By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Copyright (c) 2019
#AnneMoody
I'm happy to recommend a new resource for doing research on Anne Moody. It's a fascinating website called, Discover Anne Moody, created by my friend, Shelby Driskill, who has done extensive work on the #CivilRights pioneer. Check it out!
#AnneMoody #ComingOfAgeinMississippi #DiscoverAnneMoody #CivilRights #Mississippi #TougalooCollege
Visit https://www.discoverannemoody.com/
Sharing news, research, stories, and other material by Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D. Research topics include F.F. Bosworth, Ernest Hemingway, Anne Moody, and Natchez, MS. Email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com
Saturday, August 31, 2019
"It was a humbling experience"
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Chaplain, Wilkinson County Correctional Facility
Copyright (c) 2019
On Thursday, Aug. 29, 2019, my friends and colleagues honored me as the "Program Services Employee of the Year" for 2019 at Wilkinson County Correctional Facility (WCCF). I'm pictured here with my supervisor, Deputy Warden of Programs George Castro (right). I am so grateful to WCCF for this recognition. It was a humbling experience. I serve as chaplain at WCCF, a position I've held for nearly six years.
Chaplain, Wilkinson County Correctional Facility
Copyright (c) 2019
On Thursday, Aug. 29, 2019, my friends and colleagues honored me as the "Program Services Employee of the Year" for 2019 at Wilkinson County Correctional Facility (WCCF). I'm pictured here with my supervisor, Deputy Warden of Programs George Castro (right). I am so grateful to WCCF for this recognition. It was a humbling experience. I serve as chaplain at WCCF, a position I've held for nearly six years.
Sunday, August 25, 2019
What Jackie Robinson Had To Say About Anne Moody
His 1964 column presents a stirring message about her life and dedication to civil rights
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Chairman, Anne Moody History Project
Copyright (c) 2019
#AnneMoody
#ComingOfAgeinMississippi
Although much is said about Jackie Robinson (1919 - 1972) breaking the "color barrier" when he became the first black to play in Major League Baseball, little is said or known about his work with civil rights activists like Anne Moody. Robinson was quite active in the struggle for freedom and justice, and he was a big supporter of Moody. In fact, he was the prominent person who urged her to share her story in a book. She followed his advice and wrote the classic memoir, Coming of Age in Mississippi (1968). He and Moody also traveled and worked together to raise money for a memorial to honor civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, who were murdered in Mississippi.
In 1964, Robinson penned a column about Moody's life and dedication to the civil rights movement. He wrote about her courage and her sacrifice, including the fact that she could not return home because of the many threats against her life and her family. Moody was born and raised in Centreville, Miss., a small rural town in the southwest part of the state. She left Mississippi in 1964, the year she graduated from Tougaloo College. She eventually returned to her home state in 1976 to be with her dying mother. Moody spent her final years in Gloster, Miss., near her hometown. She suffered from dementia. When she passed in 2015 at the age of 74, her sister, Adline, said she was never comfortable being back in Mississippi.
Robinson's column was published in the Sept. 26, 1964 issue of the New York Amsterdam News newspaper. It was brought to my attention by my friend and fellow Moody scholar, Shelby Driskill. She said of the column: "It's such a fascinating moment in time. His affection for her is so clear and his influence on her life so profound."
Robinson's column appears below.
Home Plate
She Can't Go Home Again
by Jackie Robinson
"Home," someone once said, "is a place you can go to when there's nowhere else to go."
Let me tell you the story of a Mississippi girl. She is twenty-three years old. Her name is Annie and she can't go home again.
Annie is one of the displaced persons in the battle for human dignity, a fugitive who became a fugitive in the cause of freedom.
She didn't murder anyone. She didn't steal. She did nothing more immoral than to stand up in her Mississippi community and raise her voice in protest against the conditions under which she and her family and her people are forced to live. She is guilty of the crime of volunteering to work for civil rights.
In Mississippi, that is a crime. And Annie, who made the mistake of believing that the Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, Constitution and Civil Rights Bill apply to Mississippi, was soon made to recognize that fact.
But before she realized that the Star-Spangled Banner and Oath of Allegiance are meaningless in Mississippi, Annie protested. She protested against the fact that Government-sponsored factories offered whites jobs at sixty to seventy dollars a week -- and segregate those Negroes whom they hire. Many, many Negroes cannot get jobs in those factories. So they work for eight to ten dollars a week, interminable hours a day, caring for white peoples' home and children. Annie thought it was wrong that discrimination and segregation could be practised in a factory which, in part, owes its existence to the tax dollars of black as well as white citizens. She said so -- out loud.
