The Wonders He Has Done (Spring 2015)
The Wonders He Has Done (Spring 2015)
The Wonders He Has Done (Spring 2015)
The Ministry Magazine of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary | Spring 15 | Vol. 43 No. 1 | Legacy
The
Wonders
He Has
Done
contact
The Ministry Magazine of
Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
contents
Graphic Designer
Ms. Nicole S. Rim
Inquiries regarding Contact may be addressed to:
Editor, Contact
Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
130 Essex Street, S. Hamilton, MA 01982
communications.office@gordonconwell.edu
www.gordonconwell.edu
978.468.7111
Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary does not
discriminate on the basis of race, gender, national or
ethnic origin, age, handicap or veteran status.
Russell Conwell, who shared a commitment for global and urban mission,
and for accessible education.
We build upon the vision of Billy Graham, Harold John Ockenga and J.
Howard Pew, who brought two schools together to forge a seminary that
was rooted in Scripture and the Gospel, but geared to speak to the times in
which we livea seminary enabling Christian leaders to be salt and light in
a complex world.
news
f e at u r e s
articles
8
12
15
18
22
reach
23
25
good books
30
32
33
alumni notes
alumni news
reflections
35
board of trustees
Dr. Dennis P. Hollinger,
President
Rev. Dr. John A. Huffman,
Jr., Chairman
Rev. Dr. Claude R. Alexander, Jr., Vice Chairman
Dr. Shirley A. Redd,
Secretary
Mr. Ivan C. Hinrichs,
Treasurer
Mr. Joel B. Aarsvold
Mrs. Linda S. Anderson
Dr. Diana Curren Bennett
Rev. Dr. Garth T. Bolinder
Rev. Dr. Richard P. Camp
Mr. Thomas J. Colatosti
Dr. Stan D. Gaede
Mrs. Joyce Godwin
Mrs. Sharon Fast Gustafson
Rev. Dr. Michael B. Haynes
Mr. Herbert P. Hess
Mr. Caleb Loring, III
Mrs. Joanna Mockler
Dr. Charles W. Pollard
Mr. Fred L. Potter
Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, Jr.
Mrs. Virginia M. Snoddy
Rev. Dr. David D. Swanson
Dr. Joseph W. Viola
Rev. Dr. John H. Womack, Sr.
Dr. William C. Wood
emeriti members
Dr. Richard A. Armstrong
Rev. Dr. Leighton Ford
Mr. Roland S. Hinz
Mr. Richard D. Phippen
Rev. Dr. Paul E. Toms
co-founder and
trustee emeritus
Dr. William F. Graham
Over the years we have been enriched by our greatest human resource, a
president and
trustee emeritus
Dr. Robert E. Cooley
president emeritus
Dr. Walter C. Kaiser, Jr.
presidents cabinet
Dr. Dennis P. Hollinger,
President
Mr. Kurt W. Drescher,
Vice President of
Advancement
Dr. Mark Harden,
Dean of the Boston Campus
Dr. Timothy Laniak,
Dean of the Charlotte
Campus
Dr. Richard Lints,
Vice President for
Academic Affairs
Dr. Alvin Padilla,
Dean of Hispanic Ministries
Mrs. Lita Schlueter,
Dean of Students and Director of Student Life Services
Mr. Jay Trewern,
Vice President for Finance
and Operations / CFO
first-rate, Godly faculty committed to educating men and women for a vast
and marketplace. The educational mission has been sustained by a deeply
In this issue of Contact we remember that history is important for interpreting
our past and informing our future. Our legacy is not dead tradition, but a
living vision that continues to make a global impact for Christ's Kingdom.
We are thankful to God for his gracious faithfulness in providing faculty,
trustees, staff, campuses and donors who keep the vision alive. We believe
that the vision for a faithful, thoughtful, relevant seminary education is
more important than ever.
f e at u r e s
f e at u r e s
A MODERN-DAY
ABOLITIONIST
FIGHTS SLAVERY
ANNE B. DOLL
IN 2010, HOLLIS JOHNSON HAD HER FIRST ENCOUNTER WITH HUMAN TRAFFICKING WHILE
MINISTERING IN A RED LIGHT DISTRICT IN THAILAND.
