news-category: GWU Commencement Gardner-Webb Recognizes Nearly 300 Graduates in 2025 Fall Commencement By Office of University Communications On December 12, 2025 Ceremony on Dec. 12 Awards Degrees and Honors Scholastic Achievements BOILING SPRINGS, N.C.—Gardner-Webb University celebrated the achievements of nearly 300 graduates in Commencement Ceremonies on Dec. 12 at 9 a.m. in Lutz-Yelton Convocation Center. Students who completed the associate, bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees during the 2025 Fall Semester were recognized. Gardner-Webb President Nate Evans Gardner-Webb President Nate Evans noted the significance of the event as he welcomed the graduates, their families and friends. “Commencement is always one of the most joyful days of the year because it reflects the very heart of our mission: Students pursuing their calling, growing in knowledge and character, and preparing to make a difference in the world,” he asserted. “And so, we gather today to celebrate you…and, perhaps most importantly…to honor the promise you carry forward from this moment and this place: the promise of a bright and rewarding future.” Senior Scholastic awards were presented to traditional undergraduates: Carley Brooke Lawter Kalem Darius Griffin Caitlin Mackenzie Hines Jacob P. Jensen The online senior scholastic awards were present to Tona Deann Marlow, who completed her degree in the fall semester, and Donna Denise Woody for the summer semester. Doctoral candidates and those receiving their master’s degrees received their hoods. Evans conferred undergraduate and graduate degrees on all graduates. Dr. Robert Canoy The featured speaker was Dr. Robert Canoy, who served as dean of the Gardner-Webb M. Christopher White School of Divinity for 16 years. This semester, he taught part time and will retire on Dec. 31. Canoy joined the School of Divinity faculty in 2000. Through the years, he led classes in Christian theology, Greek, eschatology, the Revelation of John, and The Ministry of Worship, a Doctor of Ministry seminar. In addition, Canoy regularly led study tours to Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Greece, and Rome. Canoy’s primary area of research is New Testament theology, having written articles and books on eschatology, and Eucharistic theology. He is the author of “Atonement in the Apocalypse: An Exposé of the Defeat of Evil.” He served as pastor in Shelby, N.C., Maryland (in the Washington D.C. area), Iowa, Missouri, and Kentucky before returning to an academic career. His teaching experience began at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary as a doctoral student and then Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Kansas City, Mo. Canoy spoke about recognizing and celebrating new beginnings, and he offered examples—from biblical characters to historic figures and recent celebrities. “The Bible is an honest book filled with ‘begin-again’ stories, if I can use that phrase,” Canoy related. “That’s because life has always been about beginning again, over and over again, since each step that we take leads to the next step. And some steps that we take require some serious recalibration. Truth is, in this life there are no last steps.” He discussed Simon Peter, who had boasted that he would never betray Jesus. “But he denied Jesus, not once, not twice, but three times, which Jesus had predicted,” Canoy observed. “But Peter ‘began again.’ He made a new start on the banks of the Sea of Galilee…Jesus gave him a new beginning, a fresh start, after his past failure.” His list of famous “do-overs” included Thomas Edison, who failed more than 100 times before finding a filament that would sustain a light bulb, and Michael Jordan, who was famously cut from his high school basketball team before becoming one of the sport’s greatest players. Canoy ended with the most remarkable “begin-againer,” Jesus Christ. “He died at 33 before making the first of its kind—the greatest historical comeback ever—called resurrection,” Canoy stated. Concluding his remarks, Canoy observed, “Graduation from Gardner-Webb University means being prepared for life’s ups and downs, highs and lows. Today’s commencement from GWU means that nothing is more important than knowing that God is all about getting us back up when we throw ourselves down or when life knocks us down. So, let us commence today to do even better tomorrow what we may have done well, or not so well yesterday, Pro Deo et Humanitate!” Video of the commencement ceremony is available on The University’s Facebook page and YouTube channel. Gardner-Webb University is North Carolina’s recognized leader in private, Christian higher education. A Carnegie-Classified Doctoral/Professional University, GWU is home to nine colleges and schools, more than 80 undergraduate and graduate majors, and a world-class faculty. Located on a beautiful 225-acre campus in Boiling Springs, N.C., Gardner-Webb prepares graduates to impact their chosen professions, equips them with the skills to advance the frontiers of knowledge, and inspires them to make a positive and lasting difference in the lives of others. 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