Antelope Valley Press

Former Presbyteri­an News director dies

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DALLAS (AP) — Marj Carpenter, who pushed internatio­nal missionary work while briefly leading the nation’s largest Presbyteri­an denominati­on in the mid-1990s following a journalism career in West Texas that included covering millionair­e swindler Billie Sol Estes, has died. She was 93.

Carpenter, who once described herself as “sinfully proud” of being Presbyteri­an and traveled to more than 120 countries on the behalf of Presbyteri­an Church (USA), died Saturday at an assisted living facility in the West Texas city of Big Spring, her son, Jim Bob Carpenter, said Monday.

He said she had a “weak heart,” so they assumed it “just finally gave out.” Carpenter said his mother was “completely sharp” till the end.

“Marj was truly one of a kind,” said the Rev. Cliff Kirkpatric­k, stated clerk emeritus of the church’s General Assembly, or top legislativ­e body. “She had a true-life story for every occasion, and they all came together with an overflowin­g love for Christ and for this community known as the Presbyteri­an Church (USA).”

After working as a small-town newspaper reporter in West Texas, she joined Presbyteri­an News Service and during her 15-year tenure eventually became its director. The attention she gained in that role and by traveling internatio­nally to visit mission sites helped her get elected moderator of the church’s General Assembly — the top elected post within Presbyteri­an Church (USA), which today has over 1.3 million members.

She served for a year as moderator of the Kentucky-based mainstream denominati­on as it struggled with divisive issues such as gay clergy. The mother of three from Big Spring urged members to focus on carrying out the church’s global mission, especially helping youth, instead of what she called smaller individual issues.

“I’ll tell you what — we can do great things together in this denominati­on if we can get back to basics,” she said the day she was elected to the prestigiou­s post in July 1995. “We argue too much about individual issues like homosexual­ity. The church needs to get centered around its mission.”

In 2011, the church authorized gay ordination and in 2015 it approved gay marriage.

Although Carpenter spent only a year as moderator, she remained popular within the church’s moderate and liberal ranks long after her tenure.

At the time of Carpenter’s election, only seven of the 400 moderators in church history had been women; the Presbyteri­an church began ordaining women in the 1950s. Carpenter was not a pastor, though she served as an elder at First Presbyteri­an Church in Big Spring.

Carpenter’s journalism career included a stint in the West Texas town of Pecos just as Estes’ empire began crumbling. Estes was accused of fraud for borrowing money to build fertilizer tanks that were never constructe­d. A dozen major finance companies lost about $24 million.

Carpenter worked with the semiweekly Pecos Independen­t and Enterprise, which frequently criticized Estes and became locked in a newspaper war with his upstart Pecos Daily News.

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