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"...he being dead yet speaketh." |
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Dr. J. Harold Smith
The following biography was
originally published on the website of
flamingtorch.org: The life of Dr. J. Harold Smith
has impacted many people far beyond his years of
ministry. Dr. James Rushing said he felt that Dr. J.
Harold Smith was the greatest living example of a man
who was filled with grace and truth. J. Harold Smith was saved eight
days after graduating from college, where he was
training to be a brain surgeon. Someone led him to the
Lord while he sat on his sister’s back porch. God
immediately began to do a great work in his life. By the
time midnight had come he had led his first six people
to the Lord. The following Sunday he was baptized, along
with twenty-eight of his friends that he had personally
won to Christ that week. One week later, J. Harold
Smith preached in his grandfather’s church and had
fifty-five saved. Dr. Smith founded the Radio
Bible Hour in 1932, but is best remembered for his
famous sermon entitled “God’s Three Deadlines.” Just
through the preaching of that one sermon, Dr. Smith saw
over one-and-a-half million people make a public
profession of faith. Through his preaching on other
subjects, there were approximately another
million-and-a-half professions of faith, making a total
of three million salvations during his ministry. Dr.
Smith was certainly an example of a man who had
phenomenal fruit that remained. At one point over nine hundred
pastors in the United States of America had come from
the ministry of Dr. J. Harold Smith. Dr. Smith was an
expert on many things, including being the author of one
of the best books ever written on the subject of
fasting. There was a singular aspect of
his life beyond his great preaching that was most
exquisite, and that was his relationship with his wife
Myrtice. J. Harold first saw Myrtice when she was just a
little girl when he was at his uncle’s store. He looked
out the window and said, “Who’s that girl, the little
one?” His buddy said, “That’s the girl from the family
that moved down the road from y’all.” J. Harold said,
“I’m gonna marry that girl.” He said they came in the
store and the girl, Myrtice, wanted some candy. They
got a brown paper bag and filled it full of candy. She
told J. Harold, “I just have a nickel.” He told her,
“We’ve got a sale today.” By the fifth grade they were
sweethearts, and every day after school they walked home
together. One day the teacher said to J. Harold, “J.
Harold, when school is out in the evening, I want you to
come and dust my erasers out for me.” He told Myrtice,
“I don’t know what I’m going to do. I can’t walk home
with you. I’ve gotta stay and dust these erasers for
the teacher.” The next day Myrtice wrote in a little
letter, “J. Harold, I will walk real slow.” He dusted
off those erasers quickly and walked as fast as he could
to catch up with Myrtice. Of course, they were
eventually married and spent decades together, serving
the Lord as a great team. J. Harold often said that
Myrtice was the only sweetheart he ever had. As he sat
by her bedside, shortly before she went home to be with
the Lord, she said, “J. Harold, I’m going real soon.”
J. Harold said, “No, Myrtice, no, no, no.” She said,
“Now J. Harold, I’m sicker than you think I am.” She
said, “You remember the letter I wrote you?” When she
said that he thought, “Man of all the hundreds of
letters that she’s written me . . .” She said, “You
know, the one in the fifth grade.” Big tears welled up
in J. Harold’s eyes as she reminded him of the
fifth-grade letter. She look at him and said, “J.
Harold, I’m going soon, but I’ll walk real slow.” As J.
Harold told this story to some preacher friends, he
said, “I’ve been walking as fast as I can for two years
now.” His desire was to see his Lord Jesus Christ and
to be with his wife once again. What a tremendous
testimony and challenge for us to walk quickly, getting
things done that we should get done for the Lord before
it’s time to go home. |