Annie saw young, married couples forced to live in single houses built to accommodate one family -- as many as sixteen couples occupying such facilities because they could afford no better. She saw some of the same people fired because they had expressed the desire to vote and attempted to register to do so. She protested that too.
Early this year, Annie's uncle and three other Negroes were murdered in circumstances somewhat similar to the murders of the infamous Goodman-Chaney-Schwerner case. When their bullet-ridden bodies were gound, there was no national publicity of the kind which attended that case. Annie knows why. They were only Negroes. In Mississippi, the life of a Negro is dirt cheap. Annie knows that if Goodman and Schwerner had been Negroes as Chaney was, the country might never have known their deaths occurred.
Annie could tell that her turn was coming soon. She was threatened and harassed. A sister who resembles her was the constant object of surveillance and veiled threats. Right now, Annie knows that the rest of her family, back home, is still subjected to the nerve-wracking business if hate-filled looks and words, the knowledge that any one of them could be mysteriously struck down -- or could mysteriously disappear. What's worse -- from past experience -- they all know that the Government, state or federal, would do nothing about it. For all they know, law enforcement officers -- white -- could be involved in helping the murderers or assailants. It has happened before. And when it happened, people like former Attorney General Robert Kennedy have told the country the national government has no jurisdiction.
Annie can't understand that. She can't understand how they can free Klansmen who shoot down a Negro colonel. She can't understand how, despite the President's recent statement that arrests were imminent in the Meridian murders, nothing has happened. Annie understands one thing. She can't go home again. Actually, since Mississippi is her home, Annie has no home.
There are too many Annies in this land where the free and brave cannot be safe. Perhaps, some day, the American people will rise up and demand that their Government do something about it besides pass civil rights bills and mouth pretty words. Maybe!
For more information:
See the Anne Moody page here. Questions about the Anne Moody History Project may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D. via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on Anne Moody history and the on-going work of this community service project, simply follow this blog or follow AMHP on Twitter (@AnneMoodyHP). #ComingOfAgeinMississippi
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Chairman, Anne Moody History Project
Copyright (c) 2019
#AnneMoody
#ComingOfAgeinMississippi
This column by Jackie Robinson appeared in the Saturday, Sept. 26, 1964 issue of the New York Amsterdam News (page 21). It was found and recommended by Ms. Shelby Driskill. |
----------------------------------
Although much is said about Jackie Robinson (1919 - 1972) breaking the "color barrier" when he became the first black to play in Major League Baseball, little is said or known about his work with civil rights activists like Anne Moody. Robinson was quite active in the struggle for freedom and justice, and he was a big supporter of Moody. In fact, he was the prominent person who urged her to share her story in a book. She followed his advice and wrote the classic memoir, Coming of Age in Mississippi (1968). He and Moody also traveled and worked together to raise money for a memorial to honor civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, who were murdered in Mississippi.
In 1964, Robinson penned a column about Moody's life and dedication to the civil rights movement. He wrote about her courage and her sacrifice, including the fact that she could not return home because of the many threats against her life and her family. Moody was born and raised in Centreville, Miss., a small rural town in the southwest part of the state. She left Mississippi in 1964, the year she graduated from Tougaloo College. She eventually returned to her home state in 1976 to be with her dying mother. Moody spent her final years in Gloster, Miss., near her hometown. She suffered from dementia. When she passed in 2015 at the age of 74, her sister, Adline, said she was never comfortable being back in Mississippi.
Robinson's column was published in the Sept. 26, 1964 issue of the New York Amsterdam News newspaper. It was brought to my attention by my friend and fellow Moody scholar, Shelby Driskill. She said of the column: "It's such a fascinating moment in time. His affection for her is so clear and his influence on her life so profound."
Robinson's column appears below.
-------------------------------
Home Plate
She Can't Go Home Again
by Jackie Robinson
"Home," someone once said, "is a place you can go to when there's nowhere else to go."
Let me tell you the story of a Mississippi girl. She is twenty-three years old. Her name is Annie and she can't go home again.
Annie is one of the displaced persons in the battle for human dignity, a fugitive who became a fugitive in the cause of freedom.
She didn't murder anyone. She didn't steal. She did nothing more immoral than to stand up in her Mississippi community and raise her voice in protest against the conditions under which she and her family and her people are forced to live. She is guilty of the crime of volunteering to work for civil rights.
