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"...he being dead yet speaketh." |
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Dr. George W.
Truett
The following biography was
originally published on the website of swordofthelord.com: George W. Truett (1867 – 1944) North Carolina was George Washington Truett’s
birthplace. By the time he was 18, he was educated well
enough to begin teaching in a one-room public school on
Crooked Creek in nearby Towns County, Georgia. It was
during that two-year apprenticeship that George was
converted. Then he established an academy at Hiawassee,
Georgia, in 1887. The student body eventually numbered
over 300. When the Truett family moved to Texas in 1889,
George went to college—Baylor University—though not as a
student. He was offered the position of financial
secretary and was instrumental in saving Baylor from
bankruptcy. Afterward he became a student, graduated,
and unbelievably was elected to become Baylor’s
president! But the same year of his graduation he was called
to the First Baptist Church of Dallas, remaining there
for 47 years, or until his death in 1944. Under his
leadership the church grew into the largest church in
the world at that time, with 18,124 additions and 5,337
baptisms. But Dr. Truett had many pulpits besides the pulpit
at First Baptist Church. He instituted the Palace
Theatre services, held each noon the week before Easter,
with nearly 2,000 attending. He preached out in the
country churches all across the South, and the common
folk heard him gladly. He preached from the steps of
our nation’s Capitol, and in world centers in London,
Stockholm, Paris, Berlin, Jerusalem, etc. Everywhere
Truett’s preaching produced souls for Christ. In 1927 he was elected president of the Southern
Baptist Convention, which office he served for three
terms. By any standard, he ranks as one of the most
popular and influential preachers in America in the
first half of the 20th century. He was a world figure;
was on close terms with presidents, senators and
governors. Dr. Truett was a great man, a great leader,
and a great preacher of the Gospel. His biographers knew
whereof they spoke when they explained the man and his
ministry in two well-defined words: “heart-power.” |