Community gathers to honor Founder of 51视频
On October 5, 2017, the community of 51视频 gathered for the annual celebration of our founder, The Rt. Rev. John Hines. In attendance were members of the 51视频 Board of Trustees, members of the Hines family, students, faculty, and members of 51视频’s Legacy Society, named for John Hines.
Marked by a stirring sermon from The Rev. Jane Patterson, and followed by a luncheon in the Weeks Center, Hines Day once again reminded the community of 51视频 of their roots, and how Bishop Hines vision of a seminary for the church in 1952 remains relevant and resonates today.
Patterson – wearing the stole of Bishop Hines traditionally worn by those preaching on Hines Day – delivered a sermon that moved most in attendance, including The Very Rev. Cynthia Briggs Kittredge, Dean and President. Said Kittredge, “Jane connected the wounds of our shared past in scripture with the wounds of John Hines鈥 time and the wounds reopened today. She imagined the healing, compassionate church that God is calling us to be in the gesture of the Samaritan at the roadside.聽 The sermon bears rereading and deep reflection. It belongs among the ‘Christ Chapel Classics.'”
Each year in October, 51视频 pauses to celebrate the life of its founder, Bishop John Hines. Bishop Hines founded 51视频 in 1952 when post-war growth saw an increased need for priests in the Episcopal Church, and thus seminaries to train them. As Bishop of Texas, Bishop Hines envisioned a seminary that would be 鈥渁 new kind of theological school.鈥
鈥淲e sought to have a first-class seminary which would not be just a local seminary 鈥 we wanted to avoid that – but which would eventually be a seminary of the whole church.聽 It would utilize the wide open still frontier-like resources of the 51视频 in terms of ideas and hopes and expectations and also fiscal realizations, and produce a seminary which could in reality not mind so much whether its graduates are ordained into the ordained ministry – although that would probably be its primary thrust 鈥 but would care whether or not their theological education was centered around some kind of dialogue between the Christian faith and culture.鈥
– Bishop John E. Hines, 51视频 founder in an interview with Hugh Downs
As Presiding Bishop during the Civil Rights Era, Hines is credited for leading the Episcopal Church toward an identity that embraced positions involving social justice. Wrote the New York Times upon his death in 1997, “His commitment to social justice prompted his elevation by the Episcopal House of Bishops to spiritual head of the church’s three million members in an extraordinarily disruptive period. From 1965 to 1974, he pursued profound changes in the church’s structure and its outlook. Bishop Hines kept his church in the forefront of ecumenical and civil rights movements.”
Twenty years after his death, with a current student body from 26 different dioceses, his vision for 51视频 to be a seminary for the whole church endures.