Difference between revisions of "George W. Truett"
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
− | The seventh child of Charles Levi Truett (1830-1925) and the former Mary Rebecca Kimsey (1830-1911), Truett was born on a farm in Hayesville in Clay County in the | + | The seventh child of Charles Levi Truett (1830-1925) and the former Mary Rebecca Kimsey (1830-1911), Truett was born on a farm in Hayesville in Clay County in the Blue Ridge Mountains of western [[North Carolina]]. His grandfather and great-uncle were pastors, and one of his older brothers was named for the famous evangelist [[Charles Spurgeon]].<ref name=findagrave/> Truett graduated in 1885 from Hayesville Academy and taught school just over the state line in Towns County, [[Georgia]].<ref name=papers/> in 1886, at the age of nineteen, he underwent a conversion experience at a Christian revival meeting. He founded a subscription school at Hiawassee, also in Towns County,<ref name=handbook/> and planned to use some of his earnings to attend law school. However, he left his teaching position after two years in 1889 to relocate with his parents to Whitewright in Grayson County in north Texas. There he attended Grayson Junior College in Denison and was ordained to the ministry in 1890 at the Whitewright Baptist Church. Thereafter, he delivered his first sermon at the First Baptist Church in Sherman, Texas.<ref name=papers>{{cite web|url=https://baylorarchives.cuadra.com/cgi-bin/starfetch.exe?6Lq10ylvD@QQyDDq@2PL8cTY7urW2LPjwIqgTn.B6l6rJPhRXOZt3YPvmHrUyyXjoUZDXljLVdHzD2fLTqCk.rjCeX3F2Ut1FiS5Uj0BFP4/0001ar.xml|title=George Washington Truett Papers|publisher=Baylorarchives.cuadra.com|accessdate=March 20, 2018}}</ref> |
In 1891, Truett at twenty-four became the financial secretary for Baptist-affiliated [[Baylor University]] in [[Waco, Texas|Waco]], Texas, at which he raised $92,000, enough money to retire the university's debts at that time. He enrolled in 1893 as a freshman at Baylor, graduated in 1897, and was a student-pastor of the East Waco Baptist Church.<ref name=handbook/> He was a Baylor trustee from 1934 to 1939 and a fundraiser for Baylor Hospital in Dallas.<ref name=findagrave/> | In 1891, Truett at twenty-four became the financial secretary for Baptist-affiliated [[Baylor University]] in [[Waco, Texas|Waco]], Texas, at which he raised $92,000, enough money to retire the university's debts at that time. He enrolled in 1893 as a freshman at Baylor, graduated in 1897, and was a student-pastor of the East Waco Baptist Church.<ref name=handbook/> He was a Baylor trustee from 1934 to 1939 and a fundraiser for Baylor Hospital in Dallas.<ref name=findagrave/> | ||
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|title=Rev. George Washington Truett|publisher=Old.findagrave.com|accessdate=March 20, 2018}}</ref> | |title=Rev. George Washington Truett|publisher=Old.findagrave.com|accessdate=March 20, 2018}}</ref> | ||
− | In 1939, Powhatan James published the authorized [[biography]] of his father-in-law through Macmillian. Buildings named for Truett include the Truett Memorial First Baptist Church in Hayesville, North Carolina; the George W. Truett Theological Seminary at Baylor University, Truett-McConnell University in Cleveland Georgia, and the George W. Truett Elementary School in the Dallas Independent School District. [[Truett Cathy|Samuel Truett Cathy]], the late founder of the restaurant chain, [[Chick-fil-A]], is named for Truett. | + | In 1939, Powhatan James published the authorized [[biography]] of his father-in-law through Macmillian. Buildings named for Truett include the Truett Memorial First Baptist Church in Hayesville, North Carolina; the George W. Truett Theological Seminary at Baylor University, Truett-McConnell University in Cleveland Georgia, and the George W. Truett Elementary School in the Dallas Independent School District. [[Truett Cathy|Samuel Truett Cathy]], the late founder of the restaurant chain, [[Chick-fil-A]], is named for Truett.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www2.baylor.edu/baylorproud/2017/05/george-w-truett-a-texas-baptist-and-baylor-legend/|title=George W. Truett: A Texas, Baptist, and Baylor legend|publisher=Baylor.edu|date=May 4, 2017|accessdate=March 20, 2018}}</ref> |
− | In 1957, the actor Victor Jory portrayed Truett in the episode "Lone Star Preacher" of the syndicated [[television]] series, ''[[Crossroads (TV series)|Crossroads]]''. Barbara Eiler was cast as Jo Truett, who | + | In 1957, the actor Victor Jory portrayed Truett in the episode "Lone Star Preacher" of the syndicated [[television]] series, ''[[Crossroads (TV series)|Crossroads]]''. Barbara Eiler was cast as Jo Truett, who died eleven months before the episode aired.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0550791/|title="Lone Star Preacher", March 15, 1957|publisher=Internet Movie Data Base|accessdate=June 14, 2013}}</ref> |
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 00:22, March 21, 2018
George Washington Truett | |
---|---|
Born | May 6, 1867 Hayesville, Clay County |
Died | July 7, 1944 (aged 77) Dallas, Texas |
Spouse | Josephine Jenkins "Jo" Truett (married 1894-1944, his death) Three daughters |
Religion | Southern Baptist clergyman Pastor, First Baptist Church of Dallas, 1897 to 1944 |
George Washington Truett (May 6, 1867 – July 7, 1944) was a Southern Baptist clergyman who was the pastor from 1897 until his death of the large First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas. He headed the Southern Baptist Convention from 1927 to 1929 and the Baptist World Alliance from 1934 to 1939.
