Categories
Faculty February 2023 News Perspective Online

Faculty News: February 2023

Carlton “Sam” Young publishes autobiography

The Rev. Carlton R. “Sam” Young. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.

At age 96, the Rev. Carlton R. “Sam” Young has published an autobiography, I’ll Sing On: My First 96 Years (GIA Publications, 2023), chronicling his career as a composer, arranger, scholar and editor. Young edited The Methodist Hymnal (1966) and The United Methodist Hymnal (1989) and directed the music for nine General Conferences, including the 1968 Uniting Conference that created The United Methodist Church.  He was also Director of the Master of Sacred Music Program at Perkins and associate professor of church music from 1964-1975, Read a profile of Young and his book by C. Michael Hawn, University Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Church Music at Perkins, for United Methodist News Service here.

New Book by Hal Recinos

Harold J. “Hal” Recinos’ latest book of poetry, The Looking Glass: Near and Far was published by Wipf and Stock in January. The poetry “searches voices in the cities of a divided America faced with an unraveling democracy and across borders where people negotiate the fragility of life offer a vision of transcendences through recovery of our common humanity,” according to the jacket description.

Recinos said he drew inspiration from one of his favorite poets, William Carlos Williams, a pediatrician, writer and friend of Ezra Pound. His father was from England, raised in the Dominican Republic and his mother was from Puerto Rico. William wrote in English, but his first language was Spanish. “I discovered him in Middle School along with Langston Hughes, and especially identified with the idea present in the identity of both poets of life on the hyphen,” said Recinos. “Moreover, William Carlos Williams wrote these words that I have kept with me: ‘There is no beginning nor end to the imagination but it delights in its own seasons reversing the usual order at will.’”

Recinos is professor of church and society at Perkins.

Column by Robert Hunt

Robert Hunt, director of Perkins’ Global Theological Education department, wrote a column entitled “Spirituality versus religion in our neighborhood” in the Lake Highlands Advocate.

The column explored how a growing number of Americans are describing themselves as “spiritual but not religious.”

“Recent polls … show the number of Americans who identify as Christian (by far the dominant religion in the United States) has declined from 90% to 64% in the last 50 years,” he writes. “When we look closely, religion in our city isn’t going away. Instead, it’s going to look different than it has in the past.” Read the column here.

 

Categories
February 2023 News Perspective Online

Student News: February 2023

MLK Day Parade

Six members of the Perkins community — five students and one staff member – joined other SMU students, faculty and staff to participate in the SMU float in the January 16 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parade, co-sponsored by the City of Dallas.

Pictured, top row, left to right, are staff member Tracy Anne Allred with students Mykayla Turner and Tiffany McClain. Front row, left to right: Alarice Vann, Fernando Berwig Silva and Michaela Calahan.

In addition, the Dream Week Lunchtime Lecture on January 20 featured Ray Jordan (M.T.S. ‘08), a longtime leader of the SMU Civil Rights Pilgrimage.

SMU will dedicate a Texas historical marker as a permanent reminder of Dr. King’s visit to the campus nearly 60 years ago on February 21 at 6:30p.m during a short program in McFarlin Auditorium. The public is invited.

Perkins Student Publishes Book

Perkins M.T.S. student Kate Boyd has written an upcoming book An Untidy Faith: Journeying Back to the Joy of Following Jesus (Herald Press, 2023).  According to the book’s jacket, “In the wake of scandal, culture wars, and abuse, many Christians are wondering whether the North American church is redeemable—and if not, whether they should even stay. This book is for those who long to disentangle their faith from all the cultural baggage and recapture the joy of following Jesus.” The book is due out April 18, 2023.

Categories
February 2023 News Perspective Online

Alumni News: February 2023

Comforting Grieving Mothers

Registered Nurse Andrea Wursche and her sister, Reverend Lindsay Kirkpatrick, at The Childbirth Center at Houston Methodist Hospital in Houston, Texas.

