George Washington Truett

George Washington Truett, also known as George W. Truett (May 6, 1867 July 7, 1944), was an American clergyman who was the pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas, from 1897 until 1944, and the president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1927 to 1929.[1][2] He was one of the "most famous Southern Baptist" preachers and writers of his era.[3]

George Washington Truett
Born(1867-05-06)May 6, 1867
DiedJuly 7, 1944(1944-07-07) (aged 77)
Dallas, Texas, US
EducationGrayson College,
Baylor University
OccupationPastor
Years active1890–1944
Spouse(s)Josephine "Jo" Jenkins Truett (married 1894–1944, his death)
Parent(s)Charles L. and Mary R. Kimsey Truett
ReligionSouthern Baptist
ChurchFirst Baptist Church of Dallas (1897–1944)
OrdainedWhitewright Baptist Church (1890)
Offices held
President, Southern Baptist Convention (1927–1929)

Early life and education

Truett was born on a farm[2] in Hayesville in Clay County in remote Western North Carolina, the seventh child of Charles L. Truett and the former Mary R. Kimsey.[4] His ancestors were of English and Scots-Irish descent, and were pioneers in Appalachia. Several were well-known Baptist preachers. He entered school at Hayesville Academy in 1875 and graduated in 1885.[1] He had a dramatic conversion experience at a camp meeting revival in 1886.[2]

Truett taught in a Towns County, Georgia, school. In 1887, he founded the Hiawassee Academy in that same county, with the intention of making enough money from private students to pay for law school.[1][2][4] In 1889, however, he left his position with the Academy to move with his parents to Whitewright, Texas. There he joined the Whitewright Baptist Church and attended Grayson College.[5][1] He was ordained to the Baptist ministry at the Whitewright church in 1890.[4] He preached his first sermon at the First Baptist Church in nearby Sherman, Texas.[6]

Baylor University

In 1891, Truett was hired by the president of Baylor University in Waco, Texas, to serve as its financial secretary. Enterprising and energetic, Truett raised $92,000 in less than two years and completely wiped out the school's indebtedness.[4][2][1] After his stint as the school's financial secretary, Truett enrolled as a freshman at Baylor in 1893. From 1893 to 1897, he studied at Baylor and served as a student-pastor of the East Waco Baptist Church to pay for his tuition.[1][4] He graduated in June 1897 with an A.B. degree.[4] Truett would later serve as a Baylor trustee from 1934 to 1939.[4]

Pastoral career

Truett accepted the position of pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas in September 1897, a position he would hold until his death.[4] During his 47-year pastorate, membership increased from 715 to 7,804; a total of 19,531 new members were received, and total contributions were $6,027,741.52.[1][4] The church was rebuilt three times during his tenure there to accommodate the expanding congregation.[2] His preaching made him nationally famous, as he criss-cross the nation leading revivals, participating in religious organizations, and raising funds for churches. He was a leader in the national "Seventy-Five Million Campaign," but the financial results were disappointing. In Texas he led the fundraising for the Texas Baptist Memorial Sanitarium, the forerunner of Baylor Hospital. He avoided politics except for prohibition issues and gambling. [7]

Truett was the president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1927 to 1929 and of the Baptist World Alliance from 1934 to 1939.[1] During World War I, he was appointed by President Woodrow Wilson as one of 20 preachers sent by the president for a six-month tour to preach to the Allied forces.[1][4]

One of Truett's most famous sermons, "Baptists and Religious Liberty", was delivered on the steps of the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on May 16, 1920.[8] In this sermon, he claimed that the United States was founded on the principles of religious freedom and separation of church and state.[1][4] He elaborated anti-Catholic views as the core element in his defense of religious liberty and the separation of church and state. He argued that the Catholic doctrine of baptismal regeneration and transubstantiation is fundamentally subversive of the gospel of Christ. Likewise, the Catholics built their church to separate the individual soul from God, making it "a ghastly tyranny" that frustrates the grace of God, destroys freedom of conscience, and hinders the coming of Kingdom of God.[9] He warned his flock that America was “menaced by our vast and fast-growing cities,” which had become dens of “lawlessness.” Urban centers drew “the alien populations of the world with their strange customs and beliefs and ideals and sentimentalisms.” He said that Catholics rejected separation of church and state and were secretly plotting papal control of the American government.[10]

Truett never attended a seminary and he paid little attention to theological debates. He was orthodox in his beliefs, but opposed efforts in the 1920s to pass state laws against the teaching of evolution. Fundamentalist elements attacked him for welcoming Northern Baptists to preach at his church in Dallas, and for fighting against the divisive influence of Frank Norris.[11] Over the course of his pastoral career, he published ten volumes of sermons, two volumes of addresses, and two volumes of Christmas messages.[2]

Truett worried that cowboys who worked the cattle drives were too isolated from family, church, and society. He made annual trips through the Davis Mountains of West Texas for thirty-seven years, traveling with cattle drives there and preaching.[2][3][12]

Personal life and death

Truett married fellow Baylor student Josephine Jenkins on June 28, 1894, with whom he had three children, all daughters.[1] He died in Dallas on July 7, 1944. His wife died twelve years later. Both are interred at Sparkman-Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery in Dallas.[13]

Legacy

According to John S. Ezell:

In his prime George W. Truett was nearly six feet tall and weighed about 200 pounds, with unusually broad shoulders and erect carriage. Solemn in appearance, he was black-haired, with blue-gray eyes and a wide, sensitive mouth. His remarkable voice made him audible to large crowds without the aid of an amplifying system. He was orthodox in theology, and his oratory, which led him to be compared with William Jennings Bryan, was characterized by directness and conviction; it earned him a place as one of the great preachers of his day.[14]

In 1957 Truett was portrayed by Victor Jory in the episode "Lone Star Preacher" of the syndicated television series, Crossroads. The actress Barbara Eiler was cast as Truett's wife, Jo, who died eleven months before the episode aired.[15]

An authorized but unsourced biography of Truett written by Powhatan James was published in 1939 by Macmillan.[4] [16]

Namesakes

Baylor Medical Center exhibit honoring Reverend Truett.

