
Dave and Shirley Karnes have been investing in Biola students for nearly three decades. To date, 23 students (and counting) have received help from the couple for needs like tuition, housing, computers and new musical instruments.
But the Karneses are more than just financial benefactors for these students; they are surrogate parents, grandparents, friends and mentors. They become family to students, taking them out for meals, inviting them on road trips and vacations, walking with them during post-Biola life.
Violinist Simona Talberga (鈥09) is one example of a student whose life the Karneses have changed. After meeting her on a trip to Latvia in 2005, the Karneses became Simona鈥檚 鈥淎merican parents,鈥 helping her afford to attend Biola鈥檚 Conservatory of Music and then the Longy School of Music in Boston for a master鈥檚 degree. Simona spent summers with the couple in Lake Almanor in Northern California, and when she married, Dave walked her down the aisle. Earlier this year, the Karneses traveled to Florida to meet Simona and her husband鈥檚 recently born baby, Elliot.
The Karneses have given generously to many fundraising needs at Biola, but for them, the students 鈥 the Biola 鈥減roduct鈥 鈥 are always the top priority.
鈥淭hese students are the future of our country, the future of the church, the future of everything,鈥 Dave said. 鈥淭he quality of Biola students and their desire to serve the Lord in everything they do ... that is what motivates us to give.鈥
The gap between a student鈥檚 desire for a biblically centered education and their ability to afford it is something Shirley experienced personally as a Biola student in 1957. Her family didn鈥檛 have the money to pay for more than one year of tuition at Biola, then located in downtown Los Angeles. But Shirley鈥檚 brief Biola experience impacted her greatly, and after reconnecting with the university in the 1980s and 鈥90s, she and Dave quickly became some of its most committed supporters.
Wherever they are in the world, the Karneses are on the lookout for the next student God brings their way to help.
At a gift shop in Lake Almanor, while chatting with a young clerk, Dave learned of a cellist at Biola named Sarah. She soon became 鈥渓ike a granddaughter鈥 to the Karneses, who supported her as a student and have kept in touch with her even after she married and moved to Washington. Or there was the mom of a grade-school girl in Amsterdam whom the couple befriended. Years later, when the girl was looking for colleges in America, the Karneses spent the day showing her around Biola鈥檚 campus. Of the five Christian colleges she visited, the girl picked Biola and is now a sophomore. In March, the Karneses visited her on campus for 鈥 what else 鈥 Biola鈥檚 Grandparents Day.
As the number of Biola students who call the Karneses family keeps growing, Dave and Shirley insist that it鈥檚 the Lord, not them, who is making a difference.
鈥淭he Lord puts these students in our path,鈥 said Shirley. 鈥淭he Lord is who takes care of them.鈥