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Ben Sells to lead Ouachita Baptist Univ.


ARKADELPHIA, Ark. (BP) — Ouachita Baptist University trustees unanimously elected Ben R. Sells as Ouachita’s 16th president during a special called meeting today (April 7).

Sells will begin serving as president-elect this month and officially will assume the presidency June 1 of the 1,500-student university in Arkadelphia affiliated with the Arkansas Baptist State Convention.

Sells, who has extensive leadership experience in higher education, fundraising and missions involvement, served as vice president for university advancement at Taylor University in Upland, Ind., from the fall of 2006 to January of this year.

Sells directed record fundraising efforts during his tenure at Taylor and also had responsibilities for university strategic planning. Taylor has been ranked for nine consecutive years as the No. 1 baccalaureate college in the Midwest by U.S. News & World Report, the same ranking held by Ouachita in the South region before moving to a national ranking in 2012.

Following an in-depth nine-month presidential search process, Sells’ election marks the first time in more than 60 years that a newly elected Ouachita president has not had previous ties to Ouachita as an alumnus, staff member or trustee.

“The presidential search committee’s desire to do a national search was different than all of our presidential searches in recent history,” said Jay Heflin, chairman of the OBU board of trustees. “However, I believe that this has resulted in our eyes being opened to several opportunities that we have not been able to see in the past. And, ultimately, I believe that this national search has brought Ouachita a new president who is wonderfully gifted in many ways.

“Dr. Sells has a broad base of Christian, liberal arts experience and shares the values of our university honed by serving at a similar campus in a small-town setting,” noted Heflin, a 1993 Ouachita alumnus who served as an ex officio member of the search committee. “His experience and giftedness is a wonderful complement to the unique set of needs that Ouachita has at this time in her history.”

Telling trustees he is “deeply honored and humbled” by the opportunity to serve as Ouachita’s president, Sells pledged “my solidarity with you in an unwavering commitment to steward, to sustain and to strengthen Ouachita’s mission.”

Sells succeeds Rex Horne who resigned as president last year to accept the presidency of Arkansas’ Independent Colleges and Universities. Charles Wright, retired dean of Ouachita’s school of fine arts, has served as interim president since last August and will continue to serve in that role through the current academic year.

Sells holds a bachelor of science degree from Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Mo., and two degrees, a master of arts and a Ph.D. in higher and adult education, from the University of Missouri in Columbia. In 2012 he earned a certificate from Harvard University’s Institute for Educational Management and as an undergraduate he participated in the Oxford Overseas Study Program.

Other higher education experience includes serving as vice president for admissions and student life and director of university ministries at Southwest Baptist University and as an English instructor at Huaiyin Teachers College in China. He also has served as vice president for Avis Industrial Corporation, senior vice president of development for Enactus, coordinator of the Southern Baptist International Mission Board’s International Learning Center and director of the IMB’s International Centre for Excellence in Leadership.

Sells’ wife Lisa is the co-founder and executive director of Lift, an after-school faith-based initiative for elementary school students. They are the parents of three grown children and a high school freshman.

Gene Whisenhunt, immediate past chairman of OBU’s trustees and a 1983 Ouachita alumnus, served as chairman of the presidential search committee. Reflecting on the committee’s national search, he said, “There was interest in the position from many wonderful and qualified candidates. After consideration of the needs of Ouachita and her mission, our steps led us to Dr. Ben Sells. He has vast experience in many leadership positions and a passion for Christian higher education. We believe Dr. Sells will provide exceptional leadership of Ouachita Baptist University.”

Affirming “a confident call specifically to Ouachita,” Sells described his call as missional, educational, historical, denominational, geographical and relational.

While his past experience “significantly shapes the way I want to proceed here,” Sells told trustees, “I don’t come to Ouachita with a specific agenda for the future. I believe that such a plan will emerge as we seek the wisdom of the Lord, listen to the voices of the Ouachita family and engage in candid and respectful conversations.”

Although “we’re living in a disruptive time for higher education,” he said it poses “a pivotal moment for Christian colleges. At our core, we are focused on forming people — what Ouachita so importantly describes as ‘fostering a love of God and a love of learning’ — and that must remain foremost.

“We must not be tempted to do only what it takes to survive when it is possible to thrive,” Sells declared. “We must not be people of too much fear and too little faith. That is not our calling as Christians and that is not the character of this university.

“I cannot imagine a better time, a better opportunity for Ouachita Baptist University to lead the way in creating a more viable, more substantive and more enduring model of education,” he said. “This is Ouachita’s opportunity to further define, to differentiate and to distinguish itself as a Christian university, as a Baptist college, that will provide to students unparalleled value over time.”

Looking toward Ouachita’s future challenges and opportunities, Sells said key perspectives that will guide his approach to leadership include supporting faculty and staff, ensuring student learning and engaging alumni as well as innovating new programs, serving churches and strengthening the university’s financial sustainability.

“I believe that the search committee and Dr. Sells have both been extremely focused on God’s leading through this process,” Heflin emphasized. “It has been a journey that God has led and brought all parties together in such a way that has the potential to be life-changing for our beloved Ouachita.”

    About the Author

  • Trennis Henderson

    Trennis Henderson is the national correspondent for WMU (Woman’s Missionary Union). A Baptist journalist for more than 35 years, Henderson is a former editor of the Western Recorder of the Kentucky Baptist Convention and the Arkansas Baptist News state convention newsjournal.

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