Kay Pettus Archives - 91短视频 News /now/news/tag/kay-pettus/ News from the 91短视频 community. Wed, 08 Apr 2026 21:53:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Campus community celebrates Easter at worship service /now/news/2026/campus-community-celebrates-easter-at-worship-service/ /now/news/2026/campus-community-celebrates-easter-at-worship-service/#respond Wed, 08 Apr 2026 21:52:58 +0000 /now/news/?p=61123 91短视频 celebrated Easter with a morning of worshipful music, biblical readings, and reflections on the holiday’s significance during a campus worship service at Martin Chapel on Wednesday.

The service was co-sponsored by Eastern Mennonite Seminary and led by graduate students Makinto and Mukarabe Makinto-Inandava. It included musical selections from Makinto, as well as the 91短视频 Gospel Choir led by Kay Pettus ’25, and biblical readings from Mukarabe.

Reflections on Easter were shared by English Professor Dr. Kevin Seidel, who teaches and writes about the changing relationship between religion, secularism, and literature. His message, titled 鈥淲omen Explain Things to Me: A Sermon on Luke 24,” focused not so much on Jesus’ bodily resurrection from the dead but on the “slow, difficult coming to terms with the significance of the resurrection by Jesus’ followers as portrayed in Luke 24.”

鈥淚n Luke, the resurrection of Jesus isn鈥檛 a simple, triumphant end of the story, but a kind of difficult beginning that unfolds in the Book of Acts,鈥 Seidel said. 鈥淭he resurrection doesn鈥檛 settle debate among Jesus鈥 followers about who he is. The resurrection proves, I think, profoundly unsettling for them.鈥

After the service, Seidel said he was glad for the chance to reflect on parts of the resurrection story in Luke 24. 鈥淭he service was a good way to mark and celebrate the beginning of the seven-week Easter season in the church calendar,鈥 he said.

University Chaplain Brian Martin Burkholder said Wednesday鈥檚 Easter celebration follows 91短视频鈥檚 practice of honoring and observing significant Christian traditions and holidays, including Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.

鈥淭his morning, as we gathered, there was an opportunity for education about Easter,鈥 he said, 鈥渁s well as an invitation to worship in the spirit of Easter through Scripture, singing, and reflection.鈥

Makinto, a frequent worship leader at chapel events, performed Jesus Is Risen, an original song he wrote in 2013, as the opening song for this year鈥檚 Easter worship service. The song tells the Easter story and connects it to our own lives, he said. 

鈥淪o, as he is risen, we as well can rise above all the challenges we have, above the pains we have, above the solitude we have, and also conquer death and situate ourselves squarely in life with our community around us,鈥 Makinto said.

Makinto and his wife, Mukarabe, moved from California to pursue degrees at Eastern Mennonite Seminary and the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, respectively. They are the directors of , an organization that connects people at the local and global levels for the purpose of development, unification, and spiritual and physical well-being.


University Chaplain Brian Martin Burkholder speaks during a campus worship service on Wednesday in Martin Chapel.

Mukarabe Makinto-Inandava reads a selection from Luke 24 (left). Members of the 91短视频 Gospel Choir (right) sing during Wednesday’s campus worship service.


91短视频 Campus Worship

Campus Worship is an invitational space for gathered worship in Christian traditions and a variety of styles. Services are held in Martin Chapel of the Seminary Building on Wednesday mornings every other week.聽

Campus worship continues with a final service of the academic year on April 22 recognizing 91短视频鈥檚 senior student chaplains: Emily Suarez Nunez, Dia Mekonnen, Sara Kennel, and Miranda Beidler. The event will be livestreamed on .

Watch a video recording of the service below!

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Mayor Reed, fixture on 91短视频鈥檚 campus, inspires civic engagement among students /now/news/2024/mayor-reed-fixture-on-emus-campus-inspires-civic-engagement-among-students/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 13:55:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57823 With Election Day (Nov. 5) fast approaching, students at 91短视频 say that having an elected official, Mayor Deanna Reed, on campus has motivated them to become civically engaged.

Deanna Reed speaks at Convocation during 91短视频’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration in January 2024. (Photo by Macson McGuigan/91短视频)

Reed, who is running for reelection this year, has served as mayor of Harrisonburg, Virginia, since 2017, when she was first elected to City Council. She is the first African American woman elected to the council and also the first to be appointed mayor. At 91短视频 she is director of alumni engagement & community connections.

During the second annual Stroll to the Polls event on Friday, Sept. 20, at the Rockingham County Circuit Courthouse in downtown Harrisonburg, Reed rallied students from 91短视频 and James Madison University, as well as others in the community, to cast their ballots on the first day of early voting in Virginia. The event aims to increase voter turnout, especially among college students, with marches proceeding from the steps of the courthouse to the city and county polling places.

One of those students attending the rally, 91短视频 sophomore Elie Hoover, a social work and music major, said that having a local leader actively involved on campus helps keep her politically engaged. She feels proud to be an 91短视频 student, she added, knowing that the school has representation in city government.

鈥淚 want to do my part because she鈥檚 doing her part for us,鈥 Hoover said.

At the Stroll to the Polls event, as she walked along Main Street toward City Hall with a group of other students, 91短视频 junior Royale Parker waved a 鈥淰irginia Votes Early鈥 sign and enthusiastically encouraged passing drivers to vote.

Parker, a business administration and psychology major, said she once believed there was no use in voting. 鈥淚 was one of those students who thought my voice didn鈥檛 matter and that my vote didn鈥檛 count,鈥 she said. 

But interacting with Reed through committees and clubs on campus has shown her that everyone has a voice and a vote, including her. Reed, she said, has introduced students at 91短视频 to political issues they might have otherwise not known about and has also helped them understand the voting process.

鈥淪he鈥檚 inspired me to become more involved and excited to vote,鈥 Parker said. 

91短视频 senior Kay Pettus, a music major and president of the Black Student Alliance (BSA), proudly displayed her 鈥淚 Voted鈥 sticker as she exited City Hall during the first day of early voting. Pettus, who organized the shuttles for BSA members from 91短视频 to downtown Harrisonburg, said that Reed regularly works with BSA and encourages them to participate in civic events. She said that seeing Reed and others speak at the rally was a powerful experience. 

鈥淚 like that they were encouraging students and young people to vote,鈥 Pettus said, 鈥渂ecause it is important and our voices do count.鈥

Students who identify with a political party different than Reed鈥檚 say they鈥檝e felt her support. Jason Dwyer, a senior political science and history double major who leads the 91短视频 College Republicans club, said the Democratic mayor takes care to engage with everyone on campus. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how many other colleges can say they have a mayor on staff and as part of their community,鈥 he said.

Reed said she felt honored and privileged to know her presence and involvement on campus as a mayor has helped students engage in politics.

鈥淚t鈥檚 gratifying to see the impact of student participation in shaping our community and beyond,鈥 she said. 鈥淪tudents鈥 voices are not just significant, they鈥檙e essential. Their voices matter and have the power to shape the future, and that is incredibly motivating.鈥

Deanna Reed poses for a photo with 91短视频 students during the Vote Equality bus’s visit to 91短视频 in October 2023. (Photo by Macson McGuigan/91短视频)
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