Ecumenical group plans to extend Logsdon Seminary legacy

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Partners committed to preserving the heritage of Logsdon Seminary are developing plans for extending and expanding the seminary’s legacy in light of its closure next year by Hardin-Simmons University. 

Citing financial stress, the university in Abilene, Texas, announced in February it would close the seminary. HSU is offering final contracts to seminary faculty through May 2021 as part of a teach-out process. Previously, Logsdon had been singled out for criticism as too progressive by a few conservative West Texas pastors.

Representatives of Logsdon faculty and alumni consulted with leadership of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Texas, Fellowship Southwest and the Baptist houses of studies at Southern Methodist University’s Perkins School of Theology and Texas Christian University’s Brite Divinity School. Congregations and donors committed to training ministers also are involved in the conversations.

The group committed to care for Logsdon students and faculty, as well as to extend Logsdon’s “big-hearted Baptist legacy” into the future. 

They are developing options for Logsdon students who may be interested in completing their seminary degrees at Brite or Perkins. They also have considered how Logsdon faculty can continue to prepare women and men for ministry, embodying the Logsdon legacy in a cooperative effort with the other two schools.

Looking beyond those immediate concerns, the group has begun planning for long-term ministry preparation that embodies the ethos of Logsdon, a seminary that provided open-hearted, broad-minded ministry training across more than two decades.

Their plans include creating a network that will partner with churches and the participating groups to:

• Help young people consider careers in ministry, nurturing them as they discern God’s plan for their lives.

• Provide ongoing theological education, steeped in Logsdon’s heritage and traditional Baptist values, offered in conjunction with Brite and Perkins and utilizing professors who have taught at Logsdon.

• Ensure a strong start for students as they move into vocational ministry by providing mentoring, peer-group development and continuing education. 

These plans speak not only to current Logsdon students, but also to the seminary’s alumni, as well as to future ministers who value the seminary’s legacy, said Kyle Tubbs, president of the Logsdon Alumni Council.

“We welcome you, we cherish you, we want to listen to you,” Tubbs said about what he hopes the new venture will communicate to Baptists who feel disenfranchised.

Bob Ellis, dean of Logsdon, said serving at the school the last 24 years has been the greatest privilege of his career but looked ahead with optimism. 

“We grieve that the seminary will not continue as a part of Hardin-Simmons,” Ellis acknowledged, but added, “These plans hold the promise of preserving some of the great spirit of Logsdon Seminary and transforming it into a seedbed for growing new ways to equip ministers for our rapidly changing church and world.”

Perkins School of Theology anticipates the collaborative endeavor, reported Dean Craig C. Hill.

"We welcome this new partnership with Logsdon and look forward to welcoming both students and faculty into our community," Hill said.  "The Perkins Baptist House of Studies, led by Dr. Jaime Clark-Soles—an internationally known Baptist clergywoman and professor—is on the cutting edge of providing a home to Baptist students who seek a quality theological education. Perkins School of Theology will certainly be enriched by the gifts and graces of former Logsdon students and faculty, and we are grateful for this exciting new venture together."

Brite Divinity School is glad to participate in the project, noted Dean Michael Miller.

“Our disposition as we contribute to the emerging network to ‘extend Logsdon’s “big-hearted Baptist legacy” into the future’ is fueled by our support for the best values that inform the complex Baptist heritage, our love for God’s people everywhere, and our sense that … God works for the good of those who love God and are called to God’s purposes,” Miller said. “As such, Brite looks to a future of strong cooperation with our ecumenical siblings and is ready to welcome Baptist students … into our nurturing community that is informed by a commitment to academic excellence, inclusive justice and life-giving practice.”

The overall group hopes to help Baptists, particularly in the Southwest, coalesce around a fresh vision of partnership and theological education, said Marv Knox, coordinator of Fellowship Southwest. 

“All these partners see their plans as a redemptive opportunity emerging out of the Logsdon crisis,” Knox said. “They will open a path to a broad ecumenical endeavor that prepares women and men for ministry in churches across the Southwest and beyond. And as they minister with grace, skill and vision, they will extend Logsdon’s legacy for generations.”


CONTACTS

Dr. Bob Ellis, dean, Logsdon Seminary

(325) 864-6369‬

trellis7766@gmail.com

Rev. Kyle Tubbs, president, Logsdon Seminary Alumni Council

(770) 220-1600

ktubbs@cbf.net

Rev. Marv Knox, coordinator, Fellowship Southwest

(214) 335-7719

mknox@cbf.net

Rev. Connie L. Nelson, executive director, public affairs and alumni/ae relations, Perkins School of Theology

(214) 768-2335

clnelson@smu.edu

Dr. Michael St. A. Miller, executive vice president and dean, Brite Divinity School

(817) 257-7577

michael.miller@tcu.edu




Jay Pritchard