David Sabatini

While I had a lot of success in high school – academically, athletically, socially – I felt an emptiness that the success did not satisfy. I was excited about going to college, assuming things would be different. Nonetheless, I found that the emptiness followed me. Looking back, I was experiencing the truth expressed by Blaise Pascal, seventeenth-century mathematician and philosopher, that “There is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of each man which cannot be satisfied by any created thing but only by God the Creator, made known through Jesus Christ.” Realizing my approach wasn’t working, in the spring of my freshman year I received Christ as my Lord and Savior, and began to experience peace and a sense of purpose in life that had previously eluded me. That’s not to say that everything was perfect after that. While God has indeed blessed me, I’ve also experienced life’s pain and disappointments along the way – relational disappointments, job challenges, the death of my father in 1983 (I was 25 and he was 50), that same year being downsized (position eliminated, let go, fired) during the 1980’s recession. Yet, God’s blessings were also apparent – I met my wife in 1983, God used my unemployment to guide me to graduate school and ultimately to become a professor, which was beyond the imagination of this first-generation college son of a plumber. During my graduate school days, I was fortunate to have Godly research advisors and a Numerical Methods professor who, on the first day of class, introduced himself by mentioning the importance of his faith in his life. I have sought to emulate these Christ-centered examples in the classroom and my work with research students. On the first day of class, I share that my priorities in life are faith, family, and work, saying that a balanced life, just like a balanced bicycle wheel, is best. Thus, while I work hard at my job, I strive to maintain a balance between faith, family, and work. I tell my students that, regardless of their faith, for me, it is faith in Jesus Christ, I encourage them to maintain their faith as a top priority. When recruiting research students, I tell them I have good news and bad news. The good news is that I don’t expect them to work any harder than I do. The bad news is that I work pretty hard. However, given my faith, family, and work priorities, I encourage them to balance their faith and family/friends with their research work. While my career and my life have had their share of challenges and disappointments (e.g., why did my dad die at age 50), I have found God to be faithful to me, which encourages me to trust Him for things I don’t understand. As I trust Him, in the good times and bad, I have experienced the truth that “the peace of God, which surpasses all comprehension, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.” Phil 4:7

My Life

Favorite Quote

Abraham Lincoln – “I have been driven many times upon my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go.” Blaise Pascal, seventeenth-century mathematician and philosopher - “There is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of each man which cannot be satisfied by any created thing but only by God the Creator, made known through Jesus Christ.”

Friends describe me

Friendly, disciplined, faithful, devoted, adventurous, calculating, fun-loving

My hobbies

Abraham Lincoln biographies, athletics, long-distance cycling, sailing, woodturning, traveling, family

Fantasy dinner guests

Abraham Lincoln, Gandhi, Jesus

Best advice I ever received

make faith, family, and work equally important and seek to balance them in your life

My undergrad alma mater

University of Illinois

My worst subject in school

Biology - not a fan of memorization

In college I drove

Ford Mustang - High School; Ford Maverick - College

If I weren't a professor, I would

be a civil/environmental engineering consultant

Favorite books

Ronald White’s A. Lincoln, Donald Phillips Lincoln and Leadership, Jason Emerson’s Lincoln the Inventor; and Doris Kearn Goodwin’s A Team of Rivals

Favorite movies

It’s a Wonderful Life; Family Man; Spielberg’s Lincoln

Favorite city

Norman/OKC; Tuebingen, Germany (sabbatical year there); London; Bangkok (adjunct faculty there)

Favorite coffee

Lemon Lift Tea

Nobody knows I

for years I had a motorcycle license; I am allergic to dogs

My latest accomplishment

Being married 41 years, two wonderful children with spouses, a grandson, and two grand-dogs; cycling Route 66 from Chicago to Santa Monica

Current Research

Water Technologies for Emerging Regions: Water & Sanitation forRemote Areas; Advanced Microemulsions for Environmental, Consumer & Energy Technologies; Transport, Fate, and Treatment of Emerging Contaminants.