Texarkana Gazette

SPOTLIGHT:

Music ministry of East Texas family spans generation­s.

- By Jo Lee Ferguson Longview News-Journal

MARSHALL, Texas—A conversati­on with men in the Perkins family turns on the occasional outburst of song.

The Longview News-Journal reports seven of them, and a teenager, from three generation­s were sitting around a table together, talking about their family’s generation­al calling in music ministry when it happened—a song, Chris Tomlin’s “Jesus Messiah” to be exact. One moment they were talking and ribbing each other in gentle good humor, and then they were singing. It was unplanned, but they all joined in, someone singing bass, others harmonizin­g, a couple of them drumming a soft rhythm on the table, voices entering and exiting the song naturally, without hesitation.

Does this happen often? Caden Perkins, the teenager, who attends Hallsville schools, said yes. As he describes it, family gatherings are affairs that never run on schedule, because songs happen.

That’s how it is in the Perkins family, led by patriarch Dale Perkins, the man who started what some might say is an East Texas music ministry dynasty, except that he probably wouldn’t like that descriptio­n.

“I’d rather be in the most obscure, obsolete place on the face of God’s Earth and know that he had put me there than to stand on the pinnacle of what men call great and know that my ambition brought me here,” Perkins said.

He served more than 40 years as music minister for Mobberly Baptist Church in Longview before retiring about 11 years ago. He now leads Perkins Partnershi­p Ministries, which includes a ministry at Angola Prison in Louisiana and his family’s worship group— Classic Praise East Texas.

A number of his children and grandchild­ren are church music ministers around East Texas—in Longview, Atlanta, Hughes Springs, Lufkin and Carthage. They and other family members frequently perform together as Classic Praise East Texas, but later this month, they’ve been asked to do something they’ve never done before: a reunion concert with the East Texas Baptist University Concert Choir as part of the college’s homecoming festivitie­s.

The free concert is set at 7 p.m. Oct. 26 in the Ornelas Spiritual Life Center in Marshall. Members of the churches where the men lead music also will join the group, said Scott Bryant, vice president for university advancemen­t at ETBU.

“The Perkins family has had a great impact in leading worship throughout East Texas, and many of the family members are alumni of the institutio­n,” he said. “It’s a great opportunit­y to allow them to lead us in a night of worship during our homecoming celebratio­n.”

More than 10 members of the Perkins family either graduated from ETBU or are students there, but not the father of the family’s music mission.

“We grew up in a small country church,” Perkins said. “It was so small the preacher didn’t want to call the women ‘beloved’ because they would take it personally. I started leading music when I was probably 8 or 9 years old in church. I didn’t know a thing about it. I just did it, and everybody said I was going to be a preacher. That wasn’t my goal. I wanted to play athletics or be a cowboy.”

That’s how the story frequently goes in the family.

“I think every one of us tried to do something else,” said Dale Perkins II, music minister at First Baptist Church in Atlanta, of the men who became music ministers. They all discovered, though, that “joy didn’t come” through those other things. Music ministry is where they found their satisfacti­on.

The older Dale Perkins said he comes from a poor family, with nine children.

“There was no such thing as music lessons or anything like that for me,” he said, but he sees God’s hand in his life.

God gave him athletic ability, he said, which made it possible for him to attend what is now Texas A&M University in Corpus Christi. He later earned a master’s degree as well.

Perkins and his wife, Shirley, married when he was 19 and she was 17. They have five children, 17 grandchild­ren and 26 great-grandchild­ren.

“As we moved, everywhere we went, we never advertised what I did… and everywhere we went, a church looked us up. I don’t know how they knew,” Perkins said. “It had to be God’s hand.”

He never filled out a job applicatio­n or sent a resume to a church, he said. In fact, he said he’s never written a resume.

There was a time even he tried doing something else—selling cars with his brother in Louisiana. He remembers that time and how well his family did financiall­y. One day, though, he was in a pawn shop, shopping for a gun for a planned hunting trip, and thought he heard his brother’s voice, quoting Luke 12:14: “Life comes not of the abundance of things a man possesses.”

“I’d rather be in the most obscure, obsolete place on the face of God’s earth and know that he had put me there than to stand on the pinnacle of what men call great and know that my ambition brought me here.”

—Dale Perkins

 ?? Photos by Michael Cavazos/ The News-Journal via AP ?? aboveDale Perkins gives instructio­ns to Cayla Greer and the East Texas Baptist University Concert Choir on Oct. 9 during rehearsals for a homecoming performanc­e at ETBU in Marshall, Texas. leftAaron Perkins directs the ETBU Concert Choir on Oct. 9 during rehearsals for a homecoming performanc­e at ETBU in Marshall, Texas.
Photos by Michael Cavazos/ The News-Journal via AP aboveDale Perkins gives instructio­ns to Cayla Greer and the East Texas Baptist University Concert Choir on Oct. 9 during rehearsals for a homecoming performanc­e at ETBU in Marshall, Texas. leftAaron Perkins directs the ETBU Concert Choir on Oct. 9 during rehearsals for a homecoming performanc­e at ETBU in Marshall, Texas.
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