In Mississippi, that is a crime. And Annie, who made the mistake of believing that the Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, Constitution and Civil Rights Bill apply to Mississippi, was soon made to recognize that fact.
But before she realized that the Star-Spangled Banner and Oath of Allegiance are meaningless in Mississippi, Annie protested. She protested against the fact that Government-sponsored factories offered whites jobs at sixty to seventy dollars a week -- and segregate those Negroes whom they hire. Many, many Negroes cannot get jobs in those factories. So they work for eight to ten dollars a week, interminable hours a day, caring for white peoples' home and children. Annie thought it was wrong that discrimination and segregation could be practised in a factory which, in part, owes its existence to the tax dollars of black as well as white citizens. She said so -- out loud.
Annie saw young, married couples forced to live in single houses built to accommodate one family -- as many as sixteen couples occupying such facilities because they could afford no better. She saw some of the same people fired because they had expressed the desire to vote and attempted to register to do so. She protested that too.
Early this year, Annie's uncle and three other Negroes were murdered in circumstances somewhat similar to the murders of the infamous Goodman-Chaney-Schwerner case. When their bullet-ridden bodies were gound, there was no national publicity of the kind which attended that case. Annie knows why. They were only Negroes. In Mississippi, the life of a Negro is dirt cheap. Annie knows that if Goodman and Schwerner had been Negroes as Chaney was, the country might never have known their deaths occurred.
Annie could tell that her turn was coming soon. She was threatened and harassed. A sister who resembles her was the constant object of surveillance and veiled threats. Right now, Annie knows that the rest of her family, back home, is still subjected to the nerve-wracking business if hate-filled looks and words, the knowledge that any one of them could be mysteriously struck down -- or could mysteriously disappear. What's worse -- from past experience -- they all know that the Government, state or federal, would do nothing about it. For all they know, law enforcement officers -- white -- could be involved in helping the murderers or assailants. It has happened before. And when it happened, people like former Attorney General Robert Kennedy have told the country the national government has no jurisdiction.
Annie can't understand that. She can't understand how they can free Klansmen who shoot down a Negro colonel. She can't understand how, despite the President's recent statement that arrests were imminent in the Meridian murders, nothing has happened. Annie understands one thing. She can't go home again. Actually, since Mississippi is her home, Annie has no home.
There are too many Annies in this land where the free and brave cannot be safe. Perhaps, some day, the American people will rise up and demand that their Government do something about it besides pass civil rights bills and mouth pretty words. Maybe!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Want to know MORE about Anne Moody?
Visit here to see the timeline of important
events in her life history!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information:
See the Anne Moody page here. Questions about the Anne Moody History Project may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D. via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on Anne Moody history and the on-going work of this community service project, simply follow this blog or follow AMHP on Twitter (@AnneMoodyHP). #ComingOfAgeinMississippi
Wednesday, August 21, 2019
ON THIS DAY (August 21): F.F. Bosworth Pens Letter about His Beating
He was brutally assaulted for preaching to a black
audience near Hearne, Texas
-------------------------
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Copyright © 2019
#FFBosworth
#ChristTheHealer
#BosworthMatters
---------------------------
Reminder: "F.F.
Bosworth History" is now on Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred
---------------------------
On Aug. 21, 1911, F.F. Bosworth wrote a letter about a
beating he endured because of his ministry to blacks at a camp meeting near Hearne,
Texas. In the letter, which he addressed to his mother, he described the
assault as a “mobbing” that left him with a fractured wrist and bruises on his
back. The men, all white, reportedly struck him with wooden clubs. Bosworth
said his “flesh was mashed to the bone on my back down nearly to my knees.”
The mob, which consisted of 25 men, had urged him and his
friend to leave town. One of the men had a revolver and seemed determined to
shoot Bosworth and his friend. He said they “cursed us for coming there as they
said to put them on a level with the d-niggers.” While Bosworth was standing outside
the depot and waiting for his train to Dallas, the men attacked him. He wrote:
[A] larger mob of about 25 took
me from the depot and knocked me down and pounded me with heavy hardwood clubs
with all their power, cursing and declaring that I would never preach again
when they were through with me. As they pounded me with these heavy clubs (made
from the oar of a boat), I offered no resistance, but committed myself to God
and asked him not to let the blows break my spine.