I got to spend a month working with a ministry that has an aftercare center and outreach program, says the Charlotte MA
in Christian Counseling student (MACC). During that month I really felt like this was what God created me for.
Since then, Hollis has ministered to victims of sex trafficking in numerous countries. She now leads an anti-trafficking
initiative at Charlottes Forest Hill Church.
4
f e at u r e s
f e at u r e s
It completely changed my
life, she explains. I encountered God in a whole new and personal way. Through that
time, I also learned about human trafficking. There were
parts of my own story that allowed me to connect with
these women, and finally things made sense to me. I have
always had a heart for hurting people, and I thought, This
is itfrom that point on I would be working somewhere
in the field of sex trafficking.
The youngest trafficked child Hollis has seen was a fiveyear-old girl in a Cambodian village known worldwide
among pedophiles. A family member had traded her for a
television set. That was where I was really blown away,
she remembers. So many kids, just knowing what was
going on. It was really hard.
Hollis Johnson
A second race further strengthened her concern for trafficked women, and God kept opening ministry doors, locally and internationally. One of those doors was Forest
Hill Church.
I was helping with a justice conference at the church, and
during that event they agreed to support me in taking a
team of women to India to work at an aftercare center.
Following that trip Hollis met with the churchs outreach
director to debrief. She had been working at a coffee shop
and God told me to quit my job and ask for a job at the
church. So I did, and the outreach director said he wasnt
surprised. He had seen it coming. Together we created a
part-time position for me to develop an anti-trafficking
ministry at Forest Hill. It was totally the Lord. There was
no way I could have ever thought this up.
During her first year in the position, much of her time
was spent seeking where God is leading us as a church.
She also studied trafficking in Charlotte, and learned how
other organizations were addressing the problem. All of
them, she says, are faith based. Some are helping identify
and rescue entrapped individuals. One has opened a call
center through which volunteers can talk to girls online.
In Charlotte, there is also such a need for safe housing and
discipleship, she notes. Thats where well be fitting in.
Forest Hill is now partnering with a local organization,
End Slavery in Charlotte, to train church members to be6
But, she adds, an incredible organization, Agape International Mission, has been in that village for several years
and is transforming it. They have a ministry for children,
and a gym ministry to reach traffickers.
ENTICEMENT
ow are individuals enticed into the sex trade? Hollis says a common view is that they are kidnapped.
While that does happen, more frequently trafficked
people come from broken homes, and places where
there is neglect. Many are runaways. Often they have already been sexually abused. Some are addicted to drugs
or alcohol.
The traffickers are smart, she explains. They know what
to look for. Most likely its someone whos young, looks
very vulnerableone who can be manipulated. The traffickers, the pimps also know how to woo these women and
girls, how to play up being a father figure, a boyfriend, until they establish relationships. They provide housing, buy
her food, nice clothes and gifts, making her feel like shes
loved and cherished.
1 The Partnership Program enables Gordon-Conwell students to be prepared for a fruitful ministry, surrounded by a network of support, equipped with stewardship skills and
be less encumbered by debt with a generous full tuition scholarship. Hollis is currently
striving toward this years goals to complete her final year of study.
spring 2015 | contact
f e at u r e s
f e at u r e s
-year
Study
in
History
By Anne B. Doll
f e at u r e s
f e at u r e s
L to r: 1971 GCTS faculty with first president, Dr. Harold John Ockenga, front row, third from right; Spring 1979 seminary faculty; Dr. Garth Rosell, right, with President
Dr. Robert E. Cooley; Fall 1978 faculty retreat at the Ockengas New Hampshire home; Gordon-Conwell professors with Dr. Walter C. Kaiser, Jr., President.
...good teaching begins where our love for students converges with
our love for the subject we are studying in such a manner as to make
that material come alive and applicable to their lives and ministries.
teacher whose message was clear, rang true and was life
sustaining and life transforming. To be privileged to be a
conveyor of that message that Christ came to give, that we
are to teach, live by, try to modelall of us wish we could
do that more effectively
I think at the core of teaching, as in any ministry, it is the
work of the Holy Spirit who teaches us and opens our eyes
and empowers us to do the work. I think thats why Christ
told his disciples, in that powerful section of Acts, to stay
in Jerusalem until they were empowered from on high to
do ministry, including teaching. It was to enable weak and
faltering souls like ourselves to communicate that which
God can turn into such useful things for those who learn.
