Showing posts with label Dr. William Menzies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. William Menzies. Show all posts

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Dr. William Menzies Passes Away at 80

Dr. William Menzies was one of the finest men I have ever met. He was my professor in seminary and also our school president back in the early 1980s. His life was such a blessing for all of us students. 

At one time, I was unhappy with how the school management treated the Filipino staffs and almost got myself expelled because of my confrontational approach. Then by the grace of God, Dr. Menzies was appointed as the new seminary president. He read my letter of complaints and called me up. I expected a scolding but instead he commended me for being brave enough to point out the discrepancies and injustice in the school. He then talked to the staff concerned. 

After that, he called me to his office again and gave me a detailed 'report' of what he had done. I never knew him to be a man of much emotion but he described that during his 'talk' with the particular staff, he was "never angrier than that time in my life". 

During graduation, it was Dr. Menzies who awarded me with the first President's Award of APTS. It came as a surprise but I was very happy and proud to receive the award from him.

Thirty years had passed and now my teacher, my friend and my brother has gone to his eternal reward. He is now in heaven with his dear wife, Doris. Good bye, my brother, we will see you again.
Albert Kang

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Dr. William (Bill) W. Menzies—Assemblies of God pastor, educator, missionary and author—went to be with the Lord shortly past noon on August 15, 2011.

Born on July 1, 1931, Menzies earned a B.A. at Central Bible College (Springfield, Mo.) and a M.A. at Wheaton College, where he met and married Doris Dresselhaus in 1955. He was ordained in 1956. 

Menzies held teaching and administrative positions at Central Bible College, Evangel University, the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary, California Theological Seminary, and Asia Pacific Theological Seminary.

Menzies completed his Ph.D. at the University of Iowa. His dissertation became the benchmark history of the Assemblies of God, "Anointed to Serve" He was a prolific author, authoring or editing standard textbooks such as Understanding the Times of Christ, Bible Doctrines: A Pentecostal Perspective and Spirit and Power.
Menzies is widely known in Pentecostal and evangelical circles as a statesman, building bridges across denominational and racial divides. He was one of the organizers of the Society for Pentecostal Studies and was the first editor of the society's journal, Pneuma. He was also one of the editors for the Full Life Study Bible and a consulting editor for Christianity Today.

"Dr. Menzies has influenced generations of students," states Dr. George Wood, general superintendent of the Assemblies of God. "His textbook, Anointed to Serve, told the history of the Assemblies of God in a way that informed and inspired. He led an exemplary Christian life, and was a model of Pentecostal scholarship and the Spirit-filled life. He always inspired me to do my best to serve the Lord with heart, mind, soul and strength. We have lost a pillar of the faith and heaven has gained a saint whose rest is won."

Menzies' two sons, Glen and Robert, went on to earn their doctoral degrees and have become respected educators in the Assemblies of God. Menzies' wife of 55 years, Doris, passed away on May 28. Menzies is survived by two sons and two daughter-in-laws, Dr. Glen and Donna Menzies of Minnetonka, Minn.; and Dr. Robert and Joanne Menzies, of Kunming, China; and four grandchildren.

In place of flowers, it is requested that memorials be sent to either North Central University, 910 Elliot Ave., Minneapolis, MN 55404, or to the China Training Network, 2087 S. Celebration, Springfield, Mo. 65809. Visitation will be on Friday, Aug. 19, from 5 to 9 p.m. at Greenlawn North in Springfield. The funeral will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Central Assembly of God, 1301 N. Boonville, Springfield.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Sister Doris Menzies (1932-2011)

Change of Heart

By Keith Call | May 17, 2010


Doris MenziesAlthough I am an older person,” begins Doris Dresselhaus Menzies in her memoir, Young At Heart (2007), “I have a much younger heart.” She explains her cryptic remark as the story unfolds.
Born in Decorah, Iowa, in 1932, Doris lived peacefully with her family and worked hard on the farm. At age nine she fully committed to Christ at the local Assemblies of God church. She was baptized in a lake, and shortly thereafter during an evening service received her baptism in the Holy Spirit. In 1951 she enrolled at Wheaton College where she studied elementary education. Because there were no Pentecostal churches in Wheaton at that time, an Assemblies of God campus fellowship provided a venue where Doris could meet students of similar conviction, including her future husband, William Menzies. 

“Neither of us could imagine the adventures in faith that would be ours when we met at Wheaton College,” he reflects. Later Bill would pen Anointed to Serve (1984), the definitive history of the Assemblies of God.

After their marriage in 1955, Bill and Doris served in various mid-western churches until he was called to teach at Central Bible College in Springfield, Missouri. From there he moved to other teaching positions at home and abroad, until he and Doris were called to be regular missionaries for the Assemblies of God. 

In 1989 they relocated to the Philippines, where Bill served as president of Asia Pacific Theological Seminary. As he taught and lectured at the school, Doris quietly mingled with the people of Baguio City, personally leading many hungry hearts to Christ. Their lives proceeded busily until one day Doris suffered sharp chest pains, indicating severe cardiac arrest. 

Transferred to Salt Lake City for specialized care, it was concluded that she required a heart transplant. With that stunning report came the additional bad news that she would need to await a donor. And so for fourteen months she and Bill patiently waited in Salt Lake, until at last it was announced that a heart had been located, belonging to a young man from Oregon who requested that his organs be donated should anything happen to him. Doris MenziesTo the delight of all, the operation was a smashing success. As she writes, “There was thanksgiving and joy in my new heart.”

But Doris was not entirely free of physical affliction. In 2003 she was diagnosed with lymphoma cancer. After an onerous series of chemo and radiation treatments, she lost her strength, appetite and all her hair, but the disease was finally controlled. Her hair has since regrown, and she has regained the weight.

Summing up her eventful life, Doris Menzies expresses her joy: “I have appointments to see my oncology doctor, and also blood tests to send to my heart transplant doctor…I also see my internist, my neurologist, and my foot doctor on a regular basis. But my Great Physician continues to be God Almighty, my Creator and Redeemer. To Him I give all glory for each day!”
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Retired Asia Pacific missionary, Sister Doris Menzies, (Bill) went to be with the Lord on May 28, 2011 after a lengthy illness in Springfield, MO. She was 78 years old.

While Sister Doris’ husband, Dr. William Menzies, served as president of Asia Pacific Theological Seminary (APTS) in Baguio City, Philippines, Sister Doris was active in multiple ministries. She took teams of faculty wives and students to nearby schools as well as the city jail. She conducted Bible studies in homes and on campus and travel throughout East Asia and the Pacific with her husband. The Menzies retired from their missionary assignment in July 1999.


Sister Doris is survived by her husband, Dr. William (Bill) Menzies; two sons, Dr. Glen Menzies of MN and Dr. Robert Menzies of China; and four grandchildren.