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Delegates honor Eunice Mathews’ life, legacy
By Tracy McNeal
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
Eunice Mathews
(right) is honored by the 2004 General Conference in Pittsburgh
for a lifetime of service to the church. |
PITTSBURGH (UMNS)-- It’s not every day that
the United Methodist Church gets to honor one of its leading lights
before her years of history-making have passed into memory.
Yet, on April 29 the top legislative body of the denomination paid
tribute to Eunice Jones Mathews--a living legend in the church’s
history of mission. The 998 delegates to General Conference and
hundreds of visitors honored her 90th birthday with a "Happy
Birthday" chorus and a reception at the David L. Lawrence Convention
Center.
Legislative proceedings were suspended as an energetic Eunice
Mathews was warmly introduced to the international assembly by the
Rev. R. Randy Day, top staff executive of the United Methodist Board
of Global Ministries. She received a standing ovation.
Between intermittent applause and appreciative shouts, Mrs. Mathews
expressed gratitude for the conference’s recognition and the
reception that followed. "I will certainly remember it for the rest
of my days," she said.
After emphasizing her respect for her parents, "whose combined
missionary service totaled 108 years," and her pride at having
served with her husband in five different episcopal areas, Mrs.
Mathews made a statement that displayed the freedom of spirit
inspiring her lifework and myriad achievements.
"I do not have to be identified as the daughter of (evangelist) E.
Stanley Jones, nor do I have to be identified as the wife of my
husband (Bishop James K. Mathews)…but I do have permission to be
myself, and this is in the freedom of Jesus Christ."
Mrs. Mathews’ birthday marks another milestone in the life of the
denomination, as a record 188 delegates from outside the United
States are attending the 2004 assembly. This landmark figure is an
indirect tribute to Mrs. Mathews’ life of missionary work.
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
Eunice Mathews
acknowledges applause from delegates and guests . The conference
honored Mathews on her 90th birthday. |
She was born on April 29, 1914, to
Methodism’s premier missionary couple of the twentieth century, E.
Stanley Jones and Mabel Lossing Jones. Growing up in Lucknow, India,
young Eunice witnessed her parents plant the seeds of God’s word and
nurture them into sizable, self-sustaining Methodist communities.
Among these was a boys’ primary school in northern India launched by
Eunice’s mother, a pioneering woman whose efforts flouted her
generation’s strict gender restrictions and paved the way for women
instructors to teach male students in the region.
Her mother taught Eunice English to supplement her native
Hindustani, and her mother served on the governing board of Asia’s
first Christian institution of higher learning for women - now known
as Isabella Thoburn College, after its founder, another
gender-breaking Methodist missionary.
Soon after attending Wellesley Girls School in Naini Tal, India, and
American University in Washington, Eunice began her career in
humanitarian work and missionary service. She assisted her father,
whose lectures and writings took him around the world, and
revolutionized missionary thinking by encouraging individuals to
receive Christ within the framework of their indigenous contexts. It
was while accompanying her father on a lecture circuit in India that
Eunice met James K. Mathews, whom she married June 1, 1940.
Sixty-three years later, Mrs. Mathews and her husband, a retired
bishop and former associate general secretary at the Board of
Missions of the Methodist Church, have proclaimed the Gospel of
Jesus Christ on six continents, ordering their lives by the
scriptural mandate, "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations"
(Matthew 28:19).
She and her husband fashioned their marriage as an equal
partnership; Bishop Mathews wrote in his autobiography, A Global
Odyssey, that "these very memoirs should be titled, We Did It
Together." The couple have three children and six grandchildren.
Together, Bishop and Mrs. Mathews have advocated for peace and good
will, moving among personages such as President George and Barbara
Bush; President Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton; Pope Paul VI;
Mahatma Gandhi; Indira Gandhi; and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
King once told Mrs. Mathews of his deep appreciation for her
father--who was a personal friend and biographer of Mahatma
Gandhi--because it was reading Jones’ biography that prompted King
to adopt a doctrine of nonviolence in the civil rights movement.
Mrs. Mathews counts among her distinctions an independently
researched and written book, Drug Abuse: Summons to Community
Action, a second book co-written with her father, The Divine
Yes, and a professorship established in her and her husband’s
name at Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington.
Mathews’ lifelong call to mission beckons her still, and she
continues to respond. In 2001, she and her husband traveled back to
Naini Tal, India, to commemorate the 70th anniversary of Sat Tal
Christian Ashram, a religious retreat founded by her father.
McNeal is a staff writer with the Communications Department of
the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
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