Jones said. It may cost friendships and relationships. He encouraged students to quit watching what the world is doing and to go against the culture.
βItβs not always easy,β Jones said. βItβs not always fun, but it is fulfilling.β
LCU President Dr. Mark Johnson said it was a joy to welcome Pastor Kirk Jones back to campus for revival services.
βHaving him with us was more than hosting a guest preacher; it was welcoming home one of our own,β Johnson said. βAs an alumnus, he understands Wildcat Nation. He knows our history, our heart and the unique calling on this campus. The connection was evident in the way he spoke, not as an outsider, but as someone who has walked our halls, sat in these classrooms and grown through this community.β
Jonesβ messages were clear, biblical and deeply relevant to the seasons of life students are navigating, filled with both conviction and compassion, Johnson said.
βWhat stood out even more was his presence beyond the pulpit,β Johnson said. βHe joined us for lunch, connected with students at FCA, attended additional campus events, and made himself available for meaningful conversations. In a season when schedules are full and demands are many, his willingness to give his time was a precious gift. He didnβt rush in and out; he invested.
βOur students benefited not only from what he preached, but from how he engaged. We are grateful for the impact he made on Wildcat Nation during this revival.β
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Media Release Β Β |Β Β February 16, 2026 Β Β | Β Β Pineville, Louisiana
Contact: Dr. Elizabeth B. Clarke, Director of University Communications | Elizabeth.clarke@lcuniversity.edu