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Harry A. Ironside
1876 - 1951
"Great truths that are stumbling blocks to the natural man
are nevertheless the very foundations upon which the
confidence of the spiritual man is built."
Few preachers had more varied ministries than this man. He was
a captain in the Salvation Army, an itinerant preacher with
the Plymouth Brethren, pastor of the renowned Moody Memorial
Church in Chicago, and conducted Bible conferences throughout
the world. Sandwiched between those major ministries, Ironside
preached the Gospel on street corners, in missions, in
taverns, on Indian reservations, etc.
Never formally ordained and with no experience whatever as a
pastor, Ironside took over the 4,000-seat Moody Memorial
Church in Chicago and often filled it to capacity for 18 1/2
years. A seminary president once said of him, "He has the most
unique ministry of any man living." Although he had little
formal education, his tremendous mental capacity and
photographic memory caused him to be called the "Archbishop of
Fundamentalism."
Preaching--warm, soul-saving preaching--was his forte. Special
speakers in his great church often meant nothing; the crowds
came when he was there. He traveled constantly at his prime,
he averaged 40 weeks in the year on the road--always returning
to Moody Memorial for Sunday services.
His pen moved, too; he contributed regularly to various
religious periodicals and journals in addition to publishing
80 books and pamphlets. His writings included addresses or
commentaries on the entire New Testament, all of the prophetic
books of the Old Testament, and a great many volumes on
specific Bible themes and subjects.
In 1951, Dr. Ironside died in Cambridge, New Zealand, and was
buried there at his own request. |


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