Vanguard University welcomes new director
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- School officials and community members on Wednesday
welcomed a top leader of the country’s Christian Latino community to
Vanguard University.
Jesse Miranda has come to Vanguard as the director and principal
creator of the school’s new Center for Urban Studies and Ethnic
Leadership, through which he hopes to bring the school, community and
church together.
“The center will be that arm that will reach out to connect the campus
to the community, to the church,” Miranda said. “Those are the three
institutions that we need to partner with. The church is probably the
missing link today in the community.”
Miranda will also teach urban studies and ethnic leadership at the
private university, which is affiliated with the Assemblies of God
denomination.
Community leaders greeted Miranda and embraced the concept of the new
center at a reception held Wednesday night at The Center Club in Costa
Mesa.
Miranda, 63, is an executive presbyter of the national board of the
Assemblies of God and national president of Alianza de Ministerios
Evangelicos Nacionales, a broad and powerful alliance of national
ministries in the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada and Northern Mexico.
“I think that Jesse brings with him the status of a prominent leader
within the Hispanic community, that will act as a networking catalyst
with churches and government organizations to establish leadership that
is needed to address urban and ethnic issues,” said Vanguard president
Murray Dempster.
Using his expertise and extensive connections, Miranda plans to make
the center a research hub for addressing the concerns that come with
growing urbanization and ethnic diversity.
Instead of focusing on urban problems, however, the center will
concentrate of finding ways to bring the church and community together so
society will be better served, he said.
“The center will study the assets and needs of people in communities
and create models to provide resources and construct tools to help
leaders,” Miranda said. “We will accomplish that through research --
doing surveys, student literature and putting it together.”
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