As a church historian, Garth sees the current culture as
moving increasingly into a period that looks very much
like the time of the early Church, the time prior to the Emperor Constantine in the 4th century. Its a period in which
Christianity is growing and vital, but oftentimes persecuted, he explains. The Church is working in a society that
is very religious, but very resistant to the absolute claims
of Christ on peoples lives. So we learn from the great
saints and martyrs of the early Church what it means to
serve God faithfully in an increasingly hostile world.
His overarching sense, he adds, is that we need to fortify ourselves, our students need to fortify themselves,
by knowing the Scriptures more thoroughly. We need to
memorize them, put them in our hearts, so that if the day
ever comes when we dont have access to our Scriptures,
as is true in some parts of the world today, we will have
them readily in our minds.
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articles
articles
I
The
Lively
Ediface
of the
Church
Gordon Isaac, Ph.D.
Reason #1
12
Reason #2
13
articles
articles
Reason #3
Reason #4
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God to the sideline? All of this has been dealt with before.
Knowing these accounts gives perspective on where we
might be in the life cycle of our church bodies. Seeing the
long stretch of history that has gone before us helps us to
prepare for the history that extends out beyond our time,
and to do so in hope.
Further, church history allows us to meet the saints on
whose shoulders we stand. Let me give a few examples.
Mary of Egypt (5th century) was subjected to public
prostitution for a good portion of her life. It meant being
a non-being in the eyes of the Empire. One day she was
miraculously saved and taken in by the church community
and given dignity again. Athanasius of Alexandria was
exiled no less than five times in his life as bishop because
he maintained the deity of Christ. William Tyndale was a
linguistic genius whose translation of the New Testament
into English, developed amid intense persecution, helped
establish Protestantism in England. Nearer our own time,
the witness of Dietrich Bonhoeffer during the dark days
of Hitler held up the power of the word of God in spite of
unjust worldly power.
In short, church history is a lively edifice that continues to
be built. In the words of Philip Schaff,
How shall we labor with any effect to build up the
church, if we have no thorough knowledge of her
history, or fail to apprehend it from the proper point
of observation? History is, and must ever continue
to be, next to Gods Word, the rightest foundation
of wisdom, and the surest guide to all successful
practical activity.
Dr. Gordon Isaac is Berkshire Associate Professor
of Advent Christian Studies. He is an expert on
Reformation Studies and Martin Luther, and has
written extensively on Luther. He also has expertise
on Hell, Eschatology/End Times, Church History
and the Advent Christian denomination, within
which he has served several interim pastorates.
He is former associate editor of Luther Digest and
the author of Left Behind or Left Befuddled: The Subtle Dangers of
Popularizing the End Times.
GORDON-CONWELL
INTO THE
FUTURE
RICHARD LINTS, PH.D.
Gordon-Conwell students
at library, circa 1980s
articles
articles
Left to right, A.J. Gordon, Russell Conwell, J. Howard Pew, Dr. Harold John Ockenga,
Rev. Dr. Billy Graham
Academic Dean Dr. Tim Laniak with students in Charlotte campus library
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Caring
for the Soul
During
Seminary
Heather N. Korpi
articles
19
articles
articles
20
A Ministry of Transparency
Patrick
Schlabs
may win the award
for most distance
traveled
as
a
commuter student.
Six to seven times
each semester, this
Master of Divinity
candidate and two
friends make the
four-hour
trek
from
Charleston,
South Carolina, to
Jacksonville, Florida,
for 24 hours of
intensive learning, community-building and soul-filling.
Using words like embraced, loved, cared for, humility,
honesty, sincerity, fun and warmth to describe the ethos
of Gordon-ConwellJacksonville, Patrick asserts that his
significant commute doesnt hold him back from engaging
fully in life and learning there.
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news
good books
good books
Aaron Harrington
Campaign Director,
Advancement Office
ordon-Conwells
Comprehensive
Campaign
Director Aaron Harrington has a special affinity
for the Russian people.