God stood wonderfully by me and
no bones were broken except a slight fracture in my left wrist. When they left
off pounding me with the clubs as I got up others of the mob who had no clubs
knocked me down hitting me in the head with their fists. I was knocked down
several times but was not for a moment unconscious, which was miracle of God’s
care.
When the beating subsided, Bosworth stood and grabbed
his “heavy suitcase.” He began a nine-mile walk to Calvert, praying along the
way. He said God gave him strength. During his walk, he prayed for the men who
assaulted him.
Bosworth’s letter appeared in the Summer 1986 issue of
A/G Heritage magazine. The magazine’s editor noted:
Persecution in the early years
of the Pentecostal movement was common. F.F. Bosworth’s descriptive letter to
his mother, a copy of which was donated to the Archives by his son Bob, is
reprinted here. The two mobs which attacked him did so because he ministered at
a black church camp meeting near Hearne, Texas. Bosworth founded what is now
First Assembly in Dallas. Earlier he had been associated with John Alexander
Dowie and Zion City, Illinois.
#OnThisDay #OTD #ThisDayInHistory
#ThisDayInFFBosworthHistory #Pentecostal #Revival #AssembliesOfGod #HearneTexas
#ChurchHistory #PublicHistory #CFNI #ORU #BosworthMention
-------------------------
Note: My
book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer," can
be purchased here with a 25% discount. Use the discount code: bosworth25.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Want to know more
about F.F.
Bosworth?
Follow
the Bosworth Matters blog!
Start here:
ffbosworth.strikingly.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions
about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D.,
via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on
F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and
@Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter.
#ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
ON THIS DAY (August 20): Kenneth E. Hagin is Born
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
---------------------------
Hagin said that after his healing, the Lord called him to "Go teach my people faith." Although active as a pastor and teacher in the 1940s and 1950s, it was during the 1960s and 1970s that his ministry saw phenomenal growth.
#OnThisDay #OTD #ThisDayInHistory #ThisDayInFFBosworthHistory #ChurchHistory
-------------------------
Copyright (c) 2019
#FFBosworth
#ChristTheHealer
#BosworthMatters
#KennethEHagin
Kenneth E. Hagin (1917 - 2003) |
---------------------------
Reminder: "F.F. Bosworth History" is now
on Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred
---------------------------
On Aug. 20, 1917, Kenneth E. Hagin, who was known as the father of
the modern Word of Faith movement, was born in McKinney, Texas. Hagin was a
staunch follower of the teachings of E.W. Kenyon. He also was a student of F.F.Bosworth during the post-World War II healing revival. He and Bosworth were
members of The Voice of Healing and their writings appeared in the magazine of
the same name. Bosworth’s book, Christ the Healer, has been a required text at
Rhema Bible Training Center, the school that Hagin founded in the 1970s.
Hagin had a childhood that was plagued with sickness and
disease. He reportedly suffered from a deformed heart and an incurable blood
disease. He eventually found himself on a deathbed. However, he credited Mark
11:24 as the Scripture that led to his miraculous healing: “… What things
soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have
them.”
Hagin said that after his healing, the Lord called him to "Go teach my people faith." Although active as a pastor and teacher in the 1940s and 1950s, it was during the 1960s and 1970s that his ministry saw phenomenal growth.
During the late 1960s, he began publishing The Word of
Faith magazine, which is “now produced nine times a year, [and] has a
circulation of over 200,000,” according to Kenneth Hagin Ministries’ website. Hagin
also founded Faith Library Publications, which has seen a global circulation of
more than 65 million copies of books written by him and his family.
Hagin also produced the radio broadcast, Faith Seminar of the Air.
He held citywide ministry conferences that attracted thousands of people each
year.
In addition to his publications, one of Hagin’s major
contributions to the church was undoubtedly the founding of Rhema Bible
Training Center in 1974. Today, the school is known internationally. It has
campuses throughout the world.
Hagin was an inspiring teacher and dynamic
speaker who was known as a great story-teller. He had a folksy style of
delivery, and he spoke with clarity.
Hagin became embroiled in controversy when a scholar
found he had plagiarized the writings of E. W. Kenyon. Some of his followers who preach a prosperity gospel have been accused of taking his “word of faith” message
to the extreme. Critics have accused him of promoting heresy.
Hagin died on Sept. 19, 2003. He was 86.
Related article:
"F.F. Bosworth and Kenneth Hagin Jr.: A Look at the Similarities in Their Writings on the Past Tense of God’s Word." See here.
Related article:
"F.F. Bosworth and Kenneth Hagin Jr.: A Look at the Similarities in Their Writings on the Past Tense of God’s Word." See here.
