Watson challenges fall graduates as they enter workforce

Watson challenges fall graduates as they enter workforce

Samford University board of trustees chairman W. Clark Watson encouraged graduates to “pursue work that engages [their] mind and not simply [their] wallet” during fall commencement Dec. 18.

“I hope that Samford has instilled in you an unquenchable thirst for learning and wisdom,” Watson told the seniors. “Many of you will pursue additional formal studies and degrees, but all of you are hopefully embarking on a lifetime of learning.”

Watson, an attorney and a graduate of Samford’s Cumberland School of Law, addressed about 200 seniors and 1,500 others in Wright Center on the campus. Included were the first 11 graduates of a new accelerated degree program in the Ida V. Moffett School of Nursing.

The speaker also urged the graduates to consider careers in which they will be lifetime learners. He noted that one of the seniors had sent him an e-mail that said, “When I can do what gives me joy, then I know that financial reward will find its way there.”

Watson based the framework of his address on Samford’s motto, “For God, For Learning, Forever.” The words are descriptive of the manner in which professors, the administration and the trustees strive to nurture not only the graduates but those students who came before and those who will follow, he said.

“Samford is a rare crucible where spiritual development and robust scholastic preparation coexist and, indeed, complement each other,” he said.

Watson urged the seniors to use the motto as a “trustworthy compass” as they set their course away from Samford. “There will be lots of unanticipated detours and hazards on the road of your lives,” he said. “You will invariably take some wrong turns and find some dead ends along the way. However, you will also make some wonderful unexpected discoveries.

“That is what makes life exciting, challenging and satisfying,” he said. “That, my friends, is why you need a compass.”

Watson encouraged the seniors to entrust their lives to Jesus Christ, saying, “He will give you a heart that does not yearn for those things that the world labels as desirable.” He urged them to avoid “the culture of greed” and to live their lives “for God.”

The word “forever” in the motto serves as a reminder “that plans and decisions are best made with a view beyond the immediate,” Watson said. He urged the graduates to “enjoy a lifelong relationship with Samford” and to support their alma mater financially.

He closed with a final reference to the motto as a compass, saying, “Consult it often to make sure that your bearings are true. The world needs people who live with the perspective of ‘For God, For Learning, Forever.’ The world needs Samford people.”

The commencement program and a following reception in Beeson University Center climaxed two days of fall graduation activity. On Dec. 17, the nursing school held its traditional pinning ceremony and the Air Force ROTC detachment held its commissioning program. On Dec. 18, the Brock School of Business had its hooding program. The graduating seniors art show was held the week of Dec. 13–18, and a reception in the art gallery followed commencement.  (SU)