For nearly 15 years, he has traveled 4,500-plus miles to
Russia to serve in a local Christian churchs summer
camp near Moscow. Located on a spacious property
previously owned by the Communist party, the camp
focuses on evangelism, leadership development and
team building for about 100 Russian youth.
In addition to providing common camp activities, a
team of experienced Russian professionals also leads
campers in group team-building exercises, then challenges them to explain what they learned and how they
would apply it to real life. The result is remarkable,
Aaron says. Not all campers are Christian, and some
do not resonate with the Gospel message. But by the
end of camp, everyone has been significantly changed,
if not yet by Christat least by the team building. And
thats usually enough to draw them back the next year.
Aaron grew up in Westford, Massachusetts, a town
northwest of Boston. His was a typical Christian upbringing with two Christian parents, one brother and a
cat. His passion for Russia took root during a mission
trip in 2000. Returning to the U.S., he knew he wanted to
go again. And that eventually led to the development of
Russian Evangelization and Leadership, a non-profit organization founded by his family and some of their longstanding Christian friends. Aaron serves on the board.
Its a small organization that is investing in Russian
youth, he says. Weve been a part of many encouraging
moments with a local church inside of Russia.
Becoming interested in church activities is not a small
feat for youth who have grown up where the effects of
reach
a 70-year Communist, atheist culture linger. There are challenges for young people to get involved in their own faith:
from their parents, from the government and just life circumstances. For many Russians when they consider church,
theres a lack of trust mixed with skepticism and apathy.
Throughout his college years at Gordon College, Aaron continued to return to Russia most summers. In early 2006, during a love at first sight meeting he met Brynn at Gordon,
and in late 2007 they married in Orange County, California.
As a couple, they spent their first year together in Los Angeles, then moved to Georgia to serve in youth ministry at Atlantas Peachtree Presbyterian Church. Brynn worked with
the high school students, and he worked with middle school
studentsan experience he describes as amazing.
During that time, he recalls, it became increasingly evident
that I liked to support the work of the church and Brynn
needed to work in the church. That led Aaron and Brynn to
the seminarys South Hamilton campus, where Brynn completed an M.Div. degree in 2014. She is now pursuing ordination in the Evangelical Covenant denomination. In 2012,
Brynn and Aaron Engler, another pastor from the Highrock
Church family in Arlington, Massachusetts, planted Highrock
North Shore in Salem, a few miles from the Hamilton campus.
The church has about 150 people who call it their home.
There are a few different church and para-church ministries
that Ive had the privilege of being involved in, Aaron comments. Those experiences have taught me that I believe the
local church is the hope of the world. It has been deeply satisfying to watch the church Brynn helped plant develop into
a community, to see lives changed and to see our neighbors
being challenged to critically consider the claims of Christ.
Aaron is also Vice President of the New England Seafarers
Mission. Founded in 1880, the organization reminds seafarers and everyone who walks through the doors that they
are beloved of God. They provide Christian witness and outreach, and practical assistance such as a trustworthy way to
contact and send home money for working seafarers who
visit the ports of New England.
Reflecting on the campaign, Aaron adapts a quote from author and theologian Frederick Buechner to describe his role
as Campaign Director at the seminary. My job, he explains,
is helping the Advancement team at Gordon-Conwell marry our contributors passions with the seminarys greatest
needs. The campaign has reached 85 percent of its goal.
As for the Russian camp in which Aaron continues to serve,
it now has a new group of campersall because of a providential encounter outside his office at Gordon-Conwell.
spring 2015 | contact
23
reach
reach
Advancement Updates
and Campaign Priorities
Kurt W. Drescher, Vice President of Advancement
Clockwise, 1 Aaron Harrington, right, with Russian campers; 2 Serving with Russian church leaders; 3 Hanging out with a friend at summer camp;
4 Aaron and his wife, Brynn.
Not all campers are Christian, and some do not resonate with the
Gospel message. But by the end of camp, everyone has been significantly
changed, if not yet by Christat least by the team building.
And thats usually enough to draw them back the next year.