It isn’t often that career paths cross for the Rev. Lindsay Kirkpatrick (M.Div. ’10) and her sister, Andrea Wursche, a registered nurse at Houston Methodist Hospital. But when inspiration struck, the two launched a program to comfort women after a miscarriage or stillbirth. The idea emerged over a Tex-Mex lunch in 2021, when the two talked about the challenges facing labor and delivery nurses. Kirkpatrick, senior pastor at Asbury United Methodist Church in Pasadena, Texas, had recently visited a church member suffering after a miscarriage and felt called to help grieving families. With help from the Texas Annual Conference, the two women found a way. Read the story in the Houston Chronicle here.

Rev. Dr. Challis Bradford Appointed Chaplain

Rev. Dr. Challis Bradford

Rev. Dr. Challis Bradford (M.A.M. ‘16) is the newly appointed TX/NM State Chaplain for Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. The historically Black sorority was founded in 1913 by 22 women at Howard University in Washington, D.C.  The sorority is one of the largest sororities founded in the U.S., with more than 350,000 initiated members and more than 1,000 around the world. Bradford also serves as Servant Leader Pastor of Greater Garth Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church.

Rev. Haynie to lead St. Nicholas

The Rev. Amy Haynie
The Rev. Amy Haynie

The Rev. Amy Haynie (M.Div. ‘09) has accepted the rectorship of St. Nicholas Episcopal Church in Midland, Texas.  “As the new priest in town, I’m looking forward to getting to know my new community through parishioners, colleagues and community leaders,” she said. “I am curious about what God is up to in Midland right now and how to partner in whatever that work may be.” Haynie, who lived in Odessa from 1977-1984, comes to the new assignment from Trinity Episcopal Church in Fort Worth, where she had served as associate rector since 2016.  Prior to that she served the Episcopal Church of Wichita Falls and the St. Martin in the Fields Church in Keller. Haynie graduated from Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls and worked for a decade in nursing, then earned an M.Div. at Perkins. Read the story in the Odessa American here.

Obit: The Rev. Peter Soens

The Rev. Peter M. Soens

The Rev. Peter M. Soens (Th.M. ‘76) passed away at age 83 on January 4 in Farmington, Mo. Soens served as a United Methodist Minister for 32 years in several churches in Missouri, Arkansas, and Texas. Services were scheduled for January 10 at Memorial United Methodist Church in Farmington with Rev. Ron Beaton officiating. Memorial donations may be made to either the Farmington or Park Hills Ministerial Alliance Food Pantry. View obituary and share condolences online here.

Obit: The Rev. John Winkler, Jr.

The Rev. John “Jack” H. Winkler Jr.

The Rev. John “Jack” H. Winkler Jr. (Th.M. ‘63) died January 8. After serving in the U.S. Air Force, he attended Perkins and began his ministry in 1958. During his long career he served numerous United Methodist churches in cities across the state of Oklahoma, including Lexington, Sulphur, Leedey, Hominy, Muskogee, Oklahoma Conference Youth & Camps, Mooreland, Del City, Kingfisher, and Oklahoma City. Jack retired from ministry while serving the Methodist church in Blanchard. Funeral services were held January 16 at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church in Oklahoma City. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to Oklahoma Methodist Foundation: Turpin UMC WINKLER ENDOWMENT FUND #6587 4201 N. Classen Blvd OKC, OK 73118-2415. Read his obituary here.

Categories
January 2023 News Perspective Online Top Story

Farewell to Dean Hill

In honor of Dean Craig C. Hill’s retirement at the end of 2022, there’s a new addition to the portrait gallery in Kirby Hall Parlor at Perkins. A portrait of Dean Hill by artist James Tennison was unveiled at the Dean’s Christmas and Retirement Party on December 6.

Hill, the Leighton K. Farrell Endowed Dean and Professor of New Testament, announced in June 2022 that he would retire as dean December 31, 2022 due to medical reasons. He will remain a member of the Perkins faculty until December 31, 2023. Bishop Michael McKee became dean of Perkins ad interim effective January 1, 2023, and will serve until a permanent dean has been named.  Bishop McKee served as episcopal leader of the North Texas Annual Conference from 2012 until his retirement from that position on January 1, 2023.