Note: My
book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer," can
be purchased here with a 25% discount. Use the discount
code: bosworth25.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Want to know more
about F.F.
Bosworth?
Follow
the Bosworth Matters blog!
Start here:
ffbosworth.strikingly.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions
about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D.,
via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on
F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and
@Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter. #ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters
Sunday, August 18, 2019
History Hunting in Jackson, Miss.: A Tour of the Medgar Evers House (Saturday, Aug. 10, 2019)
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Copyright (c) 2019
#HistoryHunting
#RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures
#MedgarEvers
On Saturday, Aug. 10, 2019, Michelle Childres and I visited the home of civil rights pioneer Medgar Evers, who was assassinated on June 12, 1963. He was only 37. The house, which now serves as a museum, still has the bullet holes from the night Evers was killed. Our tour was led by Curator Minnie White Watson, who gave a stirring presentation about the life of Evers. She delivered a riveting narrative that held everyone's attention.
#HistoryHunting #RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures #History #Mississippi #CivilRights #MedgarEvers #NAACP #TougalooCollege #MichelleChildres
----------------------------------
ROSCOE BARNES III, Ph.D., is a writer, chaplain, historian, and former newspaper reporter. He is the author of more than a dozen books and Gospel tracts. For more information about his work and history, see his Personal Profile here or visit his website: http://www.roscoebarnes.net. Connect with him on Twitter (@roscoebarnes3) or by email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com.
Copyright (c) 2019
#HistoryHunting
#RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures
#MedgarEvers
Michelle Childres |
On Saturday, Aug. 10, 2019, Michelle Childres and I visited the home of civil rights pioneer Medgar Evers, who was assassinated on June 12, 1963. He was only 37. The house, which now serves as a museum, still has the bullet holes from the night Evers was killed. Our tour was led by Curator Minnie White Watson, who gave a stirring presentation about the life of Evers. She delivered a riveting narrative that held everyone's attention.
#HistoryHunting #RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures #History #Mississippi #CivilRights #MedgarEvers #NAACP #TougalooCollege #MichelleChildres
Michelle Childres, Minnie White Watson, and Roscoe Barnes III |
----------------------------------
ROSCOE BARNES III, Ph.D., is a writer, chaplain, historian, and former newspaper reporter. He is the author of more than a dozen books and Gospel tracts. For more information about his work and history, see his Personal Profile here or visit his website: http://www.roscoebarnes.net. Connect with him on Twitter (@roscoebarnes3) or by email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com.
Saturday, August 17, 2019
History Hunting in Jackson, Miss.: A Tour of the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Copyright (c) 2019
#History
#RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures
#MichelleChildres
#RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures
#MichelleChildres
On Saturday, Aug. 10, 2019, Michelle Childres and I
visited the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum, which proved to be a powerful and
deeply emotional experience. At times, it seemed overwhelming. The sights and
sounds were so evocative they moved us to tears.
We were struck by the raw and unvarnished narrative that
was boldly presented in living color. It was truth, if you will, in three
dimensions. Disturbing images of our history appeared with actual audio from
the 50s and 60s. We heard the threats, the racial slurs, and the cries for
justice. We saw the beatings and the unbelievable suffering. Thanks to the
high-tech features in the museum, the civil rights history came to life in ways
we never imagined.
The video and freedom songs were deeply moving.
Everything I saw took me back in time. Truth be told, I was not prepared for
what I experienced. Seeing the chains and shackles worn by slaves left me with
penetrating images I'll never forget. Same was true with the sight of the hood
and robe worn by the Klan.
Some of the displays were quite shocking and even
jarring, to say the least, but I suppose that was the purpose. Overall, it was
a great visit and something I highly recommend. Yes, I will be returning.
#HistoryHunting #RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures
#History #Mississippi #CivilRights #MedgarEvers #Slavery #BlackHistory
#AnneMoody
----------------------------------
ROSCOE BARNES
III, Ph.D., is a writer, chaplain, historian, and former
newspaper reporter. He is the author of more than a dozen books and Gospel
tracts. For more information about his work and history, see his Personal
Profile here or visit his website: http://www.roscoebarnes.net.
Connect with him on Twitter (@roscoebarnes3) or by email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com.
