Appointed Joseph M. Stowell, former
president of Moody Bible Institute, as
president of Cornerstone University in Grand
Rapids, Michigan. The author of many books,
including Following Christ
and Simply Jesus, Stowell
has served since
2005 as teaching pastor
at the 8,000-member
Harvest Bible Chapel
in suburban Chicago.
Died Clyde
Cook, president
emeritus of Biola
University, on April
11. A Biola alumnus
and fourth-generation
missionary to
Asia, Cook served for 25 years as president
of the Christian liberal arts university in
Southern California, resigning in 2007. During
his tenure, the school's enrollment nearly
doubled to 5,752, and its endowment grew
to $43.5 million.
Honored Elizabeth and Caspar ten
Boom, with the title of Righteous Among
the Nations by Israel's Holocaust Martyrs'
and Heroes' Remembrance Authority. The
sister and father of Corrie ten Boom (author
of The Hiding Place) were instrumental in
saving nearly 800 Jewish lives before their
imprisonment and deaths in German concentration
camps. Corrie ten Boom was honored
with the same title in 1967.
Dismissed Sheri
Klouda's lawsuit
against Southwestern
Baptist Theological Seminary
and its president,
Paige Patterson, for
wrongful termination. Klouda, a former
Hebrew professor in Southwestern's theology
department now at Taylor University, was
fired because Patterson believed her teaching
role exceeded the SBC's limitations on
women in church leadership. U.S. District
Judge John McBryde dismissed the case as
an ecclesiastical matter, saying that any
investigation would be an "unconstitutional
intrusion into the affairs of the seminary as
a religious organization."
Cornerstone also announced that Ed Dobson, retired pastor of Calvary Church in Grand Rapids, will be the school's vice president for spiritual formation.
Christianity Today's liveblog noted the passing of Clyde Cook.
Catholic News Agency has more on the honoring of the ten Booms.