The portrait was made possible through the donations of members of the Perkins Executive Board, faculty and staff.  Tennison’s portrait commissions have taken him across the United States and to England. His works include the official portraits of former Texas governors Rick Perry and Ann Richards, which hang in the State Capitol in Austin, portraits for the National Institutes of Health, Harvard University, Texas Christian University, Texas Instruments and Frito Lay, as well as many portraits for families. This is the second painting that he completed for Perkins – he painted the portrait of Dean William Lawrence when he retired in 2016 – and one of several that grace that SMU campus. He also painted portraits of James Zumberge, SMU’s seventh president from 1975 – 1980; L. Donald Shields, president from 1980 – 1986; and Kenneth Pye, SMU’s president from 1987-1994, as well as portraits of SMU donors Mr. & Mrs. David Miller and of Jerry Junkins, former Texas Instruments CEO and SMU trustee.

Tennison traveled from his home in Whidbey Island, Wash., to Dallas to meet with Dean Hill in his office last year before beginning the portrait.

“I like to discuss the client’s expectations and how they would like it to look,” Tennison said. “It helps me to meet the person, to get to know them and learn more about them, and to see their gestures and natural poses. All of that informs the portrait.”

Tennison took many photographs during his visit.

“I’ve learned that people sort of pose themselves better than I can,” he said.

Noting that the painting would be added to the gallery of past Perkins deans in Kirby Hall, Tennison aimed to make his portrait consistent in terms of size and proportion. His impression of Dean Hill, he said, was of a very kind person, and “I just hope that that came through in his portrait.”

Confirmation that he captured his subject came from Dean Hill’s wife, Robin, who had a chance to review the portrait, and approved.

Categories
January 2023 News Perspective Online

Interim Dean at Perkins

Bishop Michael McKee (M.Th. ‘78) did not languish in retirement for even a moment. On Jan. 1, he retired as episcopal leader of the North Texas Annual Conference, and on the same day, became dean ad interim of Perkins School of Theology. He will serve until a permanent dean has been named.

McKee steps into the deanship following Dean Craig C. Hill’s planned retirement as dean on Dec. 31, 2022. The announcement of McKee’s interim position was made Aug. 10 by Elizabeth G. Loboa, provost and vice president for Academic Affairs for Southern Methodist University.

McKee had served as Bishop of North Texas since his election by the South Central Jurisdiction in 2012. He was also a member of SMU’s Board of Trustees, but is stepping down during his interim deanship.

McKee said that he looked forward to returning to campus and giving back to his alma mater.

“In many ways, the person I’ve become, I owe to the theological education I got at Perkins,” he said. “I want other people to have that kind of experience.”

Before the announcement of Hill’s retirement, McKee had been appointed to serve as Bishop in Residence at Perkins. He has actively participated in Perkins’ Internship Program, mentoring nearly a dozen students over the years. A few years ago, he was honored for having mentored more students than any other mentor pastor.

“Even then, at the age of 50, serving as a mentor was formative for me,” he said. “It helped me realize that you must be a lifelong learner to be a leader in the church. And that the church is so privileged to have a theological institution like Perkins in its midst.”

Categories
January 2023 News Perspective Online

Student Spotlight: Eno Afon

Eno Afon had heard of Perkins long before she relocated to the U.S. from Nigeria. When she landed in the Dallas area, enrolling at Perkins for her seminary education was an easy decision.

“There were so many attractive things about Perkins,” she said. “Perkins is endowed with a lot of prestigious professors, and the academic program and the internship program are both excellent.”

Now, as a first-year M.Div. student at Perkins, Afon also appreciates the flexibility that Perkins. She’s interested in youth ministry.

“With my training in Perkins, I’m not restricted to the pulpit,” she said. “Everyone is gifted differently. My interest is in helping youth, especially those affected by addiction, all kinds of addiction. I’m concerned about the over-dependence on technological gadgets. That’s a major source of destruction for the youth. I want to see if there’s a way I can help.”

Afon manages to juggle her full-time studies along with an already busy schedule. She is a licensed local pastor, serving at Wesley United Methodist Church, a predominantly African congregation in Arlington, Texas, where she’s an active volunteer, a member of the choir and assistant to the pastor.

A wife and mother, Afon also works full-time at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth as a patient safety assistant. At Perkins, she’s active in the International Students group; recently, she volunteered with the group at Genesis Women’s Shelter and visited the Stockyards in Fort Worth.  She also volunteers when she can at Mission Arlington as a counselor.