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
Dr. J. Gordon Melton, Baylor Professor, is Doing Research on F.F. Bosworth
His investigation has taken him to the First Assembly of God
Church in Dallas
A growing number of people are inquiring about Bosworth, Loftis said. “There appears to be renewed interest in F.F. Bosworth,” she said, noting her surprise by the attention he’s receiving. Over the past few years, people have contacted her -- or someone at the church -- with questions about her book and Bosworth.
My phone conversation with Loftis was prompted by an email I received from a Dallas pastor who had asked about Bosworth's role in the founding of the First Assembly of God Church in Dallas. The pastor, a reader of my blog, Bosworth Matters, wanted to know where the church was founded and where it had moved during its history. According to Loftis, Bosworth first came to Dallas in 1909 and held tent meetings on North Haskell Avenue near what is now North Central Expressway (Highway 75). “He moved the tent to East Side Avenue and Washington Street,” Loftis said. “Then he secured a larger tent and placed it on Parry and Fletcher streets. In that tent he had Maria Woodworth-Etter for meetings in 1912 with up to 5,000 people in attendance.”
After learning about my own interest in Bosworth, Loftis recommended a book about leaders in Pentecostal church history. The books is titled, Portraits of a Generation: Early Pentecostal Leaders (University of Arkansas Press, 2002). It is edited by James R. Goff Jr. and Grant Wacker.
For more information:
Copyright © 2019
#FFBosworth
#ChristTheHealer
#RoscoeBarnes
Dr. J. Gordon Melton |
--------------------
“Bosworth is so important to the story I am trying tell.”
– Dr. J. Gordon Melton
--------------------
Dr. J. Gordon Melton, Distinguished Professor of American
Religious History at Baylor University, is doing research on F.F. Bosworth, author
of Christ the Healer (1924).
For several years now, he has been working on Texas
Pentecostal history “since discovering how the state’s historians have
neglected it,” he wrote in an Aug. 9, 2019 email. He said his work in this area
“has turned out to be most exciting.”
One of the fascinating discoveries Melton has made so far
is the possible identification of someone connected to the meetings in Hearne,
Texas, where Bosworth was beaten for preaching to a black audience. “I have
even tracked one black person who was probably in the service that occurred
before Bosworth was beaten,” Melton said. In highlighting the significance of
Bosworth’s contributions, Melton noted: “Bosworth is so important to the story
I am trying tell.”
Melton holds a Ph.D. from Northwestern University. He is the author of more than 50 books and scores of scholarly articles and papers. Melton is also an ordained elder in the United Methodist Church.
Melton holds a Ph.D. from Northwestern University. He is the author of more than 50 books and scores of scholarly articles and papers. Melton is also an ordained elder in the United Methodist Church.
Information on Dr.
J. Gordon Melton is available here.
-------------------
Carrie Wagliardo Loftis and the ‘Renewed interest in F.F. Bosworth’
I learned about Melton’s work on Bosworth during a phone conversation
I had on Thursday, Aug. 8, 2019, with historian Carrie Wagliardo Loftis. Loftis is
the author of First Assembly of God Dallas: A History of First Assembly
of God- Dallas, Texas, 1912- 1992 (First Assembly of God, 1992), which is now out of print. She said Melton had reached out to her pastor who
provided him with a copy of her book.
A growing number of people are inquiring about Bosworth, Loftis said. “There appears to be renewed interest in F.F. Bosworth,” she said, noting her surprise by the attention he’s receiving. Over the past few years, people have contacted her -- or someone at the church -- with questions about her book and Bosworth.
My phone conversation with Loftis was prompted by an email I received from a Dallas pastor who had asked about Bosworth's role in the founding of the First Assembly of God Church in Dallas. The pastor, a reader of my blog, Bosworth Matters, wanted to know where the church was founded and where it had moved during its history. According to Loftis, Bosworth first came to Dallas in 1909 and held tent meetings on North Haskell Avenue near what is now North Central Expressway (Highway 75). “He moved the tent to East Side Avenue and Washington Street,” Loftis said. “Then he secured a larger tent and placed it on Parry and Fletcher streets. In that tent he had Maria Woodworth-Etter for meetings in 1912 with up to 5,000 people in attendance.”
Bosworth and his congregation later formed a church and
built a permanent building. They called it the Pentecostal Tabernacle. It was
on the corner of Fourth and Grand, according to Loftis. On Nov. 1, 1912, they
held their first service in new building.
Loftis said her Wagliardo family has been members of First Assembly
since 1921. “My family has been in this church for five generations,”
she said, adding they have had “continuous attendance.”