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reach
news
2. Charlotte Building Project Completion Priority
a d va n c e m e n t n e w s
This project is nearing the finish line, and we look forward to the new Charlotte Building Dedication on May
15th. A major part of the project is the David M. Rogers
Hall of Missions, named for an esteemed alumnus who
received an M.A. in Christian Thought as a member of
Charlottes first graduating class in 1996.
dvancement articles usually work on a simple premise: Describe what resources have been raised and
what resources still are needed to reach our goals. And yet, as I have reflected on the past four years of
the seminarys Our Legacy, Our Future Comprehensive Campaign, I must begin with great thanksgiving
and praise for all that God has accomplished through His faithful people. We are so blessed to have hundreds of
friends who have generously and sacrificially provided resources year after year to the seminary.
As we approach the final stages of the campaign, we are delighted to report that we have far less left to raise then
we have raised to date. We are not there yet, but we never want to lose sight of Gods provision for us in every
aspect of the campaign. We are in the final stretch, our goals are well within reach, and we are, more than ever,
determined, with Gods help, to finish this campaign strong.
As a reminder, Advancement efforts at Gordon-Conwell focus primarily on three areas: restricted giving for projects above and beyond our regular operations, planned giving through our Founders Society and annual giving
to operations through gifts to the seminarys Education Fund. These three pieces are all covered under the current
Our LegacyOur Future Comprehensive Campaign: Serving the Church with Excellence and Innovation.
The Biblical Literacy Program for the Church, which addresses a need in many churches for basic biblical and
spring 2015 | contact
27
reach
reach
theological knowledge. We are committed to equipping
Church lay leaders with a biblical education that can be
shared with others to reverse the trend of biblical illiteracy.
-
4. Scholarships
Since the launch of the comprehensive campaign, we have
been able to create 13 new scholarships.
As a seminary community, please know we are deeply grateful for the long-term investments that have already been
made. We have received many planned gift commitments
from friends of the seminary, and we are incredibly blessed
to be partnering with these sacrificial donors who are helping to secure the training of the next generation of church
leaders. Please know that your planned gift can truly make
the difference in the lives of future generations through this
type of legacy commitment.
Attract and retain gifted faculty and staff. The fund is critical to our success in recruiting and retaining gifted personnel through competitive salaries, resources for research
and continuing education.
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alumni
alumni
alumni spotlight
ordon-Conwell
graduates John
and Mary March
describe their New City
Covenant Church near
Minneapolis as like a
family.
The church that opened
on Easter Sunday 2010 is
brimming with children
who, they say, are very
enthusiastic about their
experience at New City
and truly want to be
The John and Mary March family
there. In fact, if parents
are inclined to stay home on Sunday mornings, their
children insist that they go.
Sunday worship is followed by a communal meal called
Soul Food. During the week, members study, learn and
grow together in a number of small groups, and once a
year attend an all-church retreat.
We are blessed, the Marches comment, with a loving
community seeking Christ together.
John and Mary planted New City with the support and
assistance of the Evangelical Covenant Church (ECC)
denomination. It started with a small group meeting in
their home. As the group grew, the need for a larger space
took them to a local ice rink. The couple welcomed the
new environment that provided several rooms for worship
and Sunday School. However, these activities also had to
compete with the nearby sounds of local ice hockey teams
practicing on Sunday mornings.
Then, in what John terms Gods provision for us, an
independent church chose to bless us by transferring
ownership of their property into our name. Their goal
wasnt to make the most money on the sale, but to ensure
that a like-minded church continued to do ministry in
the space.
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alumni
alumni
alumni connect
The Alumni Services offices hosted an Archaeological Study Tour to Israel and Jordan January 5-18, 2015.
Alumni and friends from across the U.S. and as far away
as Hong Kong came together for unforgettable learning
experiences with Gordon-Conwells Dr. Thomas Petter,
Professor of Old Testament, and Dr. Christine Palmer, Adjunct Professor of Old Testament, as well as our Israeli
and Jordanian tour guides. Our preparation was enhanced
by regular blogs written prior to travel by Dr. Petter, who
gave great insight into the geography and culture behind
the biblical texts associated with places we visited.
alumni impact
alumni notes
In Memoriam
Ifeyinwa Amalu (08 MACO; 12 MAR) died
in a car accident en route to Texas. Please
keep Ifeys parents and extended family in
your prayers as they mourn the loss of their
precious daughter.