“All this has been a challenge,” she said. “I would love to do more.  The ministry is wide, so the giftedness is much, so I try to, as much as fitting where I know I can fit in.”

Afon is a lifelong Methodist. In Nigeria, she attended the Methodist Institute of Theology.

How does she stay grounded throughout all this? “Praise, prayer and studying the word of God,” Afon replies.

“When I wake up in the morning, because I get out of bed, I’m doing my prayers,” she said. “I read a daily devotion, usually one by Charles Stanley of In Touch Ministries.”

Every Wednesday, Afon partakes in fasting. “This is a self-discipline that helps me seek the face of God and to be able to intercede for others,” she said. “As a prayer leader in my church, this helps me when other people bring their problems to me. We take it to the Lord together in prayer.”

Her favorite Bible verse is John 8:32: “And you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.” (NRSVUE)

“The truth does not change,” she said. “Even if you cover the truth, eventually it comes out. Jesus Christ is the truth. Stick to the truth, so you don’t have anything to fear. That passage keeps me going, keeps me focused, keeps me on the journey of my faith.”

Dreams also factor heavily in Afon’s spiritual life; a dream played a pivotal role in her call story.

Years ago, when she was working as a flight attendant for Bellview Airlines in Nigeria, she had a dream about an aircraft in trouble. She prayed over and over the dream. On October 21, 2005, Afon completed her shift; the next day, the same aircraft crashed on October 22. The Boeing 737-200 airliner nose-dived at high speed just a few minutes after take-off, killing all 117 people on board.

“Before, I had been careless in spiritual life,” she said. “I went into things I’m not supposed to do. That experience led me to stay focused on my journey with Christ. It brought me back to the way that God has a purpose for my life.”

When she’s not busy with school, work, family or church, Afon loves to cook. She loves making two Nigerian specialties: eba, a staple made from fried grated cassava flour, and egusi, a melon soup made with meat and seafood as well as akara (bean fritters), mushrooms, and greens.

“The most joyous hobby I have is feeding people with good food,” she said.

Categories
Faculty January 2023 News Perspective Online

Faculty/Staff News

Obituary: Kenneth Hart

Kenneth Hart, Professor Emeritus of Sacred Music at Perkins and former Director of the Sacred Music program from 1987 to 2005, passed away December 27. After serving in the U.S. Air Force, he earned a Master of Sacred Music at Union Seminary in New York. Hart wrote and published the 2014 volume titled A day for dancing: the life and music of Lloyd Pfautsch.  A memorial service will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, the family asks for donations to Perkins School of Theology or to another charity of one’s choice. Read his obituary here.

Obituary: Roger L. Loyd

Roger L. Loyd (M.Th. ’71) former Associate Librarian of Bridwell, recently passed away. From 1980-1992, he served as the Associate Librarian at Bridwell Library, including a stint as Acting Director from 1985 to 1987. Along with Lewis Howard Grimes, he was one of the editors and authors of A History of the Perkins School of Theology. Loyd went on to serve as Director of Duke Divinity Library from 1992 until his retirement in 2012. He was active in Atla (formerly the American Theological Library Association), the Theological Book Network, and housing ministries through Duke Memorial UMC in Durham, N.Car. Memorial services will be held on Saturday, January 14. Read Loyd’s obituary here; a livestream link for the memorial is forthcoming. 

 

 

Categories
January 2023 News Perspective Online

Alumni/ae Updates: January 2023

Anthony Everett to Lead Siloam Project

Anthony Everett (M.Div. ’08) was recently appointed to the Baptist Seminary of Kentucky (BSK) staff as coordinator of the school’s Siloam Project, effective Dec. 15. Everett is a human rights advocate, public theologian and congregational coach/consultant. Previously he served as executive director of Mission Behind Bars and Beyond, a Louisville, Ky.-based organization that advocates for formerly incarcerated individuals as they seek to build a new life beyond prison walls. At BSK, he will provide leadership for an initiative to accelerate the seminary’s congregation-centered approach to theological education. Funded by a nearly $1 million grant from the Lilly Endowment, the Siloam Project also will develop a network of “learning churches,” which will inform and help shape BSK’s approach to contextual theological education. Read a Baptist News Global story on Everett’s new appointment here.

