Bob Jones, Sr.
- For other people known as "Doctor Bob", see
Doctor Bob (disambiguation)
Robert Reynolds Jones Sr. (October 30, 1883—January 16, 1968) was an American
Early Years
Bob Jones was the son of William Alexander and Georgia Creel Jones and the eleventh of twelve children. In 1883, when Bob was
born, Alex Jones, a Confederate veteran, was working a small farm in
Jones's elementary schooling was sketchy by modern standards, but the boy early exhibited a quick mind and oratorical ability. Alex Jones had Bob memorize passages from the Bible and literature, and Bob, who was "timid and self-conscious," was regularly called on to perform for guests. Jones later recalled, "I did whatever my father said to do, but when he told me to 'say the speech,' I suffered agony that nobody could possibly know."[2]
Jones must have quickly overcome his stage fright, however, for by 1895, as a twelve-year-old, he gave a spirited,
twenty-minute defense of the
By the time Jones was 17, both his father and mother were dead. In 1905, Jones married Bernice Sheffield, who contracted
tuberculosis and died within ten months of their marriage. On
Evangelistic career
Jones's family was devoutly Christian--his mother a
At age 12, Jones was made Sunday School superintendent, and he held his first revival meeting at his home church--seeing sixty conversions in a single week. At thirteen, he built a "brush arbor" shelter and organized his own congregation of 54 members. By age 15, Jones was a licensed circuit preacher for the Alabama Methodist Conference. A year later, he was called to the Headland Circuit of five churches, including the one he had started, and he was earning $25 a month for his labors. Jones later wondered that "the devil did not trap me....I was pulled here and there and from house to house. People flocked to hear me preach. The buildings could not hold the crowds; people even stood outside and stuck their heads in the windows to listen. It's a wonder it did not spoil me."[4]
American evangelistic meetings received more newspaper publicity at the turn of the twentieth century than before or since and
were often boosted by the town fathers out of civic pride. Bob Jones meetings were frequently front-page news for weeks in the
cities where he held meetings. By the 1920s, Jones was probably the best-known evangelist in the United States except for
By the time he was 40, Jones had preached to more than fifteen million people face-to-face and without amplification, and he
was credited with tens of thousands of conversions. (Unlike
Founder of Bob Jones University
During the fundamentalist-modernist controversy of the 1920s, Jones grew increasingly concerned with the secularization of
higher education. Children of church members were attending college, only to reject the faith of their parents. Jones later
recalled that in 1924, his friend
On April 14, the charter was approved by the circuit court in Panama City,
Florida, and a plan based on real estate sales was concocted to raise money for the college. On December 1, 1926, ground
was broken on St. Andrews Bay near Lynn
Haven, Florida, and the college opened on September 12,
By that time, oversight of day-to-day operations had long since passed to his son, Bob Jones, Jr. Nevertheless, the elder Jones continued to raise money, preach regularly at chapel services, and provide inspiration to the hundreds of ministerial students who flooded the campus during the 1950s and revered him as "Doctor Bob." Gradually, during the early '60s, he began to suffer "hardening of the arteries" and was forced to retire to the University infirmary in 1966. Despite mental confusion, his prayers were said to have remained bell-clear virtually to the end.[8]
Pioneer Religious Broadcaster
As it turned out, new mass entertainment, such as radio and movies, helped put an end to an era of city-wide evangelism
typified by the ministries of Bob Jones and
In 1927, the year that network radio was launched in the United States, Jones began both a daily and weekly network program heard from New York to Alabama; and despite his other responsibilities, he maintained an uninterrupted radio ministry for 35 years until his health failed in 1962. In 1944, Jones became a founder of National Religious Broadcasters and served as a director.
