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SBC DIGEST: Betty Drummond dies; SBTS confers posthumous certificate


Author, former seminary president’s wife Betty Drummond dies at 96

By The Alabama Baptist staff

DOTHAN, Ala. – Decades of Baptist seminarians crossed paths with Lewis and Betty Drummond through the years and would likely still garner fond memories from the connections.

Lewis Drummond died in 2004 at age 77 and was buried on the campus of Southeastern Seminary in Wake Forest, N.C., where he served as president from 1988 to 1992. His wife, Betty, lived more than 22 years without him, most recently in Dothan, Ala. She died May 19 at 96 and will be buried next to him.

Served seminaries and churches

Through their years of ministry, the Drummonds also served at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., and Beeson Divinity School at Samford University in Birmingham (Lewis as a professor at both schools). He also led churches in Alabama, Texas and Kentucky.

Billy Graham prays over the Drummonds at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary during his inauguration ceremony Oct. 11, 1988. Lewis Drummond served as the fourth president of the seminary. SEBTS archive photo

Nicholas Clark, executive director of the State Convention of Baptists in Indiana, focused on the Drummonds for his dissertation at Southern Seminary. He shared with The Alabama Baptist this week about Betty’s two books she co-authored with her husband: “Women of Awakenings: The Historic Contribution of Women to Revival” and “The Spiritual Woman: Ten Principles of Spirituality and Women Who Have Lived Them.”

“She had a lot of different hats in the world they shared,” he added. “Betty Drummond was a faithful lifetime partner to Lewis Drummond.”

While they had no biological children, the Drummonds “really had a partnership in training these students,” Clark said.

Service times

Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. (CT) Wed., May 27 at Glover Funeral Home, 1468 Hartford Highway, Dothan, AL 36301, with Phil Roberts, former Midwestern Seminary president, officiating and with Glover Funeral Home of Dothan directing.

Graveside services will be held at 10 a.m. (EST), Wed., June 17 at the Southeastern Seminary Cemetery, 873 Stadium Road, Wake Forest, NC 27587.


SBTS Seminary Wives Institute confers posthumous certificate

By Travis Hearne/SBTS

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Alexis Hewitt enrolled in Southern Seminary’s Seminary Wives Institute in 2023. She never set foot on campus. She completed seven courses from home, caring for four young children, and needed only two more to earn her certificate when she died Jan. 2. She had turned 32 on Christmas Eve.

Days before she passed, she submitted an assignment on Canvas.

In her coursework over the years, Alexis mentioned her cancer diagnosis in passing references woven into reflections on what she was learning and how she hoped to use it. Faculty engaged with her through the platform without knowing how serious her illness had become. Her assignments gave no indication. She wrote about applying what she was learning in her church. She wrote about hoping, one day, to visit the seminary.

That visit never came. But the work she put in was real, and so was the faith behind it.

“After over a year of fighting Stage 4 stomach cancer she lost the battle, but she won the war,” her husband Rusty wrote when he announced her passing. “Jesus has defeated sin, death, and the grave. She is risen with Christ and forever will be with Him.”

In January, Rusty emailed the seminary with the news of Alexis’s passing and asked whether she could receive her certificate posthumously. President R. Albert Mohler Jr. said yes.

“We now have the rare but very precious opportunity to award the certificate in ministry studies to a posthumous graduate,” Mohler said during graduation. “It is our great honor.”

On May 7, Rusty walked across the stage at Southern’s commencement to receive her Certificate in Ministry Studies on her behalf. Rusty studies online at Southern Seminary and serves as associate pastor at Conowingo Baptist Church in Conowingo, Maryland.. Alexis’s parents, Greg and Cindy Roth, attended as well.

“I now treasure the interactions I had with Alexis Hewitt over Canvas and regret that I never had the privilege to meet her,” said Mary Mohler, Director of the Seminary Wives Institute. “She was a diligent student who was working hard to complete every class she could, even while being treated for cancer.”

Along with the entire seminary community, Mohler continues to remember the Hewitt family’s faithfulness and offers prayers on their behalf. “I’m so glad I did get to meet Rusty and their four precious children, as well as Alexis’s parents and in-laws, who all made the trip to Louisville for graduation,” Mohler said. “I will never forget the poignant moment when Rusty received Alexis‘s certificate. This entire family is modeling for us how to grieve as those whose hope is in Christ alone. We will continue to pray for them!”

Reflecting on their marriage this spring, Rusty described 2025, Alexis’s final year, as a year defined by love and sacrifice.

“I never felt more love for Alexis or from Alexis more than I did last year,” he wrote. “The vacancy of her in my life at times seems insurmountable. A life without her feels impossible.”

But for Rusty, grief and hope are not opposites.

“I know God. I know His promises. I know His character. And I knew my wife’s faith in God was certain. As I grieve the loss of my Alexis, I also rejoice knowing she is at perfect peace with Jesus.”

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