Contents
Background
The seventh child of Charles Levi Truett (1830-1925) and the former Mary Rebecca Kimsey (1830-1911), Truett was born on a farm in Hayesville in Clay County in the Blue Ridge Mountains of western North Carolina. His grandfather and great-uncle were pastors, and one of his older brothers was named for the famous evangelist Charles Spurgeon.[1] Truett graduated in 1885 from Hayesville Academy and taught school just over the state line in Towns County, Georgia.[2] in 1886, at the age of nineteen, he underwent a conversion experience at a Christian revival meeting. He founded a subscription school at Hiawassee, also in Towns County,[3] and planned to use some of his earnings to attend law school. However, he left his teaching position after two years in 1889 to relocate with his parents to Whitewright in Grayson County in north Texas. There he attended Grayson Junior College in Denison and was ordained to the ministry in 1890 at the Whitewright Baptist Church. Thereafter, he delivered his first sermon at the First Baptist Church in Sherman, Texas.[2]
In 1891, Truett at twenty-four became the financial secretary for Baptist-affiliated Baylor University in Waco, Texas, at which he raised $92,000, enough money to retire the university's debts at that time. He enrolled in 1893 as a freshman at Baylor, graduated in 1897, and was a student-pastor of the East Waco Baptist Church.[3] He was a Baylor trustee from 1934 to 1939 and a fundraiser for Baylor Hospital in Dallas.[1]
Career
During his forty-seven years at First Baptist Dallas, membership ballooned from 715 to nearly 8,000, with total contribution exceeding $6 million. Three times growth required that the church be rebuilt.[2] The church for a time was the largest in the world.[3]
During World War I, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson dispatched Truett and nineteen other pastors to preach for six months to the Allied forces fighting the Central Powers.[2] Before Wilson's assignment, Truett had preached during the war at the noon hour at the Palace Theater in downtown Dallas for the convenience of workers, many of whom attended his sermons regardless of denomination.[4] For thirty-seven years, Truett preached for a month each summer to cowboys working the cattle drives in the Davis Mountains of West Texas.[3]
On May 16, 1920, Truett delivered a sermon which received nation attention, "Baptists and Religious Liberty". He spoke on the U.S. Capitol steps in Washington, D.C., where presidents have been inaugurated and foreign dignitaries feted. He explained how the nation was established on the principles of religious freedom and separation of church and state. Some analysts referred to the address as advancing "Baptist democracy."[5] Presumably had Truett lived into the 1960s, he would have been shocked that the United States Supreme Court adopted liberal ideology to strike down prayer and Bible reading in public schools on the basis of "separation of church and state," for which Truett had argued in 1920.
Truett published ten volumes of sermons, two volumes of addresses, and two volumes of Christmas messages. Sixty-one of his sermons have been published in three volumes: We Would See Jesus (1915), A Quest for Souls (1917), and God's Call to America (1923). The three volumes have been consolidated into a single work, Follow Thou Me (1932). Truett considered the ministry the best way to "help human life to realize its true destiny". He believed that no earthly task was greater than that of the minister.[3]
Legacy
In 1894, Truett wed the former Josephine "Jo" Jenkins (1872-1956), whom he met as a Baylor student. The couple had three daughters,[2] one of whom was Jessie Truett James (1897-1961), who was the wife of Powhatan Wright James (1880-1956), a Baptist clergyman who among multiple assignments was at the time of his father-in-law's death in Dallas the president of Bethel College in Hendersonville, Kentucky.[6] Mrs. Truett lived another twelve years. The Truetts and the James are interred at the large Sparkman-Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery in Dallas.[1]
In 1939, Powhatan James published the authorized biography of his father-in-law through Macmillian. Buildings named for Truett include the Truett Memorial First Baptist Church in Hayesville, North Carolina; the George W. Truett Theological Seminary at Baylor University, Truett-McConnell University in Cleveland Georgia, and the George W. Truett Elementary School in the Dallas Independent School District. Samuel Truett Cathy, the late founder of the restaurant chain, Chick-fil-A, is named for Truett.[7]
In 1957, the actor Victor Jory portrayed Truett in the episode "Lone Star Preacher" of the syndicated television series, Crossroads. Barbara Eiler was cast as Jo Truett, who died eleven months before the episode aired.[8]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Rev. George Washington Truett. Old.findagrave.com. Retrieved on March 20, 2018.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 George Washington Truett Papers. Baylorarchives.cuadra.com. Retrieved on March 20, 2018.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Truett, George Washington. The Handbook of Texas online. Retrieved on March 20, 2018.
- ↑ Henry S. Strope (1996). Truett, George Washington. Ncpedia.org. Retrieved on March 20, 2018.
- ↑ Lee Canipe (2011). A Baptist Democracy: Separating God and Caesar in the Land of the Free. Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. Retrieved on March 20, 2018.
- ↑ Powhatan Wright James. Oldfindagrave.com. Retrieved on March 20, 2018.
- ↑ George W. Truett: A Texas, Baptist, and Baylor legend. Baylor.edu (May 4, 2017). Retrieved on March 20, 2018.
- ↑ "Lone Star Preacher", March 15, 1957. Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved on June 14, 2013.