Remembering E.P. Sanders

The influential New Testament scholar E. P. Sanders (M.Th. ’62), who devoted his career to promoting more accurate and sympathetic understandings of early Judaism, died November 21 at age 85 in Durham, North Carolina. While studying at Perkins, he was encouraged by William R. Farmer (then the senior New Testament scholar at Perkins) to study Hebrew abroad. Contributions from a Methodist church and a synagogue, Temple Emanu-el in Dallas, allowed Sanders to study in Israel.  “I felt overwhelmed by their generosity, and I especially vowed that the gift from Temple Emanu-el would not be in vain,” he later wrote. From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, Sanders published a series of books, including “Paul and Palestinian Judaism,” “Jesus and Judaism” and “Judaism: Practice and Belief 63 BCE–66 A.D.,” exploring the relationship between early Judaism and early Christianity.

“In his work and personally he forcefully called on fellow scholars to reject caricatures of Judaism and to immerse themselves more deeply in ancient Jewish sources,” wrote Mark A. Chancey, professor of religious studies in Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences at Southern Methodist University, in a Religion News Service opinion piece. “Few … would question the impact of his demand that representations of Jews and Judaism be fair and accurate and not grounded in negative stereotypes. Especially at a time when antisemitism in America and elsewhere is on the rise, his presence will be sorely missed.” Click here to read Chancey’s tribute to Sanders.

Obituary: The Rev. Dr. Randy Mays Fitzgerald

The Rev. Dr. Randy Mays Fitzgerald (M.Th. ‘76) passed away on December 21 at age 70. Services were held December 26 in Palestine, Texas, with the Rev. Ken McEachern officiating. Fitzgerald started preaching at 18 years old and pastored numerous United Methodist churches in the East Texas area. He is survived by his wife Karen; and family: Jack & Lauren Dunaway, Liberty and Finley; Jamie & Bryan Duke, Rylan, Kinley and Jameson; Tiffany Gulledge, Peyton and Preslie. In lieu of flowers the family asks that memorial gifts be made to Samaritan’s Purse, P. O. Box 3000, Boone, NC 28607. Read the obituary here.

 Obituary: The Rev. Michael Head

The Rev. Michael “Michi” Thomas Head (M.Div. ‘90) of Geismar, La., died December 22 at age 62. He was serving as senior pastor at New Life Community United Methodist Church in Luling, La., at the time of his death. Previously, he was senior pastor at Jefferson UMC in Baton Rouge and Maguire UMC in West Munroe. He also served the United Methodist Foundation of Louisiana in various roles since 2012, most recently as the Chairman of the Board. A funeral was held at Jefferson United Methodist Church on December 28.  Read the obituary here.

Obituary: The Rev. Carr Dee Racop, Jr.

The Rev. Carr Dee Racop, Jr. (M.Th. ‘58) passed away on December 22 at the age of 91 in Plano, Texas. During his career as a minister, Racop was appointed to several United Methodist churches, including one in College Mound, Texas, and several in Arkansas including Bearden, Sheridan, Gurdon, Portland, Ashdown, Sherill and Little Rock. He also spent several summers leading Camp Tanako in Hot Springs, Ark. During his career in ministry, Racop was passionate about youth ministry and advocated for change regarding social issues, including civil rights. After he retired from the ministry in 1997, he held positions in Arkansas state government and with H&R Block. A memorial service will be held on January 14 at Trinity United Methodist Church in Little Rock. Read his obituary here.

Categories
December 2022 News Perspective Online Top Story

Letter from the Dean

For as long as there is jealousy and quarreling among you, are you not fleshly and behaving according to human inclinations? For when one says, “I belong to Paul,” and another, “I belong to Apollos,” are you not all too human? What then is Apollos? What is Paul? Servants through whom you came to believe, as the Lord assigned to each. I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth.  (1 Corinthians 3:3b-6)

In this well-known passage, Paul warns the Corinthians not to form factions based on allegiance to specific leaders. To do so is “fleshy and behaving according to human inclinations.” The my-apostle-is-better-than-your-apostle argument is just one example of the countless ways people find identity and status by aligning with what they perceive to be a superior group. It is a sign of human insecurity and vulnerability as much today as it was then. It has always been divisive and is quite frequently perilous, sometimes catastrophically so.