After learning about my own interest in Bosworth, Loftis recommended a book about leaders in Pentecostal church history. The books is titled, Portraits of a Generation: Early Pentecostal Leaders (University of Arkansas Press, 2002). It is edited by James R. Goff Jr. and Grant Wacker.
“This is a book you need to read,” Loftis said. “It has
so much to offer on church history and the Pentecostal movement.”
-------------------------
Note: My book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind
"Christ the Healer," can be purchased here with
a 25% discount. Use the discount code: bosworth25.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Want to know more
about F.F. Bosworth?
Follow the Bosworth Matters blog!
Start here:
ffbosworth.strikingly.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reminder: "F.F. Bosworth History" is now
on Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred
For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions
about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D.,
via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on
F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and
@Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter. #ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters
Friday, August 9, 2019
How to Order My Book on Bosworth and Get a 25% Discount
Ignore the outrageous prices on Amazon
I think I was as shocked as anyone to learn a few months ago that my book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer" (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009), was being sold on Amazon for $300 (Today it's listed at more than $900 by one seller.). Why anyone would attempt to scam readers in this way is beyond me. When I checked, I found to my disappointment that the book was no longer available directly through Amazon. Concerned, I contacted my publisher. Unfortunately, I did not get a clear answer about the situation. However, to my delight, my publisher assured me that the book is NOT out of print. In fact, it is now available with a 25% discount on the publisher's website. You can order it here or simply follow this link: https://www.cambridgescholars.com/product/978-1-4438-1004-3
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Copyright © 2019
#FFBosworth
#ChristTheHealer
(Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009)
|
Reminder: "F.F.
Bosworth History" is now on Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred
-------------------------
I think I was as shocked as anyone to learn a few months ago that my book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer" (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009), was being sold on Amazon for $300 (Today it's listed at more than $900 by one seller.). Why anyone would attempt to scam readers in this way is beyond me. When I checked, I found to my disappointment that the book was no longer available directly through Amazon. Concerned, I contacted my publisher. Unfortunately, I did not get a clear answer about the situation. However, to my delight, my publisher assured me that the book is NOT out of print. In fact, it is now available with a 25% discount on the publisher's website. You can order it here or simply follow this link: https://www.cambridgescholars.com/product/978-1-4438-1004-3
When you order, use the discount code (All caps): BOSWORTH25.
The 25% discount means the book is cheaper than even
the original retail price that was set in the United States. The
publisher's website doesn't have the one-click feature of Amazon, but
it will allow you to save money on your order. I urge you to visit the site and order your copy today. Visit here. F.F. Bosworth is a book that is well appreciated by pastors, teachers, students, evangelists, missionaries, historians, etc. Use the 25% discount and order copies for yourself and a friend.
Book Overview
When the Pentecostal movement exploded in 1906 in Zion City, Ill., Fred Francis ("F.F.") Bosworth was present. When the Assemblies of God was being formed, Bosworth served as one of its leaders. He also was present as a mentor to the tent revivalists in the 1940s and 1950s. This book is about his life and ministry.
If you enjoyed reading Christ the Healer, then you will love reading
about the man behind the book. Discover the secrets of his success!
Book Overview
When the Pentecostal movement exploded in 1906 in Zion City, Ill., Fred Francis ("F.F.") Bosworth was present. When the Assemblies of God was being formed, Bosworth served as one of its leaders. He also was present as a mentor to the tent revivalists in the 1940s and 1950s. This book is about his life and ministry.
Bosworth was a Pentecostal pioneer, musician,
famous healing evangelist, and the author of Christ the Healer. He reportedly
led over a million people to Christ and was considered by scholars and
ministers alike to be one of the most successful healing evangelists of his
era. His writings on divine healing influenced many church leaders of his day,
as well many who claim healing ministries today. While many people are familiar
with his book, Christ the Healer, few know much about the man behind the book.
F.F. Bosworth is the first book to offer a critical analysis of Bosworth's life
and ministry from the beginning to the end. The purpose of this work is to
explore his life and ministry in order to identify and analyze some of the
factors that contributed to his success as a famous healing evangelist.
-------------------------
Note: My
book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the
Healer," can be purchased here with
a 25% discount. Use the discount code: bosworth25.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Want to know more
about F.F.
Bosworth?
Follow the Bosworth
Matters blog!
