By Linda Green* FORT WORTH, Texas (UMNS)—A 120-member student choir, college presidents and delegates attending the 2008 General Conference celebrated United Methodist higher education and church-related schools for their "open hearts, open minds and open doors." More than 1,000 delegates and visitors attended the banquet and program celebrating higher education on April 28 at the Fort Worth Convention Center, site of the 2008 General Conference. The event honored the institutions for educating the next generation of students that will determine the future of the United Methodist Church. The evening included a video presentation on the 122 United Methodist-related academic and theological institutions. Openness is "not just a slogan" at United Methodist institutions, said the voiceover on a video. Students from all over the world attend church-related schools and, when they walk through "the global doors," they put a face on United Methodist education, the video said. "Young people are the future for any organization but especially for the church," said Jake Schrum, president of Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas, and chairman of the Higher Education Night Task Force. The student choir was under the direction of the Rev. Barbara Day Miller, assistant dean of worship and lecturer in liturgical practices at Candler School of Theology in Atlanta. Following the choral performance featuring songs about the holiness of Jesus and how Jesus is the rock, Schrum said he "doesn't worry about the Methodist Church's ability to share the hope of Christ with the rest of the world."
Schools are superiorUnited Methodist education is distinctive and in many ways superior because the institutions emphasize John Wesley's charge of education for the common good, said William Lucky, president of the National Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities. "We celebrate John Wesley's vision by continuing to have open hearts, open minds and open doors," he said.A prayer led by Stuart Gulley, president of LaGrange (Ga.) College, thanked the Methodist Church for not stopping with the establishment of local congregations and the spread of scriptural holiness across the land. He thanked the church for investing in the educational institutions. Gulley said that in times of war, terrorism, crime, immorality, poverty, disease and depletion of the earth's resources, it is the church and its academic institutions which have "challenged minds and inspired souls to address these complicated and vexing problems." Higher Education Night was sponsored by an 11-member task force of representatives from the National Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities; the United Methodist Board of Higher Education and Ministry, the Council of Bishops, the Council of Presidents of the denomination's historically black colleges and universities, and the United Methodist Higher Education Foundation.
Wade in the waterFollowing a stirring rendition of the traditional African-American spiritual "Wade in the Water" by the student choir representing nearly 30 United Methodist academic and theological institutions, Iowa Area Bishop Gregory Palmer said the metaphor heard in the song should be a calling card for the United Methodist schools, colleges and universities.Palmer, president of the United Methodist Council of Bishops, said the song could be used to invite people to consider United Methodist education when making decisions about where they will attend school to "wade in this water." "Very often students make that decision with strong oversight from their parents under the misguided conception that it will cost them more to attend a private, church-related (or) United Methodist institution," he said. "If we are beginning to sing in harmony … the key to our future and the future of the world and of our planet is leadership, leadership, leadership. I say to you to let's wade in the water." Across the United States, 250,000 students attend United Methodist-related academic and theological institutions. Of the total schools, 92 are four-year institutions, six are two-year colleges, 13 are seminaries and theological schools, 10 are pre-collegiate schools and one is a professional school. *Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn. |
- Ministry
Explore Ministry
- Overview
- Welcome
- Lay & Ordained
- Certification Studies
- Deacons & Diaconal Ministers
- Elder
- Chaplain
- Pastoral Counselor
- Local Pastor
- United Methodist Seminaries
Ministry Candidates
- Beginning Candidacy
- Continuing Candidacy
- Probationers
- Licensing & Course of Study
Clergy
- Boards of Ordained Ministry
- Campus Ministry
- Chaplains & Pastoral Counselors
- Deacons & Diaconal Ministers
- District Superintendents
- Elders & Local Pastors
Seminaries
- Overview
- Seminarians
- University Senate-Approved Seminaries
- United Methodist Theological Schools
- Young Adult Seminarians Network
Continuing Education
- Overview of Continuing Education
- Standards & Guidelines for Use of CEUs
- Policies & Guidelines
- Annual Conference Continuing Educators
- Seminaries and Independent Centers of Continuing Education
- Recommended Readings for Continuing Education
- Education
Schools, Colleges & Universities
- Overview
- Welcome
- Guide to Choosing a School
- Benefits of United Methodist Schools
- Colleges and Universities
- Pre-Collegiate Schools
- International Association of Methodist Schools, Colleges & Universities
- The UM Historically Black Colleges
- National Association of Schools & Colleges of The UMC
- The University Senate
On Campus
- Campus Ministry
- Trauma on Campus Consultation
- Campus Minister & Chaplain Profile
- 17 Ways to Welcome College Students
- Month-by-Month: Connecting Your Church with Campus Ministry
- Allan Jerome Burry Scholarship
- Campus Ministry-Based Student Internship
- So What About God Now That You Are Off to College?
- Campus Ministry At-A-Glance
- United Methodist Student Movement
- Orientation Magazine
Funds
- Ministerial Education Fund
- Black College Fund
- Africa University Fund
- Methodist Global Education Fund
- Loans & Scholarships
Loans and Scholarships
- Make Loan Payment
- Loan & Scholarship Opportunities
- Loan & Scholarship Application
- Communities
Communities
- Boards of Ordained Ministry
- Campus Ministry
- Chaplains & Pastoral Counselors
- The Ministry of Chaplains and Pastoral Counselors
- About Us
- Endorsement
- Information
- Scholarships
- Military Ministry Assistance
- Son, A Soldier's Work Is Never Done
- From Warrior to Citizen
- An Order for Welcoming Service Members Returning from War
- An Order for Blessing Service Members Deploying to War
- War and the Soul: Healing our Nation’s Veterans from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
- HART (Helping Airmen Recover Together)
- What United Methodist churches can do now for American troops
- Telling Our Stories
- Worship Resources
- Study of Ministry Commission
- Clergywomen
- Deacons & Diaconal Ministers
- District Superintendents
- Elders & Local Pastors
- United Methodist Student Movement
- Young Adult Seminarians Network
- Women of Color

