Educators Scottsdale
Bishop Sandra Steiner Ball, President Joel Thierstein and Rev. Dr. Thomas Wolfe attend the 2019 NASCUMC meeting Jan. 3-4 in Scottsdale, Ariz. (GBHEM Photo)
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., Jan. 4 – Representatives from United Methodist higher education institutions gathered in Scottsdale, Ariz., Jan. 3-4 to discuss how the values of the church’s higher education ministry could inform the denomination’s mission. Attendees included university presidents and senior leaders from the National Association of Schools and Colleges of The United Methodist Church (NASCUMC).
The gathering was the most highly attended in a decade, demonstrating the organization’s continuing influence. The General Board of Higher Education and Ministry (GBHEM), The United Methodist Church’s leadership development agency, initiated NASCUMC, which has grown in its work to enhance United Methodist higher education as a ministry to the church and world.
“The history of the United Methodist movement has been defined by its deep commitments to education,” said Colette Pierce Burnette, president of NASCUMC and of Huston-Tillotson University in Austin, Texas. “At the same time, I expect that the future of this denomination will be equally defined by the relationship maintained between the church and its educational centers going forward. United Methodist colleges and universities are the most important gateway to the church for young adults.”
NASCUMC leaders discussed the importance of maintaining that educational gateway for all students and its relevance to the 2019 Special Session of the General Conference.
One of the co-facilitators of the Way Forward Commission, Bishop Sandra Steiner Ball, West Virginia Episcopal Area, described the various proposals that the upcoming General Conference will examine. The Rev. Dr. Thomas Wolfe, president of Iliff School of Theology, in Denver, Colo., spoke about the importance of the historical connection between the church and United Methodist schools, colleges and universities.
NASCUMC members also addressed the association’s international relationships.
“The leaders of many Christian denominations speak about their church-related colleges, but ours is certainly a college-related church,” said Mark Hanshaw, associate general secretary for GBHEM’s Division of Higher Education. “The mission of United Methodism in the world has been defined by the church’s commitment to education and educational accessibility.”
NASCUMC is the second-largest denominationally-affiliated network of schools in the United States. It includes 119 member institutions. Among these institutions are 13 United Methodist seminaries, 11 historically black institutions and several private secondary schools. NASCUMC is supported by GBHEM’s Division of Higher Education.
Victoria Rebeck is a staff communicator for the General Board of Higher Education and Ministry.