Lee M. Yoder Archives - 91Ƶ News /now/news/tag/lee-m-yoder/ News from the 91Ƶ community. Tue, 19 Jul 2016 15:23:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 International flags fly in the University Commons, as chapel service dedicates The Orie O. Miller Hall of Nations /now/news/2016/international-flags-fly-in-the-campus-center-as-chapel-service-dedicates-the-orie-o-miller-hall-of-nations/ Mon, 11 Apr 2016 16:26:35 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=27698 The flags of 55 countries now hang in “The Orie O. Miller Hall of Nations,” dedicated during a chapel service at the University Commons at 91Ƶ (91Ƶ) on April 8, 2016.

Among the countries represented are those where 91Ƶ has sent cross-cultural groups; where alumni, faculty, and staff live; and where students come from.

The concept of the hall was developed by Lee M. Yoder, chair of and a former vice president and professor of education at 91Ƶ from 1975-1986.

The hall “gives visibility to the global context in which we teach and work,” Yoder said during opening ceremonies. “These national flags serve to welcome those learners who come to this campus to study and to enrich our lives. The national flags serve also to demonstrate the global destinations of 91Ƶ students in their pursuits of a distinctive, life-changing cross-cultural program which is central to the core values of this university.”

Lee Yoder, former vice president at 91Ƶ, speaks during the dedication ceremony for The Orie O. Miller Hall of Nations.

The hall is named after , a Mennonite leader in the United States who led missions to other nations and was instrumental in the formation of many Mennonite institutions, including Mennonite Central Committee, that led Mennonites to serve in a global context.

Miller was also an important influence in Mennonite education. “Programs such as 91Ƶ’s cross cultural seminars, services for international students, visiting scholars programs, mission and service trips, as well as many graduate programs, including the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding were directly influenced through the work of Orie Miller through Mennonite Central Committee and Eastern Mennonite Missions,” said Professor , chair of the , who provided the welcome for the service.

After opening words from Yoder, Edgar Stoesz shared memories of working with Miller. A Minnesota native, Stoesz worked more than 30 years with Mennonite Central Committee in Akron, Pennsylvania, in various leadership capacities.

Several students shared their thoughts on what the hall means for the university.

“I think 91Ƶ is very globally minded,” said sophomore Hannah Shultz. “This would be another representation of that, that’s very visible, very clear, right as a prospective student comes in. I think it will also bring life to the place, to have all that color and the flags.”

First-year Sebastian Rivas, a student from Colombia, felt similarly. “Right now this is very important to see, at least to remember, who we are,” explained Rivas. He said, “We as children of God and as Mennonites need to be together despite the borders, despite the conflicts that we’re seeing right now, because right now is the moment that we most need love.”

Faculty, staff, students, and the broader community have been invited to sponsor a flag of their choice for $90. The goal is to reach 100 flags. Those interested in sponsoring a flag can click .

The inauguration of the hall was a part of the 91Ƶ leadership conference, “,” which brought several hundred particpants to campus over a three-day period to hear speakers such as Brian Welch, founder of Mother Earth News, and organizational leadership innovator Peter Block.

Portions of this article were reprinted from the April 1, 2016, issue of The Weather Vane.

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91Ƶ leadership conference to create a new paradigm of “Leading into the Common Good” /now/news/2016/emu-leadership-conference-to-create-a-new-paradigm-of-leading-into-the-common-good/ Fri, 05 Feb 2016 14:19:16 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=26817 Author and speaker Peter Block headlines a list of notable speakers for “,” a conference for practitioners, scholars and students April 7-9, 2016, at 91Ƶ (91Ƶ).

Block, a well-known expert on organizational development, community building and civic engagement, will address the conference live via video. A strong advocate for the concept of “servant leadership,” he is the author of The Abundant Community: Awakening the Power of Families and Neighborhoods (2010), Community: The Structure of Belonging (2008), The Answer to How Is Yes: Acting on What Matters (2001) and Stewardship: Choosing Service Over Self Interest (1993).

, vice president and dean of graduate studies at 91Ƶ and one of the primary organizers for the conference, says Block will bring an important perspective as an “outsider” to the church. Smucker says Block’s address will focus on “third-way leadership.”

