IORG: Gateway reflects kingdom diversity; celebrates milestone

06.16.21 | Gateway News | by Tyler Sanders

IORG: Gateway reflects kingdom diversity; celebrates milestone

    Gateway Seminary’s mission is exemplified in biblical diversity and by a significant graduation milestone, President Jeff Iorg told messengers at the Southern Baptist Convention June 16. “Gateway is your daily demonstration of the power of the gospel to unify people from a wide-variety of cultural and racial perspectives,” he said. 

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. (June 16, 2021)Gateway Seminary’s mission is exemplified in biblical diversity and by a significant graduation milestone, President Jeff Iorg told messengers at the Southern Baptist Convention June 16. “Gateway is your daily demonstration of the power of the gospel to unify people from a wide-variety of cultural and racial perspectives,” he said. 

    Iorg said in the past semester the Seminary offered master’s level courses in English, Korean and Mandarin, and diploma training at its learning centers in English, Korean, Spanish, Burmese, Cantonese, Chin, Thai, Lao, Karen, Main, Nepalese, French, Haitian-Creole, Hmong, Vietnamese, and Mongolian. Anglo students have made up less than 50 percent of Gateway’s student body for more than 25 years.

    “We have current employees who are African-American, Mexican, Romanian, Chinese, Korean, Pacific Islander, Filipino, Australian, Zambian, Taiwanese, and Anglo,” Iorg said.

    “Because of this diversity,” he said, “Gateway has been addressing racial issues and the global problem of racism for decades.”

    Referencing a report to Gateway’s trustee board in April 2021, Dr. Iorg shared how Gateway faculty address racism, including but not exclusively white/black issues present in America. Iorg stated in the report Gateway faculty depend on biblical, theological and missiological tools to train students to confront racism. 

    Following Dr. Iorg’s spring trustee report, a trustee asked if the seminary could produce a document detailing how faculty address racism in the classroom.

    “Our faculty responded to this request with pages of examples of how they address racism and racial issues throughout the curriculum – from biblical studies to theology to church history to counseling to spiritual formation to early childhood development and every discipline in between,” Iorg said. This document is available at gs.edu/curriculum. 

    Iorg personally shared his invitation to serve as the first Anglo elder of an historic African-American church, Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Ontario, California. “My relationships with the leaders at Mt. Zion have become a profound source of spiritual strength for me,” he said. 

    “For the past six years, we have been tithing our income, helping start a second site, going to prayer meetings, and giving to the building program. Ann teaches Sunday School and I preach a few times each year,” he said. 

    “It has been a life-changing experience to build leadership credibility in a church where we are learning new ways of being the church as white minority members within a majority black culture.”

    Iorg asked messengers to share in celebrating Gateway’s 10,000 graduate, Yoon Sagong. Sagong earned the master of divinity and serves as a pastoral intern alongside a Gateway faculty member in a southern California church plant.

    “Some of you may be surprised [by 10,000 graduates] because you think of Gateway Seminary as your small seminary out west. We are now a leader-producing powerhouse making a global impact,” he said

    “We thank you Southern Baptists for standing with us, giving through the Cooperative Program, praying for us and sending us students.”

    --30--