Start here:
ffbosworth.strikingly.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions
about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D.,
via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on
F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and
@Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter. #ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters
Wednesday, August 7, 2019
History Hunting in B.B. King's Hometown
Couple of B.B. King images taken Saturday, July 27, 2019 on Church Street in Indianola, Miss. The gorgeous lady in the pics is Michelle Childres. 😊
#BBKing #Mississippi
#RoscoeAndMichellesExcellentAdventures #HistoryHunting #RoadTrip #History
#Blues #MichelleChildres
----------------------------------
ROSCOE BARNES
III, Ph.D., is a writer, chaplain, historian, and former
newspaper reporter. He is the author of more than a dozen books and Gospel
tracts. For more information about his work and history, see his Personal
Profile here or visit his website: http://www.roscoebarnes.net.
Connect with him on Twitter (@roscoebarnes3) or by email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com.
Thursday, August 1, 2019
Brandon McCollum Draws Famous Images of Joan Trumpauer Mulholland
Pencil sketch of Joan Trumpauer Mulholland by offender Brandon McCollum at Wilkinson County Correctional Facility, Woodville, Miss. She will visit us in September.
#AnneMoody #ComingOfAgeinMississippi #JoanTrumpauer #CivilRights #WomensHistory #PublicHistory #Literature #BlackHistory #History #Tougaloo #HBCU #BrandonMcCollum
More on Oswald J. Smith and What He Learned from the Bosworth Brothers
What they taught him about citywide campaigns
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Copyright © 2019
#FFBosworth
#OswaldJSmith
Reminder: "F.F. Bosworth History" is now on
Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred
--------------------------
--------------------------
F.F. Bosworth may not have been a great orator or a
preacher with a silver tongue, but he was still able to teach Oswald J. Smith a
few things about divine healing and large citywide crusades.
In Douglas Hall’s book, Not Made for Defeat: The
Authorized Biography of Oswald J. Smith (Zondervan Publishing House, 1969), he
writes about the ministry of the F.F. and his younger brother, B.B. Bosworth,
and their impact on Smith. The brothers, who were known for their salvation
healing meetings, had become known as “two of America’s leading evangelists” in
the 1920s, notes Hall. “They had a unique ability for drawing crowds over a
sustained period of time,” he writes.
In addition to notable miracles of healing, the thing
that caught Smith’s attention was the success and sustained growth of the evangelistic
meetings in Toronto, Canada. Hall writes about Smith’s experience as follows:
“It was really my first
experience with large campaigns,” Smith recalls. “F.F. Bosworth was not what
you would call a great preacher but he had something. Night after night he
would address the people in his quiet manner. His message was Salvation and the
Deeper Life. The results were above average as the people responded to the
invitation. I was more interested in the mechanics of the crusade than in the
actual preaching. I watched and listened carefully. I can honestly thank them
for teaching me how to hold extended evangelistic campaigns. I’ve used some
their techniques down through the years.”
Watching the success of the Bosworths, Smith apparently
felt inspired to step out in faith and hold his own large evangelistic campaigns.
What he saw in the ministry of the Bosworth brothers “whetted” his appetite and
broadened his vision for greater ministry opportunities, according to Hall. Details of the lessons/techniques are not presented in the book.
“He had tasted the thrill of being on a platform and in
charge of services which attracted capacity audiences,” Hall writes. “When he
saw the crowds being turned away at the doors he knew that his was the ministry
he wanted and had no intention of ever being satisfied with anything less.”
The lessons that Smith learned became an integral part of his ministry for many years. He learned to “capitalized
on the revival which had begun under the ministry of the Bosworth Brothers,”
but he didn’t stop there, according to Hall. Building on his experience in the Toronto meetings, Smith experimented, devised new
methods and adapted to changing times and situations.
Related articles:
“What Oswald J. Smith Discovered in the Revival Meetings
of the Bosworth Brothers.” See here.
“'These Things No One Can Deny': What Oswald J. Smith
said About the Healing Ministry of the Bosworth Brothers.” See here.
-------------------------
Note: My book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind
"Christ the Healer," can be purchased here with
a 25% discount. Use the discount code: bosworth25.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Want to know more
about F.F.
Bosworth?
Follow the Bosworth
Matters blog!
Start here:
ffbosworth.strikingly.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more
information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here.
Questions about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed
to Roscoe Barnes
III, Ph.D., via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or
roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow
this blog or @bosworth_fred and @Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter.
#ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters
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New Mississippi History Now article published
( Click on image to enlarge. ) This announcement appeared in the MDAH Weekly Update newsletter (11.18.24). See article at this link: http://...