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Former Gateway Seminary president dies at 81
Katherine Chute, Gateway Seminary
March 02, 2017
5 MIN READ TIME

Former Gateway Seminary president dies at 81

Former Gateway Seminary president dies at 81
Katherine Chute, Gateway Seminary
March 02, 2017

William O. Crews, 81, president emeritus of Gateway Seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention, passed away March 1 after a brief illness.

Bill Crews

“William O. Crews was a Baptist statesman, who profoundly impacted our work in the western United States,” said Jeff Iorg, president of Gateway Seminary. “He was a friend and mentor to many, who will miss him deeply. His impact at Gateway Seminary lives on through our emphasis on shaping leaders – Bill’s passion and legacy.”

Crews became the sixth president of Gateway Seminary (formerly Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary) in December 1986. He transitioned to the role of chancellor in 2003 and retired in 2005. He subsequently was elected by the Northwest Baptist Convention as executive director-treasurer in 2007, serving until his second retirement at the end of 2012. During the late 1970s, Crews served as the convention’s director of communications and editor of the Northwest Baptist Witness.

Crews was pastor of eight churches over a span of 32 years, including the 2,300-member Magnolia Avenue Baptist Church in Riverside, Calif., for eight years and churches in Washington, Oregon and Texas.

He was elected as president of the California Southern Baptist Convention and, earlier, the Northwest Baptist Convention (NWBC).

During his 18-year tenure as Gateway president, the seminary established new campuses in Phoenix in 1995 and Denver in 1996. The seminary also achieved accreditation approval to offer full master’s degrees at all five of its campuses. Enrollment rose to 1,600 students in 2004 from 865 in 1986.

In 2005, the seminary honored Crews by announcing an endowed William O. Crews Chair of Leadership, creating a special section of the seminary library housing leadership books and materials named in Crews’ honor, and establishing a “Crews Leadership Award.”

Crews was named to the 22-member SBC Peace Committee to study theological strife in the convention when it was formed in 1985, resigning when he became Gateway’s president in December 1986. Also in SBC life, Crews served as a trustee for Gateway and the then-Foreign Mission Board (now International Mission Board) and was chairman of the executive boards for both the Northwest and California conventions.

As president emeritus, Crews taught at Gateway Seminary’s Pacific Northwest Campus in Vancouver, Wash., until his death. He was active in community service, including the Rotary Club for nearly a half-century, serving in numerous leadership positions.

A native of Houston who grew up in San Angelo, Texas, and preached his first sermon at age 15, Crews held a doctor of ministry degree from Gateway Seminary; a bachelor of divinity degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Texas; and a bachelor of arts degree from Hardin-Simmons University in Texas. He received Southwestern’s distinguished alumni award in 1994 and was awarded two honorary degrees in 1987 – the doctor of humanities degree from Hardin-Simmons and the doctor of divinity degree from California Baptist University.

Crews was led to Christ by a Sunday School teacher called “Mother Boyd” at a Baptist mission across the street which he said was “the formative church in my life,” started by a Baptist preacher-carpenter named Wade Campbell who had “a burning dream to form a new church.” Crews, in a 1988 article in the former Baptist Program magazine, also noted that the conversion of his father, a truck driver, on the side of the road during a nighttime run “turned our family around.”

Frank S. Page, president of the SBC Executive Committee, said Crews was “a great example of a servant leader who grew to love the West and the Northwest.”

“Southern Baptists are deeply indebted to him for his long-tenured service to Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary and the Northwest Baptist Convention. Our prayers go out to his family. He will be missed,” Page said in a statement to Baptist Press.

The Executive Committee, in a 2005 resolution of appreciation after Crews’ retirement from Gateway, noted that he was respected by colleagues and friends “for his integrity, devotion, faithfulness, compassion, warmth, and unflagging commitment to reaching the West for Christ.”

In leading the seminary, the Executive Committee noted that Crews’ vision “recognized and addressed the need to equip ministers in effectively evangelizing and ministering within the contextual challenges that are unique to the western United States.”

At the Northwest Baptist Convention, Randy Adams, the current executive director, recounted that Crews was “a 71-year-old retiree when he was elected. Deeply respected and trusted, Dr. Crews’ service brought needed healing, while leading the NWBC through significant change.

“Until his last days he was looking forward, thinking of the future, always optimistic,” Adams said in a statement to Baptist Press. “His optimism and enjoyment of life was most remarkable when you consider that he outlived both of his children and suffered blows in life that would have laid low most any other man. Bill Crews’ faith in Jesus Christ and his hope of heaven were seen clearly in the way he lived each day.”

Crews is survived by his wife, the former Jo Ann Cunningham. He was preceded in death by a son, Ronald, and a daughter, Rhonda.

A memorial service for Crews will be at 1 p.m. Fri., March 10, at Pathway Church (formerly Greater Gresham Baptist Church) in Gresham, Ore. At Gateway Seminary, a memorial service is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Thurs., March 9, at the Ontario, Calif., campus.

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Katherine Chute is director of communications for Gateway Seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention.)