The Rev. Dr. Stephen A. Hayner (73
Th.M.) died of pancreatic cancer January
31, 2015, in Decatur, GA. He had recently
retired as president of Columbia Theological
Seminary. He had also served as President
of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship
(USA), University Pastor at University
Presbyterian Church, Seattle, WA, Vice
President of Student Affairs atSeattle Pacific
University, Senior Associate Pastor at High
Point Church and Associate Pastor at the
Fountain of Life Family Ministry Center,
both in Madison, WI. He is survived by his
wife, Sharol, three grown children and five
grandchildren.
Rev. Stanley Monroe Horton (44 M.Div.)
died July 12, 2014, at Maranatha Village in
Springfield, MO. He had been recognized
as the premier Pentecostal theologian, was
a scholar and prolific writer who continued
to travel the world until age 92, visiting
25 countries as a lecturer. Believing that
following Christ means being a lifelong
disciple, he continued to serve the Church
well into his nineties: on the Assemblies of
God Commission on Doctrinal Purity, as
an adviser for AGTS doctoral participants
and as an original board member of Israels
Redemption, a role he fulfilled to the end of
his life.
1960s
Reg Dunlap (60 B.Div.) turned 80 this
year, and is still serving energetically and
speaking throughout the country. The
Revival and Bible Conference Ministry of
which Reg is a part in Florida saw many
decisions for God in the spring, and in May
he taught a seminar at the Ministry on the
Holy Spirit conference in Leesburg, FL. In
June, he spoke at Union Chapel in Hampton,
NH, and at conferences in Rumford and
Eliot, ME, in September. Reg covets your
prayers for his Florida speaking schedule
through May 2015.
1970s
John Babson (75 M.Div.) started an
organization in the fall of 2013 in New
Hampshire called The Lakes Chaplaincy. The
mission statement is to provide emotional
and spiritual support to the elderly, disabled,
ill, homeless and broken, their families and
the staff who serve them. There are two
purposes: to share the love and hope of
Christ and to support regional pastors to
engage these largely non-churched people
groups.
Paul Buttrey (74 M.Div.) and his wife just
returned to California for retirement after
34 years of missionary service in Taiwan
with OMF International. During those years
Paul served as assistant to the field director,
Field Director, Field Finance Manager
and for the last 16 years as a teacher in a
Taiwan seminary. He is pleased to have
seen the Sharpening Your Interpersonal
Skills workshop materials translated into
Chinese and local facilitators trained for
the Taiwan church. Paul doesnt know what
retirement will look like yet, but he is
looking forward to many new adventures in
the Lords service.
Jack Good (70 MRE) was the main speaker
and recipient of an Honorary Doctor of
Humane Letter at Endicott Colleges annual
Convocation September 2. He has served
as executive vice president of Beverly
National Bank for six years, serves on a
number of boards and is an active volunteer
on Bostons North Shore. Jack also has
been honored as one of the Top 100 North
Shore Leaders by the Salem News, and as an
American Red Cross Enduring Hero, among
many other awards.
Ed Smyth (72 MRE) recently completed
30 years on the faculty of Seattle Pacific
University as Professor of Educational
Ministry and Chair of the Department of
Ministry and Practical Theology. While
serving at SPU, Ed has led 27 discipleship
groups of college men, which has brought
him great joy, and he is looking forward to
the upcoming academic year at SPU. Ed and
his wife, Ellen, celebrated their 45th wedding
anniversary last September. They have four
grown children and five grandchildren.
1980s
Edwin Aponte (82 MATS) became the
Dean of Palmer Theological Seminary in
July 2014. Remarks from Palmer Seminary
1990s
John Lee (94 M.Div.) was appointed
interim Academic Dean at the John Leland
Center for Theological Studies in Virginia.
John has taught as an adjunct professor
and Teaching Fellow at Leland since 2005,
in addition to serving as Pastor of the Rock
Presbyterian Church in Rockville, MD.
Rich Noble (95 M.Div.; 04 D.Min.) coauthored On Mission, a missions mobilization
resource that was released in 2013.
Jeff Patterson (95 D.Min.) recently
was appointed Yadkin Valley District
Superintendent in the United Methodist
Churchs
Western
North
Carolina
Conference.
