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"...he being dead yet speaketh." |
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T. DeWitt Talmage
The following biography was
originally published on the website of
swordofthelord.com: T. DeWitt Talmage (1832 – 1902) Like Spurgeon, Talmage’s
ministry was multiplied not only from the pulpit to
immense congregations, but in the printed pages of
newspaper and in the making of many books. His sermons
appeared in 3,000 newspapers and magazines a week, and
he is said to have had 25 million readers. And for 25 years, Talmage – a
Presbyterian – filled the 4,000 to 5,000 seat auditorium
of his Brooklyn church, as well as auditoriums across
America and the British Isles. He counted converts to
Christ in the thousands annually. He was the founding editor of
Christian Herald, and continued as editor of this widely
circulated Protestant religious journal from 1877 until
his death in 1902. He had the face of a
frontiersman and the voice of a gold bell; sonorous,
dramatic, fluent, he was, first of all, an orator for
God; few other evangelists had his speech. He poured
forth torrents, deluges of words, flinging glory and
singing phrases like a spendthrift; there was glow and
warmth and color in every syllable. He played upon the
heartstrings like an artist. One writer described him as
the cultured Billy Sunday of his time. Many of his
critics found fault with his methods; but they could not
deny his mastery, nor could they successfully cloud his
dynamic loyalty to his Saviour and Lord, Jesus Christ. |