Published works

  • George W. Truett (1915). We Would see Jesus: and other Sermons. New York: Fleming H. Revell.
  • George W. Truett (1917). A Quest for Souls. Harper & Brothers.
  • George W. Truett (1946). Some Vital Questions. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans.
  • George W. Truett (1954). After His likeness. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans.
  • George W. Truett (1973). Sermons from Paul (George W. Truett Library). Grand Rapids: Baker Book House. ISBN 0-8010-8796-1.

See also

References

  1. George Washington Truett Papers Accession #0095, The Texas Collection, Baylor University
  2. Perez, Joan. "TRUETT, GEORGE WASHINGTON". The Handbook of Texas. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
  3. Canipe, Lee (2011). A Baptist Democracy: Separating God and Caesar in the Land of the Free. Mercer University Press. pp. 128–129. ISBN 9780881462395.
  4. "George Washington Truett". Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives Biographies. Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
  5. Stroupe, Henry S. (1996). "Truett, George Washington". NCpedia.
  6. "George Washington Truett". Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives Biographies. Southern Baptist Historical Library and Archives. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  7. Durso, 2009.
  8. "George W. Truett Sermons". Baylor Digital Collections. Baylor University. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  9. J. David Holcomb, "A Millstone Hanged about His Neck?: George W. Truett, Anti-Catholicism, and Baptist Conceptions of Religious Liberty." Baptist History and Heritage 43.3 (2008): 68+.
  10. Michael Phillips, "You Get What You Pray For" Jacobin (March 6, 2018)
  11. James J. Thompson, Tried as by Fire: Southern Baptists and the Religious Controversies of the 1920s. (Mercer UP, 1982) pp 134-35, 143, 148, 157, 163.
  12. Holden, Melvin L. (January 7, 2015). "State of the City Address". Baton Rouge Government Website. Retrieved August 4, 2015.
  13. Durso, Keith E. (2009). Thy Will be Done: A Biography of George W. Truett. Mercer University Press. p. 272. ISBN 9780881461572.
  14. John S. Ezell, J"Truett, George Washington, (May 6, 1867 - July 7, 1944)" in Dictionary of American Biography, Supplement 3 (1973)
  15. "Lone Star Preacher". Internet Movie Data Base, March 15, 1957. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  16. James, Powhatan (1939). George W. Truett: A Biography. Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman Press.
  17. Baylor University || George W. Truett Theological Seminary || The History of Truett Seminary at Baylor.edu

Further reading

  • Canipe, Christopher L. "A captive church in the land of the free: EY Mullins, Walter Rauschenbusch, George Truett, and the rise of Baptist democracy, 1900–1925" (PhD. Diss. Baylor University, 2004). online
  • Canipe, Lee. “The Echoes of Baptist Democracy: George Truett’s Sermon at the U.S. Capitol as Patriotic Apology.” American Baptist Quarterly 21.4 (December 2002): 415-431.
  • Durso, Keith E. Thy Will Be Done: A Biography of George W. Truett (Mercer University Press, 2009), a standard scholarly biography
  • Ezell, John S. "Truett, George Washington, (May 6, 1867 - July 7, 1944)" in Dctionary of American Biography, Supplement 3 (1973)
  • Farnsley, Arthur Emery. Southern Baptist Politics: Authority and Power in the Restructuring of an American Denomination (Pennsylvania State UP, 1994) online
  • Hankins, Barry. Uneasy in Babylon: Southern Baptist Conservatives and American Culture (U Alabama Press, 2002) online
  • Hatch, Derek Christopher. "E.Y. Mullins, George W. Truett, and a Baptist theology of nature and grace" (PhD Theology. Diss. University of Dayton, 2011) online.
  • Holcomb, J. David. “A Millstone Hanged about His Neck?: George W. Truett, AntiCatholicism, and Baptist Conceptions of Religious Liberty.” Baptist History and Heritage 43.3 (Summer/Fall 2008): 68-81. online
  • James, Powhatan W. George W. Truett: A Biography (Broadman Press, 1939). online
  • Locke, Joseph. "Making the Bible Belt: Preachers, Prohibition, and the Politicization of Southern Religion, 1877-1918" (PhD . Diss. 2012) online.
    • Locke, Joseph L. Making the Bible Belt: Texas Prohibitionists and the Politicization of Southern Religion (Oxford UP, 2017).
  • McBeth, H. Leon. "George W. Truett: Baptist Statesman" Baptist History and Heritage 32.2 (April 1997): 9-22.
  • McBeth, H. Leon. Texas Baptists: A Sesquicentennial History (Dallas: Baptistway Press, 1998).
  • Thompson, James J. Tried as by Fire: Southern Baptists and the Religious Controversies of the 1920s. (Mercer UP, 1982).
  • Young, Doyle L. "Leadership That Motivates: A Study in the Life of George W. Truett." Baptist History and Heritage 20#1 (1985): 45-51.
Preceded by
George W. McDaniel
President of the Southern Baptist Convention

George Washington Truett
1927-1929

Succeeded by
W.J. McGlothin
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