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BOLIVAR, Mo. â Mark W. Lawson of St. Louis received an honorary doctorate from Southwest Baptist University during the annual Foundersâ Day chapel service held Monday, March 2, in Pike Auditorium on the Bolivar campus.
âIt is always our goal to honor the University by recognizing outstanding individuals who have made significant contributions to society and to the Kingdomâs work,â ±«Óătv President Dr. Eric A. Turner said. âThe ±«Óătv story is the composite of thousands of individual lives that have influenced the University at a University influencing lives. Today, we honor one such individual.â
Mark W. Lawson
Mark W. Lawson grew up in Aurora, Mo., and went on to earn his bachelor of music in education degree from ±«Óătv in 1979. He received a master of sacred music degree from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary in 1981.
Lawson served as minister of music at Edmondson Road Baptist Church and Kirkwood Baptist
Church in St. Louis before becoming owner and president of MorningStar Music Publishers
in St. Louis in 1997. In 2015, he became owner and president of ECS Publishing Group
in St. Louis.
Lawson said he was humbled and honored to receive the honorary doctorate, and shared
about opportunities he never experienced until he came to ±«Óătv.
âWhen I look back on my years here at ±«Óătv, I cannot help but think about how incredibly fortunate I was to have chosen this path,â Lawson said. ⱫÓătv, in many ways, was the basecamp for the beginning of a very long journey for me.
âI grew up in rural Missouri, and until I came to ±«Óătv, I never heard a symphony orchestra, and yet, had the opportunity to sing with one my first semester. I had not had the opportunity to see a play, and yet, I would take advantage of going to many of the arts things that were available at ±«Óătv at the time.â
Lawson also recalled the examples set by the faith-based faculty at ±«Óătv, and the opportunity to grow with fellow students who went on to be teachers, conductors, ministers of music and lifelong friends.
At ECS, Lawson is responsible for the publication development, strategic focus and management of E.C. Schirmer Music Co., Galaxy Music Corp., MorningStar Music Publishers and ARSIS Audio. ECS controls the rights to more than 20,000 copyrights and publishes music and books for schools, churches, professional ensembles and opera companies.
Lawson has developed publishing strategies for the Washington National Cathedral,
the National Collegiate Choral Organization, the Presbyterian Association of Church
Musicians, Baylor University, the National Lutheran Choir and Duke University Choir.
ECS also has been a consultant on two U.S. Papal visits. Lawson has served as a council
member for the National Pastoral Musicians, on the advisory board for Baylor University
School of Sacred Music and currently serves on the executive board of Chorus America.
âOur music company is very fortunate to own several important musical works from American history,â Lawson said. âOne of those works is a collaboration between Randall Thompson and Robert Frost. Many times during the year, I get to hear choirs sing the wonderful poem, âThe Road Not Taken.â In that poem, the lines that always strike me are the ones in which Frost says, âTwo roads diverged in a wood, and I, I took the one less traveled by and that has made all the difference.â So, when I look back and see my high school friends going off to schools that sometimes were closer, sometimes were larger, I thank God that I chose that path that He had for me.â
Lawson and his wife Ginny are active members of Kirkwood Baptist Church in St. Louis, where they sing in the choir, work in the childrenâs choir program and direct the handbell program. They enjoy spending time with their grandchild and the families of their five adult children, as well as traveling, reading, running, biking, watching the St. Louis Cardinals, visiting art museums and attending concerts.
About Foundersâ Day
±«Óătv was founded 142 years ago this coming fall semester, in 1878, when James Rogers Maupin and Abner Smith Ingman established Southwest Baptist College in Lebanon, Mo. A year later, the college moved to Bolivar. Foundersâ Day is a time set aside to reflect on the universityâs history and heritage.
âFrom its founding to today, the historical documents and artifacts confirmed that ±«Óătv is distinctively Baptist in its heritage, devoted to the mission of leading and growing studentsâ faith in Christ, passionate about teaching from a distinctively Christian worldview and bent on educating students with academic rigor,â said Dr. Ed Walton, dean of ±«Óătvâs University Libraries and university archivist.
âAnyone who takes a look at its history will find some consistent themes emerge. ±«Óătv exists because of Godâs handiwork. ±«Óătv has faced many opportunities to fail, but God is always faithful to bring the right people and support to enable it to persist. God calls people and He brings them to ±«Óătv and gives them a purple transfusion â they become lifelong Bearcats.â
Walton reflected on some of the pivotal points in ±«Óătvâs history and how they illustrate Godâs provision since ±«Óătvâs founding, from going bankrupt to recovering from a devastating fire in the early 1900s to one of its âsilent heroesâ in Frank Stuffelbam.
âYou ask, âwhat is the future of ±«Óătv,ââ Walton said. âYou only have to look at its history and youâll get the answer. It is a rich tapestry of God's provision and handiwork. If you find yourself here today, it is because of God's handiwork, both in establishing SWBC and preserving ±«Óătv today.â
PHOTO 1: (Left to right) ±«Óătv President Dr. Eric A. Turner, Mark W. Lawson, recipient of an Honorary Doctor of Music Ministry and ±«Óătv Provost Dr. Lee Skinkle, during the annual Foundersâ Day chapel March 2 at ±«Óătv.
PHOTO 2: (Left to right) ±«Óătv President Dr. Eric A. Turner, Mark W. Lawson, recipient of an Honorary Doctor of Music Ministry, Ginny Lawson and ±«Óătv Provost Dr. Lee Skinkle, during the annual Foundersâ Day chapel March 2 at ±«Óătv.
*Published: 3-2-2020