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Mordecai Ham
1877 - 1961
"My call to the ministry was a continuous and irresistible urge.
I fought it when I started out as a salesman, because God had not
completely whipped me, and I did not want to be a preacher until I had
first made a fortune."
Preaching ran in Mordecai Ham's family. Both his grandfather, for whom he
was named, and his father pastored numerous
churches in the small Kentucky
communities where he was raised.
Mordecai
Ham first felt the call to preach at age nine, but he resisted until his
grandfather's death in 1899. At that time, Ham entered the field of
evangelism, traveling and preaching across Kentucky. The results from those early
meetings were so great that he was in great demand throughout the South.
Ham
and his song leader, W. J. Ramsey (known as the Ham and the Ram) saw over
300,000 converts baptized into Baptist churches between 1902 and 1940.
Over 7,000 people surrendered to full-time Christian service under his
preaching. Ham stayed in evangelism full-time except for a brief stint as
pastor of the First
Baptist Church
in Oklahoma City 1927-1929.
Along
with Billy Sunday, he led in the fight for Prohibition, and then later
against its repeal.
After
1941 Mordecai Ham focused on a growing radio ministry and shorter
meetings in churches. God continued to use him for another twenty years
to bring hundreds more to faith in Christ.
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