- Marcus Martins
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Marcus Helvécio Martins (born 22 April 1959[1]) is a former chairman of the Department of Religious Education at Brigham Young University Hawaii and the author of Setting the Record Straight: Blacks and the Mormon Priesthood. Martins was the first black member to serve as a Latter-day Saint missionary after the revelation extending the priesthood of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to all male members regardless of race or color. Martins is the son of Helvécio Martins, the first Latter-day Saint of African descent to serve as a general authority in the LDS Church.
Contents
Biography
Martins was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,[1] and became an American citizen in 2010. The Martins family joined the LDS Church in 1972. In February 1978, Marcus Martins became engaged to Mirian Abelin Barbosa, who had just returned from serving in the church's Brazil São Paulo South Mission. Initially they planned on getting married in May 1978, but then planned to postpone the marriage until after the dedication of the São Paulo Brazil Temple so Mirian could be sealed to her parents at the same time. However, she then decided to not follow that plan and they set a new marriage date of August 5. On June 8, 1978, Official Declaration—2 was announced. After much contemplation and prayer, Martins decided to serve a mission rather than get married.[2] He served in the Brazil São Paulo North Mission from 1978 to 1980.[3]
After returning from his mission, Martins married Mirian. He worked as a construction inspector and later as a systems analyst. During this time he also served as a bishop in the church (a position he would again occupy years later in Hawaii). In the early 1980s Martins was involved in making a new translation of the Book of Mormon into Portuguese.[4]
Martins then went to Provo, Utah, where he studied for six years at Brigham Young University (BYU), earning degrees in business management, organizational behavior, and a Ph.D. in Sociology at BYU. During his doctoral work he was a part-time Religion and Sociology instructor at BYU, and later worked as a religion professor at Brigham Young University–Idaho (then Ricks College), before taking his current position at BYU-Hawaii in the Summer of 2000. As department chair at BYUH he was responsible for revitalizing the religious education program through the use of educational technology and public relations. He also served as chair of the Faculty Advisory Council (akin to a faculty senate), and member of the strategic planning and academic planning committees. He was the first BYU-Hawaii professor to work closely with BYU Television in taking academic lectures to an international audience.
He has spoken to LDS and professional audiences throughout the United States, Brazil, and Japan, and participated in professional conferences in China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, and Qatar. He is working on his next book The Bishop: Steward of God, Agent of Salvation.
In 2011 Martins was assigned to serve as the president of the Brazil São Paulo North Mission.[5]
Notes
- ^ a b Martins, Helvecio and Mark Grover. The Autobiography of Helvecio Martins, (Salt Lake City: Aspen Books, 1994) p. 29
- ^ Martins. Autobiography, pp. 68–73.
- ^ Martins. Setting the Record Straight: Blacks and the Mormon Priesthood, back cover
- ^ Rosemarie Howard, "Marcus Martins Named New Chair of L2 Committee", 2007-03-20, byuh.edu, accessed 2008-05-02.
- ^ LDS Church News, Feb. 19, 2011
References
- Aaron Shill, "Modern pioneer will always be linked to 1978 revelation", Mormon Times, 2008-04-30
External links
- Marcus H. Martins, "Thirty Years After the 'Long Promised Day': Reflections and Expectations", presented at the Orem Utah Institute of Religion, 2008-02-29
- Martins on YouTube, "Dr. M. H. Martins Channel"
Categories:- 1959 births
- Brazilian Latter Day Saints
- Brazilian Mormon missionaries
- Brigham Young University alumni
- Brigham Young University–Hawaii faculty
- Brigham Young University–Idaho faculty
- Bishops of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- Mormon missionaries in Brazil
- Mormonism and race
- Living people
- Brazilian academics
- Brazilian writers
- Latter Day Saint writers
- 20th-century Mormon missionaries
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