

Sarah Carmen Clements Rogers went home to her Lord on Easter Sunday, April 5, 2026. She was born on February 19th, 1947 to James Kurtis and Jonnie Thomasson Clements, at Archbold Hospital in Thomasville, Georgia. She was brought home to Foshsalee Plantation on the Florida-Georgia Line where her father was employed. Soon, the family moved across the woods to Sunny Hill Plantation near Miccosukee. Carmen, her 3 sisters, and other children of all the Red Hills plantations could not begin to tell you the joy they felt growing up in those environments: playing outdoors in piney and hardwoods, with fishing ponds, cane grindings, mayhaw gatherings and such, all combined with glimpses of the sophistication of other worlds.
In those childhood years, the Miccosukee Community was a hub of activity for local families: Farm Bureau, 4-H, Home Demonstration Club, and all the things happening at church and the Miccosukee School. In Carmen's childhood her family attended Miccosukee Methodist and when she was 14, the Clements family began years spent at 1st Presbyterian in Thomasville. Both churches played major roles in establishing her faith in Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord. Carmen returned to Miccosukee Methodist in her early 30’s, and as a member, became volunteer pianist for 35 years.
Carmen spent her school days at Miccosukee School (Elementary- 8th ), Elizabeth Cobb Jr. High, Leon High School, then on to Florida State University.
She excelled in music and languages (Latin & French). She studied piano from early childhood on, and by college years had become a classically trained pianist under the tutelage of Norma Mastrogiacomo. She earned her BA. In Secondary English Education, but it was her minor in French that paved the way for her fine career as (the new) Lincoln High's first French teacher, a post she held for 27 of her 30 years in teaching. "Madame Rogers" was loved by her students, whose lives she influenced on both academic and spiritual levels. She twice took students to Paris, often cooked gourmet recipes for classroom parties, taught strong skills in the tried and true blackboard and lecture methods.
All the while, Carmen was growing in Christ. Freely confessing years where He was on a back burner, she became a Bible scholar, dedicating herself to knowledge of accurate translations of His Word, and zealously passing on what she learned. She was a prayer warrior for the lives of students and faculty alike, holding morning prayer groups with students, God showing her a harvest in answered petitions.
Though some knew her for her deep knowledge of the Bible and her great faith, many knew her for her incredible talent displayed on the piano. Carmen gave God the glory for that gift and so did all those who listened and were ministered to as she played. Besides her years as Miccosukee Methodist pianist, she served in that capacity for 7 years at McCall’s Chapel United Methodist Church in Hatch Bend, FL, where her husband , Pastor Dave Rogers, ministered.
Psalm 113:9 tells us, “He makes the barren woman …to be the joyful mother of children.” So it was with Carmen. Having no children of her own, she loved and carried joys and sorrows as a parent would for her sisters' children, and had the full heart of a grandmother for those children's children.
If she came across leisure time, she created fabulous recipes which took the “wild” out of game, made & decorated wedding cakes for loved ones and friends, explored nature in every way, wrote short essays and humorous commentaries for friends and family. There were years she was a runner, an early member of Gulf Winds Track Club, where she assisted her husband with overseeing 31 races during those active stages of life.
Lastly, Carmen was a devoted wife to her husband, Pastor David Rogers. She was there for him in every way. She encouraged & assisted him in his ministry in the Methodist Church, and helped him to follow his lifelong dreams in track, hunting, and aviation.
Carmen is preceded in death by her parents, her sister Susan Clements, nephew Benjamin Inman, her brother-in-law George Thomson, and countless other loved ones gone on before.
She is survived by husband Pastor David Rogers, sisters Alice Thomson and Martha Inman (Benjie), nephew Voight Thomson, niece Meghan Saunders, great nieces Lizzie, Sarah, and Caroline Saunders, and great nephews Levi and Noah Inman and their Annie.
A service will be held at Miccosukee Methodist Church, Friday, April 10, 2026, at 12:00 noon with interment at the church cemetery. A covered dish luncheon will follow in the fellowship hall.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Big Bend Hospice, who provided her with wonderful care in last weeks of life.
COMPARTA UN OBITUARIOCOMPARTA
v.1.18.0