33
reflections
alumni
2000s
Jared Alcntara (04 M.Div.) graduated
with a Doctor of Philosophy degree at
Princeton Theological Seminary in May
2014. The Doctor of Philosophy is the highest
academic degree earned in theological
study.
Chris Castaldo (02 M.Div.) is now
Lead Pastor at New Covenant Church in
Naperville, IL.
Rt. Rev. Foley Beach (02 D.Min.) was
elected the new Archbishop of the Anglican
Church in North America. He succeeded
the Most Rev. Robert Duncan, the first
archbishop for the Anglican Church in
North America.
Jeanne DeFazio (04 MAR) co-edited
Creative Ways to Build Christian Community,
which was recently featured on the program
Beauty for Ashes aired on Time Warner.
Peter Denio (08 MANT), Dr. Frew Tamrat
(02 MANT), and Dr. Richard Stuebing
(69 M.Div.; 94 DMin) are teaching at
Evangelical Theological College in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia.
Dr. Robert Harp (13 D.Min.) is offering a
free course called Faith at Work through
ChristianCourses.com (an affiliate of
RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI).
Harp is President and Executive Editor
ofGlobalHotelNetwork.com.
Deacon Steve Kramer (06 D.Min.) has been
hired as the Director of Homiletics at Sacred
Heart Seminary and School of Theology in
Hales Corners, WI, the largest seminary
in the U.S. specializing in the formation of
men of all ages for priesthood in the Roman
Catholic Church.The school has more than
100 seminarians, and 70-80 students in ESL
and MA programs. In addition to teaching
homiletics courses, Deacon Kramer has
been commissioned to create a dynamic and
systematic preaching program to provide
seminarians multiple opportunities to hone
their preaching skills.
Ryan Lokkesmoe (08 MANT) just
published his first book, Blurry: Bringing
Clarity to the Bible. It is a brief, innovative
introduction to the Bible in plain language.
Ryan serves as the Small Groups Pastor
at Parkway Fellowship in Katy, TX. He is
also in the dissertation phase of a Ph.D. in
Biblical Studies, and will graduate in 2015
from the University of Denver.
34
EPC Conference
(Orlando, FL)
Luke 17:11-19
Matthew D. Kim
July 2015
CCCC Family Conference
(Rochester, NY)
October 2015
Alumni Reunion
(Hamilton, MA)
November 2015
ETS/SBL Annual Meetings
(Atlanta, GA)
For alumni resources, a complete list of
events and to connect with other alumni, visit the Alumni Services website at:
http://my.gordonconwell.edu/alumni
you well. Didnt Jesus just heal the 10 lepers? Why does
Jesus now bring up the issue of faith? By giving thanks,
the Samaritan leper opened his heart to receive the Savior.
The text says that he fell on his face at His feet, giving
thanks to Him. He acknowledges that Jesus, the master,
doctor, and now Lord of his life had not only performed
a bodily miracle, but more crucially healed him from his
spiritual malady called sin.
We live in a thankless culture. We are not always swift
to say thank you. We tend to take things for granted
perhaps even our salvation. What this true account of the
Samaritan leper reveals is that when we give thanks to
Jesus, He makes our faith and life complete. Our human
minds gravitate toward what is most pressing, our
physical and earthly needs. But Jesus cares ultimately
about our eternal status with Him. By giving thanks and
praising Jesus, the Samaritan leper receives the greatest
form of healing of all: salvation! How are we doing in
giving thanks and praise to God? Like this Samaritan
leper, lets take time daily to give thanks to Jesus for who
He is and what Hes done, because He alone makes our
faith and life complete.
Dr. Matthew Kim (M.Div. 02) served as an adjunct
professor, as the Burnett H. and Dorothy F. Sams
Visiting Professor at the Hamilton campus and as
a D.Min. mentor before joining the Gordon-Conwell
faculty in 2012 as Assistant Professor of Preaching
and Ministry. He has also served as Senior Pastor
of Logos Central Chapel in Denver, Colorado, as an
adjunct professor at Denver Seminary and Youth
Pastor at Korean Church of Boston in Brookline, Massachusetts.
He is the author of 7 Lessons for New Pastors: Your First Year in
Ministry and Preaching to Second Generation Korean Americans:
Towards a Possible Selves Contextual Homiletic.
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