Marvin Perkins (1963– )

1928 – 2015

April 06, 2017 
/ Contributed By: BowenScott

Marvin Perkins is an accomplished recording vocal artist, a sought-after public speaker, and a leader in the effort to correct misunderstanding and incorrect assumptions about Blacks, especially in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Perkins was born in 1963 in Niagara Falls, New York, to Cecil and Cora Perkins. He was one of six children and attended many different Christian churches growing up. When Perkins was twenty-five in 1988, he joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He studied at Western Governors University in Salt Lake City and received a BS in Business Management. Perkins is currently married to the former Ani Crespo. They have three children and live in Los Angeles, where he works as a human capital management software sales director.

Perkins has served in many capacities in the LDS Church, including director of African American Relations on the Southern California Public Affairs Council, Gospel Doctrine and Seminary instructor, and co-chair for Genesis Public Affairs, Los Angeles Temple worker and service in the High Priest group leadership.

In the early 1990s, Perkins served in the leadership of the Genesis Group (a social group of African American members of the church that started in the 1970s but was reorganized in the 1990s) in the Salt Lake City area with Darius Gray. In 2007, he and Mr. Gray coauthored “Blacks in the Scriptures,” a lecture series addressing racially-related misunderstandings. Together, they formed a non-profit organization, Blacks in the Scriptures, of which he is currently president. A series of DVDs of the lectures has been distributed in sixteen countries to date, and the website http://blacksinthescriptures.com provides helpful materials on the subject.

Mr. Perkins is in demand as a speaker and has personally presented to a broad audience. He was interviewed by CNN as part of their series, “Black in America,” in 2008. More recently, he has developed a podcast that answers questions raised in the initial lecture series and presents additional insights (posted on the website cited above).

Mr. Perkins received the Humanitarian Award from the National Council of Humanity and Justice in 2004. He has recorded two CDs, singing his favorite church hymns: “Hymns for Him” and “I’m So Glad.” Along with Fred Bethel of Chicago, Illinois, he launched the African American Outreach Program in 2009, which taught classes to members of the church on a local level about current issues. He is the president and co-founder, along with Bethel, of the B1 Project (http://www.theb1project.org/), which provides a corporate training resource to deal with issues of racism in the workplace. He has worked tirelessly to “unify the human family” and overcome the racial divisions that separate us.

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