11 minute read

Kiwanis Club to induct 6 into Birmingham Business Hall of Fame

Back Together

Southminster, Shades Valley Presbyterian Churches Merge

By RuBin E. GRant

God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform.

The opening line of William Cowper’s well-known poem that became a hymn could be applied to the recent merger of Shades Valley Presbyterian Church and Southminster Presbyterian Church.

The merged congregations held their first service June 5, Pentecost Sunday, with the official merger taking place Oct. 2.

Two unlikely things occurred, leading to the congregations becoming one church community. The first was a broken air conditioning unit and the other was a columbarium.

According to the Rev. Tom Bryson, who will serve as co-pastor of the merged church along with the Rev. Leanne Pearce Reed, two years ago the air conditioner broke down on the main part of Shades Valley Presbyterian’s campus on Montevallo Road in Mountain Brook.

Shades Valley Presbyterian initiated a capital campaign to raise funds for the needed repairs.

“They raised the funds and were ready to go, but right before they accepted a bid for the repairs, they asked themselves if it was the most faithful thing to do with the resources,” said Bryson, who has been pastor of Southminster since 2018. “They did an honest assessment and decided they didn’t really want to spend a half-million dollars to replace an air conditioning unit, that the money could be put to better use.”

At that point, Shades Valley Presbyterian leaders decided they could move to a new location and use the funds the church had raised for ministry. But there was one issue that needed be resolved: What to do about the columbarium in the church’s courtyard with 75 of its dear members interred?

Reed, who had been pastor at Shades Valley Presbyterian since 2017, reached out to Southminster to see if those members could be interred in their columbarium.

As it turned out, Southminster was in the process of considering a new columbarium for the north end of its campus in Vestavia Hills. The project had been financed already and the church had just accepted a bid for it.

Reed wanted to know if the columbarium could be expanded to hold its 75 members.

“We were able to expand by one more tower,” Bryson said. “The tower on the east is almost completely filled with Shades Valley members.”

With that issue resolved, the conversation turned to how each church conducted ministry, with four members from each congregation meeting to the discuss the matter.

Courtesy

The merged congregations of Shades Valley Presbyterian Church and Southminster Presbyterian Church held their first service June 5, Pentecost Sunday, with the official merger taking place Oct. 2. Above, from left, Lucy Benoit, Molly Heisler, Thomas Reed, Adam Reed, Michael Bryson and Henry Bryson attended the service at Southminster on June. 5.

The Same DNA

“We discovered that we did similar things as it relates to Christian education, worship, outreach and the Session,” Bryson said. “We were so much alike, but that shouldn’t have come as a surprise because Shades Valley actually planted Southminster with 50 or 60 families in Vestavia. So those families brought the DNA of Shades Valley with them.”

Shades Valley was founded in 1947 and Southminster was established in 1957.

“All the fingerprints of Shades Valley stayed with us,” Bryson said. “Everything in both churches were almost exactly the same, except the pulpit in our sanctuary was different.”

During the summer of 2021, the two churches began exploring the idea of a merger. They formed a committee with representatives from both churches that met via Zoom, discussing the pros and cons and potential deal breakers.

In December last year, they had worked out whatever differences there were, including maintaining staff from both churches, and decided to merge, settling on June 5 as their first Sunday to worship together.

In a church newsletter leading up to their first Sunday together, Reed wrote:

“After many months of praying and planning, Shades Valley and Southminster take an important step in the process of becoming one church community. This summer will be a time of transition on our way toward “official” merger in the fall. We will share many aspects of community life, including worship, learning, fellowship, congregational care, and outreach.

“In other areas, the congregations will remain distinct for now, with separate Sessions, operating budgets and finances. … For all of us, worship will seem a bit different in the coming weeks. We’ll see new faces and hear voices we haven’t heard before. We’ll use paraments and communion ware from both congregations. The bulletin will have a new look. At times, we might feel uncomfortable and think, “This isn’t what I’m used to!’ We hope that sharing in communion each week will serve as an important reminder for us: at the table, Christ makes us one body.”

Shades Valley’s property has been sold and the contents, such as pews, baptismal font, hymnals and Bibles, distributed to other churches in the region. Some legal details still have to be ironed out before the merger is final.

Bryson and Reed will share preaching duties.

“We have very complementary gifts,” Bryson said. “Leanne is very detail-oriented, which I wish I was better at, and I have a large, broad stroke.”

On their first Sunday worshiping together, the brass crosses from both churches were displayed and marched in, and members from both churches gathered in small groups in Southminster’s Grace Hall during the Sunday School hour prior to worship.

“It resembled a long-delayed family reunion of cousins, aunts and uncles getting reacquainted once again,” said Kent Howard, a member.

Sue Westfall, executive at Presbytery of Sheppards and Lapsley, delivered the sermon, recognizing the efforts of both congregations for creating the opportunity for the two churches to merge.

Two Named as Interim Leaders of UAB Medicine

Two University of Alabama at Birmingham leaders will head UAB Medicine when Senior Vice President and Dean Selwyn Vickers leaves to become president and CEO of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York on Sept. 12, the university announced.

Anupam Agarwall, executive vice dean of the UAB Heersink School of Medicine, will serve as interim senior vice president of Medicine and interim dean of the School of Medicine for the second time. He also will serve as interim chair of the Health Services Foundation board. He first served in these interim roles in 2013, when UAB President Ray L. Watts vacated them to become president.

