Athletics PCC participates in the
National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA) for
intercollegiate sports. Sports include men's basketball and soccer and women's basketball and volleyball. The men's wrestling team won the NCCAA national championship in 1994, 1995, 1996, and 1998, the last year before the NCCAA discontinued the sport. The Eagles men's basketball games as well as Lady Eagles basketball games and volleyball are played in the arena level of the Sports Center. PCC also hosts a number of invitational high school sporting tournaments and camps. In addition to intercollegiate athletics, PCC students are also afforded the opportunity to play intramural sports through their Collegians. Sports offered through collegians include soccer,
basketball,
softball,
volleyball, and broom hockey among others, and the Eagles have a
cheerleading squad called the Blue Crew. Every fall Collegian Soccer culminates with the winners of the playoffs facing each other in the annual Turkey Bowl held over the Thanksgiving weekend. In the spring, students can play softball and basketball.
Recreation The campus offers opportunities for individual or group recreation, such as the Arlin R. Horton Sports Center which opened in 1993. The Sports Center has facilities for
ice skating, bowling, racquetball, miniature golf, table tennis, and weight lifting. A 2008 expansion by Hewes & Company, LLC added a waterpark with a
FlowRider Double and water cannons, an
inline skating track, a rooftop sun deck, a snack bar, and
climbing walls. The campus also has the John Ray Hall Field House, the former home of Eagle men's basketball, in which students can play basketball, swim, work out in the weight room, and play tennis. The West Campus has 24
Hobie catamarans with classes "offered in sailing, kayaking, swimming, and lifeguarding."
Academia PCC offers many collegiate clubs and opportunities for its students to grow academically. The newest addition to these clubs, is the forming of a student chapter on campus of
IEEE-the largest organization of electrical engineers in the country. PCC recently competed at
IEEE's SoutheastCon robotics competition.
Rules and regulations PCC policies govern many aspects of the students' lives, including dress,
hairstyles, cleanliness of residence hall rooms, styles of music, borrowing, off-campus employment, and Internet access. For example, "All students are expected to dress modestly, in conservative fashions and ... men are not to wear effeminate hairstyles or apparel." PCC also prohibits physical contact and interaction between unwed members of the opposite sex. Mixed groups must obtain a "3+ Pass" to hang out off campus, however, men and women are not allowed to ride in the same vehicle to the destination without an approved
chaperone. Students over the age of 23 are not required to have a chaperone on a date, but cannot go to a beach or a park after dark. Most stairwells, elevators, and parking lots on campus are
segregated by gender. This includes all residence halls where the students live. Other prohibited activities at PCC include "fornication, adultery, homosexual behavior, or any other sexual perversion. Also, any involvement in pornography or sexual communications, including verbal, written, or electronic." In addition, "most forms of dancing," profanity, hazing, discrimination, gambling, stealing and "witchcraft, séances, astrology, or any other satanic practices" are also banned. Students are also not allowed to use, possess, or "associate" with alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs. "demerits," or be
expelled. Students may be given notices, charges, demerits, or be expelled. While being shadowed the student was prohibited from speaking with any student other than with the Floor Leader who was shadowing them. The rules and disciplinary policies at Pensacola Christian College have been the subject of criticism. In 1996 a PCC alumnus started an
electronic newsletter entitled
The Student Voice, which criticized PCC, particularly the school's rules and demerit system. It was originally published in a newsletter format distributed exclusively via e-mail, and it was later published online. Following numerous attempts by the college to have the website shut down through
arbitration and
lawsuits, the website's owners relinquished control of the domain to the college, who has redirected the domain to the main PCC website.
Faith and King-James-only debate PCC rejects
hyper-Calvinism,
Modernism,
Neo-orthodoxy, and the modern day
charismatic movement and specifically states that "Pensacola Christian is not a part of the 'tongues movement' and does not allow students to participate in or promote any charismatic activities, nor do we permit students to promote hyper-Calvinism." PCC also states the belief that the
Textus Receptus is the superior Greek text of the Bible and upon this basis uses the
King James Version of the Bible for all pulpit ministry and classroom Bible instruction. ==Affiliated ministries of PCC==