Jones understood that the manner of delivery necessary to declaim to thousands unamplified was unsuited to the new medium, and his radio sermons were instead delivered in an intimate, folksy manner. Perhaps three thousand of his approximately ten thousand radio messages survive, and recordings are still nationally syndicated.[9]
Religious Views
Theologically, Jones was a Protestant in the Reformation tradition. One of his first concerns when he founded Bob Jones
College was to provide a
Perhaps because of the tension between his mother’s
Jones's view of academic learning was also practical; he advocated Christian higher education yet insisted that faith could
not rest on human argument. Jones was skeptical of both the intellectual emphasis of the Reformed tradition and the
In the 1950s, Jones played an important, if unwelcome, role in the division of orthodox Protestantism into fundamentalism and
Political and Social Views
Jones enjoyed politics and was the friend of many politicians. Had he not believed that preaching was a higher calling, he
might have run for office himself as he was occasionally encouraged to do. During the 1928 presidential election, Jones
campaigned throughout the South for Republican Herbert Hoover against Democrat
In the late 1920s, Jones, like
Nevertheless, Jones remained a segregationist into the era of the
"Chapel Sayings"
During the heyday of city-wide evangelism, the revivalists often created epigramatic quotations that could be published in the daily newspaper--the early twentieth-century version of the "sound bite." Bob Jones, Sr. used the English language creatively, and his "chapel sayings," which he repeated for generations during the BJU chapel hour, continue to hang in classrooms of the University he founded. The following are a sample:[17]
- Finish the job.
- No doubt the trouble is with you.
- The greatest ability is dependability.
- You and God make a majority in your community.
- The test of your character is what it takes to stop you.
- You can borrow brains, but you cannot borrow character.
- The acid test of our love for God is obedience to His Word.
- Don't sacrifice the permanent on the altar of the immediate.
- It's never right to do wrong in order to get a chance to do right.
- Beware of unreasonable people. Good men are always reasonable.
- The door to the room of success swings on the hinges of opposition.
- The measure of your responsibilities is a measure of your opportunities.
- If you will give God your heart, He will comb all the kinks out of your head.
- Beware of the man who kowtows to his superiors or who is rude to his inferiors.
- Trust God as if it all depends upon Him, and work as if it all depends upon you.
- When gratitude dies on the altar of a man's heart, that man is well-nigh hopeless.
- Like it or not, you will have to live somewhere forever; so you better learn how to live.
- It's no disgrace to fail; it is a disgrace to do less than your best to keep from failing.
- The religions of the world say, "Do and live." The religion of the Bible says, "Live and do."
- Mere education is not enough. You cannot put a man in the penitentiary for forgery until you first teach him to write.
| Preceded by Position Established |
President of Bob Jones University |
Succeeded by Bob Jones, Jr. |
Books by Bob Jones, Sr
- Bob Jones' Sermons
- On Here and Hereafter
- "My Friends" [radio messages based on Jones's chapel sayings]
- Things I Have Learned: Chapel Talks by Bob Jones, Sr. (1945)
Notes
- ^ Turner, Standing Without Apology, 3
- ^ Turner, 6
- ^ Turner, 6-8.
- ^ Turner, 5-6
- ^ Johnson, 91
- ^ Turner, 19
- ^ Turner, 23-25
- ^ Turner, 210-11, 320
- ^ [1]; Turner, 12, 59
- ^ "I believe in the inspiration of the Bible (both the Old and the New Testaments); the creation of man by the direct act of God; the incarnation and virgin birth of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ; His identification as the Son of God; His vicarious atonement for the sins of mankind by the shedding of His blood on the cross; the resurrection of His body from the tomb; His power to save men from sin; the new birth through the regeneration by the Holy Spirit; and the gift of eternal life by the grace of God."
- ^ Comments on Here and Hereafter, 61, 91; Johnson, 77-84
- ^ Comments, 54, 123
- ^ Turner, 179-83
- ^ Bob Jones, The Perils of America (1934), a sermon published as a red, paper-bound booklet.
- ^ Johnson, 138; Turner, 12
- ^ Turner, 225, 369
- ^ Wright, 279-84
References
- R. K. Johnson, Builder of Bridges: The Biography of Dr Bob Jones Sr (Bob Jones University Press, 1969).
- Daniel L. Turner, Standing Without Apology: The History of Bob Jones University (Bob Jones University Press, 1997)]
- Melton Wright, "Fortress of Faith: The Story of Bob Jones University (Bob Jones University Press, 1984)
There is no scholarly biography of Bob Jones, Sr.
External links
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