After an extensive national search, Biola selected Oscar Merlo, starting July 17, as the director of the Center for the Study of the Work and Ministry of the Holy Spirit Today.
Merlo is spearheading the center鈥檚 launch, funded by a major donation by a couple passionate about what the Holy Spirit will do through students at Biola. As an academic center, it will provide resources for a biblical examination of the person and ongoing work of the Holy Spirit, including research, publications, conferences, events and services for students.
鈥淚 believe this center will play a critical role in strengthening 黑莓视频 in the midst of the challenges we face in a rapidly changing, secularizing context,鈥 said Barry H. Corey, Biola鈥檚 president. 鈥淲e need to tap into the Spirit's power on our own campus and celebrate his movement in the wider world. Christian higher education demands not just intellectual development but spiritual formation, not just rational inquiry but supernatural encounter.鈥
Also, the center will organize prayer initiatives, bring in global leaders and host student conferences, all to help raise a generation of students, which in the donor couple鈥檚 mind, 鈥渃an change the world!鈥
鈥淚 praise God for this,鈥 said Clinton E. Arnold, dean of Talbot School of Theology, who will provide oversight for the center. 鈥淥scar is excited about his new role and is full of ideas.鈥
In the last 20 years, Merlo has served in executive leadership positions in for- profit and nonprofit multinational institutions like Target Corporation, ConAgra Foods, and for the past decade, Alberto Mottesi Evangelistic Association (AMEA). He has traveled to over 32 countries on five continents and has witnessed how God is powerfully at work all over the world.
As the executive director of AMEA, one of the world鈥檚 largest Latino evangelistic associations, he was responsible for facilitating all global administration and the institution鈥檚 operations. He also served as the dean of AMEA鈥檚 School of Evangelists, where he developed an academic program that has expanded to 136 international centers throughout Latin America, Africa, Europe and the Middle East.
Merlo is currently pursuing his doctorate in intercultural studies at Fuller Seminary, exploring the aspirations of millennial neo-Pentecostal Cubans, as well as the missiological themes emerging in the underground house church movement. 鈥淥scar鈥檚 expansive and diverse experience in global work and with diverse cultures makes him a great addition to the Biola community,鈥 Corey said. Merlo will serve as the leader of the center鈥檚 10-year initiative.