Christians have always believed that virtue is not so much taught as caught. Since we acquire qualities more by example than instruction, Scripture advises us to select our friends and mentors carefully. For this reason, I could not be more grateful to have worked beside Virginia Patterson for more than 15 years.

We first met at Wheaton College, at the conference of Christians for Biblical Equality (CBE) in 1993. Of course her reputation preceded her. While serving as adjunct faculty at Wheaton College and also Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Patterson was nearing the end of a distinguished career as president and CEO of Pioneer Clubs, a position she had held for 27 years. I was awed by her achievements as a leader and author, yet realized she was a humble woman of few words. Her sharp mind fueled her capacity to listen and discern. No wonder there was always admiration in the air whenever Virginia's named was evoked. It seemed everyone in CBE turned to her for wisdom. In this we were not alone.

Virginia's accomplishments in leadership theory and practice were recognized by distinguished awards from various evangelical organizations. Significantly, Virginia was the first and only woman to receive the Christian Management Award (1996) by (what is now) the Christian Leadership Alliance. In observing her participation on evangelical boards like SEND and ECFA, one executive said:

Her commitment, her common sense, and logical approach to things, and her willingness to stand alone if necessary, are just outstanding.

Patterson's willingness to go alone characterized her service to Christ early in life. As a single woman, she sailed to Nigeria where, for 10 years she served with the Sudan Interior Mission (SIM), educating hundreds of missionary children. With SIM Virginia discovered her lifelong passion to empower youth. And, her "wonderful missionary kids," as she called them, loved and admired her. One of her students became a missionary teacher himself. To him, Virginia was "a wonderful role model and a woman of great faith." Though she went to Nigeria without a husband or children, she returned a spiritual mother to hundreds. They were family to her the rest of her life. "She was a strong, smart woman whose legacy is the positive and profound influence she had on the lives of countless children," noted current Pioneer Clubs president Judy Bryson to the Chicago Tribune. "When children were around her, they felt affirmed."

A willingness to go alone also distinguished Patterson as an advocate of gender inclusivity, which was, for her, a biblical mandate. As CEO and president of Pioneer Girls, Virginia decided to include boys throughout its mission and programs. Though controversial, her vision grew the organization to 160,000 children a year with clubs in over 4,000 churches worldwide. Pioneer Girls became Pioneer Clubs because, for Patterson, God's mission on earth is accomplished by men and women working together. Their combined gifts constitute the work of the church, and on this point she was uncompromising. Inasmuch as she included boys equally within the mission of Pioneer Clubs, she was also determined to see women included in all levels of Christian service and leadership.

Beginning with her church, Virginia developed a strategy. She approached the Elders of her church, asking them to consider an egalitarian interpretation of Scripture. Though the Elders were world-renowned Bible scholars, Patterson was unintimidated. To make her case, she visited them personally. She told me once how she waited patiently at one Elder's home while he mowed his lawn. As he pushed his lawnmower back and forth, Virginia stood smiling at him from his living room window, eager to engage him theologically. I am not sure who was the more courageous that day, Virginia or her Elder. Her holy boldness helped move a community of scholars from a male-only model of leadership to one where women now serve as Elders. Inevitably Virginia was ordained as an Elder in the Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Wheaton, IL. She also served on many denominational committees. As one of her missionary kids said, "Her influence was epic!"

In 1995, Patterson joined the board of CBE as chair, perceiving the need to transition our board from managing tasks to identifying policies. She not only developed board policies with a focus on governance, she also established a process of strategic planning that helped create a more vibrant and sustainable organization. For more than 15 years I watched this fearless Cherokee woman lead CBE, churches, organizations, and individuals, always motivated by mission rather than human accolade. And, she was restless in her search for new and better ways to serve.

Even while growing Pioneer Clubs, Patterson found time to become a licensed counselor and to complete her doctorate in education, believing that higher education equips women for strategic leadership. In all of this she stands alone in placing her ambition, time and talents at the service of others, in never taking the easy path, and in giving much more than 100 percent.

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Virginia made it clear not so much through words but through her actions that leadership is some of the most demanding yet sanctifying work God can give. Perhaps there is no better way to celebrate her life and legacy than with the words of Saint Francis. Like Virginia, Francis left the world not with great literary works but with a spirit of love and prodigious effort that had the good of others as their chief aim. Like Francis, Virginia's passion to serve God and others is her legacy. She embodied the prayer of Saint Francis, who said:

O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned:
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.

Mimi Haddad is president of Christians for Biblical Equality.

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