Home
Current Issue
Archive
Calendar
Advertisements
 
About Us
Contact Us
Subscribe
 
 

E-Mail this article E-Mail
Display this article more printer friendly Printer-friendly

SBC Executive Committee adds $100,000 to Union recovery

 

Morris Abernathy/BP

David Dockery, left, president of Union University in Jackson, Tenn., accepts a check for $100,000 on Feb. 18 from Bill Harrell, pastor of Abilene Baptist Church in Martinez and chairman of the SBC Executive Committee, to help the school with rebuilding efforts in the aftermath of the Feb. 5 tornado.

NASHVILLE (BP) — The Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee voted Feb. 18 to give $100,000 to help Union University rebuild from the devastating tornado that wrecked the campus almost two weeks earlier.

The vote came on the first evening of the group’s two-day meeting in Nashville, Tenn.

“The officers of the Executive Committee discussed this last night,” chairman Bill Harrell, pastor of Abilene Baptist Church in Martinez, told Union President David Dockery as he presented the check. “We knew what the heart of Southern Baptist people is on a subject like this. We want to give you a gift to help you put the campus back in first-class condition.”

“We are very, very grateful for your kindness and generosity to us in this moment of need at Union University,” Dockery replied. “This is my first time away from the University in 13 days, and it has been 13 days like we never could have imagined.

“I just want you to know of our heartfelt, deep, and genuine appreciation,” Dockery continued. “The recovery road is long. It will not be easy. It will be painful. And we are going to need your ongoing help and prayers, support and encouragement for many weeks and months to come. I want to thank churches across the Southern Baptist convention for their prayers and willingness to stand with Union University during this important time in the life and history of this great institution.”

 

New day at Union

Executive Committee President Morris H. Chapman, as a trustee of Union, did not participate in the EC officers’ deliberations. Chapman told EC members that during his trips to Union’s campus in the storm’s aftermath he was struck not only by the destruction but by Dockery’s leadership.

“... [T]his past Saturday morning I attended a trustee meeting where Dr. Dockery gave us a briefing of all that had happened and what is happening,” Chapman said. “As I drove across the campus on that morning, things had already changed dramatically. Much of the debris was already being hauled off, and it’s going to be a new day at Union University.

“But during the trustee meeting, Dr. Dockery took all that had happened and all that needed to happen, how it was going to be accomplished and what the results would be, and he put it in a capsule of brief understanding and made it as clear as it could have been,” Chapman said.

Executive Committee members watched a video presentation about the tornado striking Union’s campus, including not only an overview of the physical destruction but also testimonies from students and parents about God’s protection during the storm.

Afterward, Dockery said Union’s hope for the future is rooted in their confidence in God’s love and power.

“We are hopeful because we believe in a God who raises the dead, and out of the rubble will come renewal,” Dockery said. “There is hope for Union University because we have confidence in our great God. He has protected us. He will provide for us.

“We believe in a God who will touch the hearts of people, who will come and help our students, help our staff, help our faculty and, enable Union University to carry out its God-ordained mission to advance Christ-centered higher education and expand the Kingdom of God in this earth.”