“We’re struggling as Anabaptists with leadership paradigms and how we make decisions,” Smucker says. “We want to facilitate a conversation about how we go forward and further develop our movement in a way that brings us together.”

The conference will focus on clarifying Anabaptist values related to leadership, examining historical models, critiquing current economic and social systems, and developing applied theories that can be used to build more effective and future-looking organizations.

The planning committee is emphasizing the representation of diverse voices and perspectives, and students from the various Anabaptist-related schools will be sharing during each plenary session.

Other keynote speakers include:

  • Bryan Welch, CEO of B The Change Media and founder of Mother Earth News;
  • John Sharp, teacher, author, storyteller, and historian;
  • Lee Snyder, a former vice president and academic dean who will serve as at 91Ƶ;
  • John Stahl-Wert ’81, recognized expert in leadership and innovation;
  • Rachel Waltner Goosen, professor of history at Washburn University;
  • ’82, executive director of Lancaster County Conservancy and former CEO of Isaac’s Famous Grilled Sandwiches;
  • Gilberto Perez Jr. ’94 , senior director for intercultural development and educational partnerships at Goshen College;
  • Jeff Boodie ’07, founder and CEO of JobSnap;
  • , associate professor of organizational studies and of 91Ƶ’s MBA program;
  • David Miller, associate professor of missional leadership development at Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary;
  • Dominique Burgunder-Johnson, Goshen College director of marketing and current collaborative MBA student;
  • , professor in 91Ƶ’s Bible and religion department and former academic dean;
  • Rick Castaneda, home/school liaison for Harrisonburg City Public Schools and founder of Men of Character;
  • , MA ’07 (conflict transformation), doctoral student at James Madison University and instructor with the Summer Peacebuilding Institute and 91Ƶ’s business department.

Workshop topics include emergent leadership, leading innovation, people management ethics, developing resilient organizations, and authentic leadership.

The conference grew out of discussions at the (ACRS), a community of Mennonite elders and scholars who meet monthly for fellowship and intellectual engagement at 91Ƶ. Six years ago, ACRS initiated a biography project on 20th-century Mennonite leader Orie Miller; the result was a published by Herald Press in May 2015.

In the planning and conception process, the group found synergy with conversations happening in the program (a joint project of Bluffton University, Canadian Mennonite University, 91Ƶ and Goshen College), which Smucker says had recognized a lack of scholarly work around leadership and Anabaptism. A network of partnerships began to grow.

The conference is sponsored by ARCS, 91Ƶ’s , , (MEDA), and . Co-sponsors include Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary, Bethel College, Bluffton University, Canadian Mennonite University, Conrad Grebel University College, Goshen College and Hesston College.

“We have never before pulled off a conference of this type with this amount of collaborative engagement,” says Lee M. Yoder, chair of the ACRS steering committee and former vice president and associate professor of education at 91Ƶ. “It’s the first of its kind.”

Register at .

 

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New Orie O. Miller biography to be celebrated by contemporaries at Anabaptist Center for Religion and Society meeting /now/news/2015/new-orie-o-miller-biography-celebrated-by-contemporaries-at-anabaptist-center-for-religion-and-society-meeting/ Tue, 05 May 2015 18:20:26 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=24189 He has seen more of the world than Marco Polo. He has opened more mission fields than David Livingstone. He has been as innovative in his world of church ministries as Thomas Edison was in the world of technology. Orie Miller may be the most remarkable Mennonite in our generation, perhaps of our century. –Robert S. Kreider, 1969

Orie O. Miller is a well-known name, but the reputation of this Mennonite lay leader, missionary, and businessman may grow, deservedly, in legend and stature with the publication of John E. Sharp’s long-awaited biography, ” (Herald Press).

Miller was a “20th century leader, and considering his extensive leadership in his day in many, many church institutions and agencies, it’s important to introduce Miller to 21st century leaders,” says ’63, steering committee chair of the (ACRS), a community of Mennonite elders and scholars who meet monthly for fellowship and intellectual engagement at 91Ƶ (91Ƶ).

The biography, six years in the making, was initiated and partially funded by ACRS. Other funders include the Brethren in Christ church, and two organizations that Miller helped found, and , known commonly by the acronyms of MCC and MEDA, respectively.

