President of Mercer University to be graduation speaker
Dr. R. Kirby Godsey, president of Mercer University, will deliver the graduation
address at Campbell University on Monday, May 9. The 9 a.m. ceremony will be
held on the Academic Circle in front of the D. Rich Memorial Hall.
Since coming to the presidency in 1979, and being the
17th president in Mercer’s 170-year history, Dr. Godsey has steered Mercer
University to unprecedented heights. His numerous achievements include doubling
Mercer’s enrollment, expanding its endowment to well over $200 million and
founding schools of Theology, Education, Engineering, Business and Economics and
Medicine. These and other accomplishments have garnered Mercer perennial
recognition as one of the South’s leading institutions of higher education.
Dr. Godsey’s academic preparation is notable for its
outstanding breadth. Following his undergraduate studies at Samford University
in Birmingham, AL, he added two masters degrees, a Master of Divinity from New
Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary (1960), and a Master of Arts in philosophy
from the University of Alabama (1967). His two earned doctorates are a Th.D.
from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary (1962), and a Ph.D. from Tulane
University (1969). He has also received honorary degrees from The University of
South Carolina, Averett University and Samford University.
Dr. Godsey is the author of “When We Talk About God,
Let’s Be Honest,” and has written numerous articles for scholarly and
professional journals and denominational publications, including the “Journal of
Higher Education, “The Educator” and “The Journal of Philosophy.” Among many
significant involvements, he is active in the American Association of Higher
Education, the American Philosophical Association and has served as a member of
the board of trustees of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.
Acknowledging his long and distinguished involvement with the Commission on
Colleges of the Southern Association, Dr. Godsey was, in 2001, the recipient of
its highest honor, the Meritorious Service Award.
Campbell expects to confer approximately 700 degrees at its
May commencement services.
Bulletin 0098-4/19/05
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