(RNS)— Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary announced Wednesday (April 19) that longtime Christian educator David Dockery had been named the school’s president, seven months after the former president resigned unexpectedly.
Dockery has been serving as interim president of Southwestern since September 2022, after the departure of Adam Greenway, who had been installed in February 2019.
“Dr. David Dockery is God’s man for Southwestern Seminary in this hour,” said Danny Roberts, chairman of the board of the seminary, which is in Fort Worth, Texas. “Our seminary’s at a critical juncture in this 115-year history, and in God’s providence, He has already provided the man to lead our seminary during this time.”
Before coming to Southwestern, Dockery had been the longtime president of Union University, a Baptist school in Tennessee, and later served for several years as president of Trinity International University outside of Chicago.
Longtime Southern Baptist leader O.S. Hawkins, who had been serving as an adviser to Dockery, was named the school’s chancellor. According to Southwestern, Hawkins will serve in a volunteer capacity. He is the former president of Guidestone, an entity of the Southern Baptist Convention that provides financial services and insurance for churches.
Southwestern has about 2,400 full- and part-time students, according to data from the Association of Theological Schools. One of six seminaries affiliated with the SBC, the school has experienced difficulties in recent years.
In 2018, longtime President Paige Patterson was fired after a series of controversies that drew national attention. His successor, Greenway, left after three years, saying he had not been prepared for the enormity of the “legal and financial realities” facing the seminary.
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According to the announcement Wednesday, the Southwestern board did not form a presidential search committee to fill the school’s spot. The board chair said that the school’s current challenges needed “clarity in the Office of the President as soon as possible and for the future.”