[2] Following its closure, the college formed a non-profit in 1983, the Southeastern Christian Education Corporation, to provide scholarships to students from a list of Churches of Christ congregations.
The filing for incorporation listed three people as the board of directors: Carl Vogt Wilson, Albert Von Allmen, and James H.
For example, in an effort to encourage unity in the churches, “Rightist” and “Centrist” leaders met on the campus in 1959 to address a “factional spirit” in the movement.
[10] However, the efforts to foster unity in the Churches of Christ sometimes resulted in controversy; in 1970 the president (LaVern Houtz) and ten of the college's fifteen faculty members were asked to resign for their acceptance a charismatic movement in American Christianity.
[9] With approximately serving 3000 students in its thirty year existence, Southeastern Christian College was always small; it struggled to support itself with tuition, grants, and gifts from the churches that funded it.