91Ƶ President says he’s looking forward to reading the biography. “For many years, I have heard fascinating stories about Orie O. Miller and his legacy from those who worked directly with him,” he said. “So many Anabaptist ministries and institutions launched by Orie have improved the lives of people around the globe. I am pleased this project was sponsored by ACRS and rooted at 91Ƶ.”

At the ACRS May 11 Annual General Meeting, a handful of Miller’s contemporaries will share anecdotes and stories about this consequential man who, from his first pioneering trip as a relief worker to Russia in 1919, forever changed Mennonite education, business, relief work and peacemaking.

The meeting, which begins at 7:30 a.m. with coffee and pastries in the west dining room on the 91Ƶ campus, is open to the public.

‘Visionary and hard-nosed realist’

Former colleague Calvin Redekop, the ACRS representative to the editorial committee, says Miller’s “work and leadership are difficult to condense.”

“He was a person who represented best the challenges and opportunities of his time, an unusual combination of visionary and hard-nosed realist who expected persons to be accountable,” Redekop said. “He was one of the most disciplined persons I ever knew.”

Redekop served under Miller as administrator of a post-war alternative service program called Pax. Redekop and colleague Paul Peachey ’45 had conceived this program in August of 1950, and a mere eight months later, with Miller’s support and that of MCC, “Paxers” arrived in war-ravaged Europe to help resettle refugees.*

Born in Indiana in 1892, Miller attended Goshen College before answering the call to engage in relief work in 1919 and shortly after, helping to form MCC, for which he served in various capacities, including executive secretary, from 1921-1963.

Miller helped to engage and steer Mennonite values and ministry into a global perspective, while integrating sound business and organizational principles.

He was “an incredible catalyst” with unique organizational skills, and “passionately committed to the church with a vision for mission,” says ACRS founder , who was director of an Anabaptist-Mennonite bookstore financed by Miller and other Lancaster businessmen in the mid-1960s in Luxembourg, Belgium. “He would start a project, then find the personnel and the organizations to carry it on.”

Seeing a need often meant forming an organization to meet that need: Miller was the motivating force behind the founding of many Mennonite organizations, including Mennonite Mental Health Services, Mennonite Indemnity, Mennonite Mutual Aid, Mennonite Travel Service, and several others.

Hundreds of young men were indebted to Miller – and had their lives changed forever – because of Miller’s creation and administration of Civilian Public Service, the alternative to military service that allowed conscientious objectors to fulfill their civic responsibilities.

Miller married into the shoe manufacturing business and ran it with acumen and dedication throughout his life. Yet “to the end his life, he maintained his vision for service, never allowing his considerable wealth to determine his needs,” Gingerich said, adding that Miller could have easily afforded a Lincoln Continental, but instead drove a Ford Falcon.

Miller died in 1977 at the Landis Retirement Home in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, yet another enterprise he was instrumental in founding and supporting.

Keim’s work provides inspiration

A standard feature of the ACRS Annual General Meeting is a time to discuss the group’s ongoing work and vision. At one of those times, many years ago, members noted the need for a comprehensive biography of Miller that would address the full range of his personality and involvements not covered in a previous 1969 biography by Paul Erb.

Another inspiration for the Miller project was the work of the late Albert N. Keim ’63, professor emeritus of history at 91Ƶ and an ARCS member. Keim’s biography of Harold S. Bender, a professor of theology at Goshen College and Goshen Biblical Seminary, was published in 1998.

“Harold Bender was tremendously influential on theological matters in the same way that Orie Miller was tremendously influential in shaping Mennonite influence today,” said ’64, ACRS interim director.

Miller’s accomplishments as a leader are widely recognized. 91Ƶ houses an , which promotes interdisciplinary activities and scholarship modeled after the man’s visionary integration of business, mission, development, education, justice and peace.

In addition, 91Ƶ, ACRS, Mennonite Central Committee, and Mennonite Economic Development Associates are in the early stages of planning a leadership conference at 91Ƶ in early April 2016 that will highlight Miller’s leadership within the Mennonite church, according to, vice president and dean of the .

Editor’s note: In April 2015, the Pax program was chosen as the recipient of the annual Gandhi Center Community Service Award. To read about this event, click .

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