Thankfully, Corinthian-level identification with leaders is not an issue at Perkins. That’s not to say that this or that former leader is not regarded with particular appreciation. That is as it should be. It becomes a problem only when such admiration exists to the exclusion of and in competition with appreciation for the gifts and achievements of others. In that case, the true focus in not on the leader but on us.

When I read this text, my attention is drawn instead to verse 6: “I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth.”

Unquestionably, I knew this lesson to be true on an intellectual level before becoming Dean. Still, it is easy to begin a leadership position with the unconsidered and largely unconscious conviction that one’s job is to solve every problem and, in due time, to hand off the school to the next Dean in all but perfect order.

Over the years, several things become much more front-of-mind thanks to lived experience. Among them are the following:

  1. Whatever you achieve, there will always be new opportunities and new problems. Who saw COVID coming with its myriad long-term effects? What new technologies will emerge in the next decade or two that will disrupt (and improve, one hopes) current models of education?
  2. Where significant advances are made, it will be because others bought into a shared vision, whatever its origin, and worked to see it come to pass. There is only so much you can do alone. It follows that, over the years, your appreciation for your colleagues will deepen. It also follows that you see retirement not as the occasion for leaving colleagues in the past, but rather as a chance to continue to know them, though now wholly as friends.
  3. Likewise, the more time goes by, the more admiration you will have for your predecessors—in my case, Deans Lawrence, Lovin, and Kirby in particular—and the more appreciation you will have for their accomplishments. (Thank God for the things they did that freed me to focus my attention elsewhere!) The same goes for the members of the Perkins Executive Board and other benefactors whose generosity made possible those advances.
  4. The borderland between continuity and change has always existed in the church (consider, for example, the controversy over Gentile inclusion in the 1st century church), and it will always be hotly contested territory. This tension can be avoided to some extent through the adoption of self-contained, circular positions that promise ongoing and comfortable certainty, but that certainty eventually will be challenged by the threat of some new change.
  5. Perhaps the most insidious change is that which is not even recognized as change. My children grew up with computers, social media, streaming content, and so on. The enormous cultural shifts brought by such technologies are largely unknown to them as change. Similarly, a great deal of what passes for normal, acceptable Christian life in America today would have been unrecognizable to St. Paul or even to John Wesley.
  6. You see this dynamic of continuity and change playing out over the decades at Perkins, recognize it in our own time, and anticipate it in the future. You hope that vital continuity will remain, but also that necessary change will occur every year, just as it has in each of the years of my own deanship.

Perhaps you’ve heard recited “The Oscar Romero Prayer.”  It was composed by Bishop Ken Untener for inclusion in a homily by Cardinal John Dearden in 1979 at a celebration of departed priests.  It is often prayed at services commemorating the martyrdom of Bishop Romero, but also on other occasions of transition. It sums up perfectly my own thoughts as I am about to move into a new phase of life.

It helps, now and then, to step back and take a long view.
The kingdom is not only beyond our efforts, it is even beyond our vision.
We accomplish in our lifetime only a tiny fraction of the magnificent
enterprise that is God’s work. Nothing we do is complete, which is a way of
saying that the Kingdom always lies beyond us.
No statement says all that could be said.
No prayer fully expresses our faith.
No confession brings perfection.
No pastoral visit brings wholeness.
No program accomplishes the Church’s mission.
No set of goals and objectives includes everything.
This is what we are about.
We plant the seeds that one day will grow.
We water seeds already planted, knowing that they hold future promise.
We lay foundations that will need further development.
We provide yeast that produces far beyond our capabilities.
We cannot do everything, and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that.
This enables us to do something, and to do it very well.
It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way, an
opportunity for the Lord’s grace to enter and do the rest.
We may never see the end results, but that is the difference between the master
builder and the worker.
We are workers, not master builders; ministers, not messiahs.
We are prophets of a future not our own.
Amen.

Amen, indeed.