Agarwal also directed the Division of Nephrology from 2008 to 2021 and serves as the program director of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases-funded O’Brien Center for Acute Kidney Injury Research while maintaining an active role in clinical medicine, teaching, research and administration.

Dawn Bulgarella will serve as interim CEO of the UAB Health System and continue to serve as president of the UAB Health System and CFO for the UAB/Ascension St. Vincent’s Alliance.

Bulgarella spent 15 years in operations before becoming the senior associate dean of finance and administration in the UAB Heersink School of Medicine and ultimately the first president and CFO of the UAB Health System.

Reid Jones will continue his role as CEO of UAB Medicine and Jason Alexander, CEO of Ascension St. Vincent’s, also will continue as a key member of the senior leadership team in the UAB/Ascension St. Vincent’s Alliance.

UAB Medicine had almost 1.7 million patient visits last year and UAB Hospital, the eighth-largest hospital in the country, discharged more than 90,000 patients. UAB ranks among the top 3% of U.S. universities based on all federal research funding awarded.

Kiwanis Club to Induct 6 Into Birmingham Business Hall of Fame

By annE Ruisi

The Kiwanis Club of Birmingham will induct six business leaders into the Birmingham Business Hall of Fame on Aug. 25 at The Fennec.

Claude B. Nielson, Coca-Cola Bottling Co. United Inc., and David W. Wood II and John H. Wood of Wood Fruitticher Grocery Co. will be inducted, as will the late Kirkwood R. Balton, of Booker T. Washington Insurance, the late Thomas E. Jernigan of Marathon Corp. and the late Judy M. Merritt, former president of Jefferson State Community College.

The Birmingham club is the world’s largest Kiwanis Club with more than 540 members. The Birmingham Business Hall of Fame Committee since 1997 has annually selected business leaders to induct into the hall of fame who have shown strong leadership and made extraordinary contributions to the greater Birmingham area. Inductees can be living or deceased. It’s part of the 105-year-old club’s mission of building a stronger community.

“It has been my good fortune to

‘I am honored to be recognized by Kiwanis and join the company of the other inductees who have had such an important impact on Birmingham and our greater community.’

CLAUDE B. NIELSON, COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. UNITED INC.

From page 8 have a business career working with a team of exceptional people and benefiting from exceptional brands,” Nielsen said. “Any success I’ve enjoyed as a business leader must be shared with the thousands of associates within the Coca-Cola United family who made leading our business over the years such a joy.

“I am honored to be recognized by Kiwanis and join the company of the other inductees who have had such an important impact on Birmingham and our greater community,” he continued. “It is particularly gratifying for me to join my wife, Kate Johnson Nielsen (2019), and my father-in-law, Crawford T. Johnson III (2004), in the Kiwanis Club Business Hall of Fame.”

Nielsen, a Mountain Brook resident who joined Coca-Cola Bottling Co. United Inc. in 1979, rose to become CEO in 1991 and was named chairman in 2003. In 2013, the company embarked on a major territorial expansion that more than tripled its size and scope in terms of revenues, geography and the number of employees and facilities.

He retired as CEO in 2016, while continuing to serve as chairman.

He has served in leadership positions in the Coca-Cola system and beverage industry, including as chairman of the American Beverage Association and The Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation. He also served on the board of governors of the Coca-Cola Bottlers’ Association.

Nielsen’s numerous civic and charitable works includes the United Way of Central Alabama and the American Cancer Society, and he served on the Birmingham Airport Authority Board. He is a member of the Birmingham Rotary Club and has served on the executive committee of the Birmingham Business Alliance.

He was inducted into the Alabama Academy of Honor in 2016 and he and his wife, Kate, were recognized by the Greater Alabama Council of the Boy Scouts of America in 2017 with the Heart of an Eagle Award for their community service and were named Outstanding Civic Leaders by the Association of Fundraising Professionals in 2021.

The Wood Brothers

Brothers David W. Wood II and John H. Wood of Wood Fruitticher took over leadership of their family business after their father died at an early age. Over 38 years until their retirement in 2017, they grew the company from $10 million in sales to $400 million.

David Wood, a Birmingham resident, is a graduate of Leadership Birmingham and is in the current class of Leadership Alabama. He served on the Birmingham Airport Authority and in leadership positions with the Boy Scouts of America. He is on the board of the Community Food Bank of Central Alabama and has flown more than 60 flights for the Veterans Airlift Command, an organization that flies wounded veterans to and from hospitals around the country for treatment.

John H. Wood, also a Birmingham resident, is a member of the Kiwanis Club of Birmingham and has served in many leadership positions in the Presbyterian Church of America.

The company’s website notes that when the brothers retired, they handed the business to the fourth generation of the family – a milestone that only 3% to 5% of family businesses achieve.

This year’s event is sponsored by Alabama Power Company, CocaCola Bottling Co. United, Wood Fruitticher, Balch & Bingham, Bradley, Featheringill Capital, Milo’s Tea Company, The Piedmont Group, Protective Life Corporation and Starnes Media.

To learn more about the event or to buy tickets, go to kcob.org/events/ bbhof. Tickets include dinner and complimentary valet parking sponsored by Alabama Power Company.

Courtesy Brothers David W. Wood II and John H. Wood of Wood Fruitticher took over leadership of their family business after their father died at an early age.

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