Scott J. Jones
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The Reverend Scott J. Jones | |
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Bishop of the Global Methodist Church | |
Church | Global Methodist Church |
Appointed | January 9, 2023 |
Previous post(s) |
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Personal details | |
Born | |
Denomination | Methodism |
Spouse | Mary Lou Reece |
Children | 3 |
Alma mater |
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Scott Jameson Jones (born 23 May 1954) is an American bishop of the Global Methodist Church and former bishop of the United Methodist Church, elected in 2004, serving until his retirement and subsequent resignation from the episcopal office and transfer to the GMC in 2023.
Early life, education and family
[edit]He was born in Nashville, Tennessee and raised in Illinois, Indiana and Colorado. Jones' younger brother, L. Gregory Jones, is also a theologian and serves as president of Belmont University. He met his wife, Mary Lou Reece, while a student at the University of Kansas, and they were married 18 August 1979. She is the president of Reece Construction Company, with offices in Salina, Kansas and Prosper, Texas. The couple has three children and five grandchildren.
Jones earned a B.A. degree in philosophy at the University of Kansas (1977 with highest honors). He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He earned an M.Th. degree at Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University (1981 with high honors). Jones's Ph.D. is also from Southern Methodist University, which he earned in 1992 in religious studies.
Theology
[edit]Jones holds to a Wesleyan-Arminian soteriology.[1]
Episcopal ministry
[edit]Jones was endorsed for election to the Episcopacy by the North Texas Conference Delegation to the South Central Jurisdictional Conference and was elected in July 2004. He was assigned to the Kansas Episcopal Area, with offices in Wichita, Kansas. He was initially very popular, particularly with younger members of the Kansas East and Kansas West Annual Conferences.
Jones took over the new Great Plains Conference, which was formed in 2014 by combining the former Kansas East, Kansas West and Nebraska United Methodist conferences.
In 2016 he was assigned to the Texas Annual Conference (Houston Area) where he served until January 2023.[2]
In January 2023 Scott Jones resigned as a Bishop of the UMC and withdrew his conference membership to unite with The Global Methodist Church.[3]
Selected writings
[edit]- John Wesley's Conception and Use of Scripture, Nashville, Kingswood Books/Abingdon, 1995.
- Wesley and the Quadrilateral: Renewing the Conversation (with S. Gunter, T. Campbell, R. Miles and R. Maddox), Nashville, Abingdon, 1997.
- United Methodist Doctrine: The Extreme Center, Nashville, Abingdon, 2002.
- The Evangelistic Love of God and Neighbor: A Theology of Witness and Discipleship, Nashville, Abingdon, 2003. ISBN 0-687-04614-9
- The Wesleyan Way, Nashville, Abingdon, 2013.
- Ask: Faith Questions in a Skeptical Age (with Arthur D. Jones), Nashville, Abingdon, 2015.
- Scripture and the Wesleyan Way (with Arthur D. Jones), Nashville, Abingdon, 2018.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Bounds 2011, p. 87.
- ^ "Texas Conference Welcomes Bishop Scott Jones". www.txcumc.org. Retrieved 2021-05-16.
- ^ "Former Texas Bishop Goes to Global Methodist Church". um-insight.net. 10 January 2023. Retrieved 2023-02-16.
Sources
[edit]- Bounds, Christopher. T. (2011). "How are People Saved? The Major Views of Salvation with a Focus on Wesleyan Perspectives and their Implications". Wesley and Methodist Studies. 3: 31–54. doi:10.5325/weslmethstud.3.2011.0031. JSTOR 42909800. S2CID 171804441.
- 1954 births
- 20th-century American theologians
- 20th-century Methodist ministers
- 21st-century Methodist ministers
- American religion academics
- American United Methodist bishops
- Arminian ministers
- Arminian theologians
- Duke Divinity School alumni
- Living people
- Methodist theologians
- Southern Methodist University alumni