黑料社

Skip to main content

Explore Over 100 Pathways to Your Future

Majors, Degrees & Programs
Interested in a Major in English? 黑料社, a Christian College in Indiana offers a bachelor's in English that is relational. Professor Dr. Cesar Soto in the Library.
January 31, 2025

A Major in English, a Lifetime in Scholarship: How Dr. C茅sar Soto Connects Faith to Intellect

By Maria Ignas (BA 25)

Dr. C茅sar Soto regrets he鈥檒l never read all the books he would like to in his lifetime.聽

Assistant professor of world literature at 黑料社, he has built a career on studying and teaching the best prose the globe has to offer. A teacher at heart, he punctuates every conversation with, 鈥淣ot to make this a teachable moment, but鈥︹ He brings at least three books wherever he goes, and never the same ones day-to-day.

Any major in English will tell you that a good story is universal. Soto鈥檚 is no exception.

The Biggest Legacy

Soto was born to immigrant parents in San Fernando, California, also known as 鈥淭he Valley.鈥 He was raised in Mexican immigrant Pentecostal culture, a vibrant community characterized by storefront churches and coffee-visit hospitality. The entire community regularly rallied around a person or family in need.

In Soto鈥檚 part of The Valley, street evangelism trumped intellectual pursuit. Though never impoverished, working-class concerns and piety mattered a whole lot more than, say, applying cultural theory to 19th-century British literature. For Soto, that would come later.

As an academic, Soto deals in theory and abstraction. But his childhood forged his faith through first-hand experience of God鈥檚 power. Soto witnessed God鈥檚 power reach even his immigrant, working class community through unexplainable healings and the miraculous provision of resources.

Soto鈥檚 mother converted to Christianity when he was 3, and she took Christ鈥檚 charge to serve the poor as marching orders. She regularly brought Soto and his siblings while she ministered to people facing homelessness and addiction, often offering their home as a haven.聽

As Soto watched the unlikeliest of people encounter Christ through her, he learned to hope for every soul, no matter how marred by sin it appeared.

鈥淭he biggest legacy my mother gave me is introducing me to Christ,鈥 said Soto. 鈥淏esides that, she showed me no life is beyond redemption.鈥

The faith of Soto鈥檚 mother saturated her parenting. She only allowed him to consume Christian media, though that didn鈥檛 stop him from reading Stephen King along with A.W. Tozer, or Anne Rice with C.S. Lewis.聽

Soto鈥檚 third-grade teacher, Mrs. Wallander, encouraged the voracious reader. According to Soto, her support launched his intellectual development.

He progressed from commercial fiction to literary fiction when he discovered the elevated prose of Emily Bronte鈥檚 Wuthering Heights as a 17-year-old. He realized the literature that stretched his mind was the same kind that whispered to his heart.

Undergraduate Success

After graduating high school, Soto enrolled at California State University Northridge. After trying fields in STEM, he semi-reluctantly switched one final time to a double major in English literature and Mexican-American studies.

Soto鈥檚 mentors immediately perceived his gifts in writing, research, and literary analysis, so much so they invited him to speak at graduate-level conferences as an undergraduate. He recalls the faculty鈥檚 pride when he, a minority student and major in English, won the English Department鈥檚 鈥淗onors Thesis of the Year鈥 award.

Moments of God鈥檚 power followed Soto even into academics. Moments before presenting his research at his first conference, Soto spotted a scholar whom he had cited sitting in the audience. With a pounding heart and trembling hands, he offered a desperate prayer to God.

鈥淚 said, 鈥楪od, just use me,鈥欌 said Soto. 鈥淔rom that day on, even the way I moved my hands while speaking changed. My presentation went very smoothly, and they invited me back the next year.鈥

Soto graduated with his bachelor鈥檚 in English in 2007. Keeping his major in English, he earned his master鈥檚 degree at the same university five years later, garnering more recognition and academic accolades. A doctorate program was the natural next step for the blooming scholar.

Now What?

A two-time winner of the prestigious Ford Fellowship, Soto was accepted into seven doctoral programs. He enrolled at Notre Dame in 2012 and embarked on his doctorate in English literature.

By now, Soto was tasting the fruits of his intellectual gifts. He was in the midst of his dissertation at one of the most prestigious universities, being mentored by some of the brightest minds. He founded the Latino Graduate Association at Notre Dame (LGAND) 鈥 still running 11 years after its inception 鈥 and even traveled to Ireland, England, Rome, and Argentina for his studies and archival research.

But spiritually, he was 鈥渂acksliding.鈥 Living according to his own desires, he had drifted from church attendance, prayer, and discipleship, though seeing God work in his childhood preserved his faith from complete erosion. The tension between his mind and his soul weighed on him, and soon enough, he routinely dealt artificial smiles and empty laughs.

鈥淚 was very unhappy but would fake being joyful,鈥 said Soto. 鈥淚 felt this loneliness.鈥

He remembers one night in particular, when, sitting on his porch, he wrestled with his unshakable emptiness.

鈥淚 thought, 鈥業 just went to a great conference,鈥欌 said Soto. 鈥溾業鈥檓 here at Notre Dame. They gave me all this money to study.鈥 But something inside me said, 鈥楴ow what, though?鈥欌

Interested in a Major in English? 黑料社, a Christian College in Indiana offers a bachelor's in English that is relational. Professor Dr. Cesar Soto in the Library.

Reconciliation

It wasn鈥檛 a marvelous show of God鈥檚 mighty power that brought Soto back to the faith. It wasn鈥檛 even one event. In the end, Soto鈥檚 return came down to need.

He began having medical issues and problems with classmates, and it created a dependency that he hadn鈥檛 felt in a long time. He realized although he had been given tremendous intellectual gifts, they weren鈥檛 enough to save him.

鈥淵ou can be really gifted, but there are problems that your gifts cannot help you with at all,鈥 said Soto. 鈥淚鈥檓 brought to situations again and again where my intellect is of little help, and I have to bend my knees in supplication.鈥

Soto slowly began to accept the Lord鈥檚 help. He and God reunited, their relationship renewed, and their friendship rebloomed.

鈥淚 feel reconciled,鈥 he said.

In the final years of his dissertation, Soto attended both English-speaking and Spanish-speaking churches, finding a body of brothers and sisters united in Christ.

In 2019, Soto graduated with a doctorate in English. No longer a student, he knew teaching came next. But where?

Gifts of Grace

黑料社was one of the many colleges to which Soto applied. But even before meeting students, he identified something different about the school.

鈥淭he faculty were a mix of brilliant but very kind and down-to-earth,鈥 said Soto. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been my experience that at other institutions, faculty are very competitive. Here, I found full-on support for my teaching, research, and personal life.鈥

Soto became a 黑料社professor in 2020. It was an adjustment from his previous teaching as a graduate student.

鈥淢y training has always been to be very separate from students,鈥 said Soto. 鈥淏ut 黑料社is so relational. And the more relational I am, the more students are comfortable learning.鈥

Soto is still progressing in his academic career, having published two articles and working on several partnerships with institutions around the world, including Yale鈥檚 Rivendell Center for Theology & the Arts. But now, he knows who to credit.

鈥淕od has given me these gifts,鈥 said Soto. 鈥淚鈥檓 supposed to use them for His glory. Wherever we end up, He wants us all to be light. Nothing that God gives you is accidental.鈥

And it鈥檚 in this vocation that Soto continues, not reliant on his gifts but on the One who gave them.

The more dependent I am on God,鈥 said Soto, 鈥渢he more I’m fully becoming who I’m supposed to be all along.鈥

Learn more about a major in English, and explore .