Let me close by expressing my heartfelt thanks to all of the many wonderful people associated with Perkins School of Theology and SMU. I trust that you will continue to support our cherished school and its leadership for years to come. I shall always remember you with profound gratitude.

Grace and peace,

Craig

Categories
December 2022 News Perspective Online

Office of Enrollment Management: Six Splendid Years of Service

Grace to you and peace from God…and the Lord Jesus Christ.

I give thanks to my God always for you because of the grace of God that has been given you in Christ Jesus, for in every way you have been enriched in him, in speech and knowledge of every kind—just as the testimony of Christ has been strengthened among you—so that you are not lacking in any spiritual gift as you wait for the revealing of our Lord Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 3-7).

It is with great sentiment and affection that I write to inform you of my resignation from my position as Associate Dean of Enrollment Management. Clearly, serving Perkins has been the pinnacle of 48 years of professional service. My joy in this position was made complete by the hundreds of students I’ve met and the call stories they shared. Reading students’ essays, filled with pure, heartfelt yearning to serve God, and following their diverse journeys and ministries, brought meaning to every hour of my job.  To meet them in-person, along with their spouses, fiancées, best friends, mentors, and parents, was an even greater joy.  To witness their gifts and graces in worship at Perkins or in various ministry locations made my work even more meaningful. We have had applicants who were biologists, lawyers, doctors, dentists, IT personnel, politicians, educators, nurses, veterans, community organizers and experienced pastors when they sought out Perkins. We have a rich community of students and Perkins will continue to attract and extend hospitality and grace to all seeking graduate theological preparation for ministry.

Perkins served me as a seminary student, in my ministries after graduation and ordination, and in my years as an administrator at Perkins. Perkins has served countless others and will continue to do so. Here are just a few characteristics that set us apart among theological schools. These are the reasons students shared about what brought them to Perkins:

  1. Perkins bridges the academy to the church and the church to the academy
  2. Perkins honors one’s call from God
  3. Perkins embraces difference, whatever it may be, and values the traditions, person, perspective and voice
  4. Perkins recognizes that this is “your time” and that there is “no one like you”
  5. Perkins does not treat you like a number in the recruitment/admission process
  6. Perkins moves swiftly in the recruitment/admission process because we know how important it is for you to have a decision about admission and scholarship award

Indeed, the Perkins vision and values were the core that kept me persevering after the death of my beloved husband, Ken. I still turn to them regularly. Many of you are aware that Ken and I owned a home in Austin and leased a condo in Dallas. Without Ken, it has been difficult for me to take care of the condo in Dallas and travel intermittently to maintain the home in Austin.  That led to my decision to resign.

I could not be more pleased that Andy Keck, Chief of Staff, will serve as interim beginning January 3, 2023, while a successor is chosen. Christina Rhodes will continue to serve as Financial Aid and Financial Literacy Coordinator. Stephen Bagby, Director, Admissions Operations, will take the lead with virtual events, individual visits, and Inside Perkins events. Emilie Williams is our new Ministry Discernment Associate and handles recruiting on the road, and Caleb Palmer will continue to recruit, take the lead in communications from OEM, assist with virtual events and serve as liaison between the Office of Enrollment Management and Public Affairs. Prospective student referrals can be forwarded to Caleb (calebp@smu.edu).

Thank you for many kindnesses and cooperation in the work we have accomplished together. I will never forget how much you and the Perkins community mean to me—in good times and in the bad that we have all experienced together. I am especially grateful to my team and Dean Hill for support beyond measure.

Lastly, at a recent small dinner party with a handful of faculty and staff, we sat around the dinner table and posed the question, “What has been your best job?” Perkins was the unanimous answer. Personally, I have had many great jobs. Perkins is the winner, hands down. Truly, it never felt like a job to me. Thanks be to God.

He will strengthen you to the end, so that you may be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ. God is faithful; by him you were called into the fellowship of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. (1 Corinthians 1: 8-9).

Very sincerely,

The Rev. Margot Perez-Greene, PhD

P.S. I have just read yet another essay from an applicant whose story has brought me to tears…yes God is still calling wonderful people who have hearts for ministry, amazing lives and leadership potential.