
D. L. Moody
1837 – 1899
“Someday you will read in the papers that D. L.
Moody of East Northfield is dead. Don’t you believe a word of
it! At that moment I shall be more alive than I am now; I
shall have gone up higher, that is all, out of this old clay
tenement into a house that is immortal – a body that death
cannot touch, that sin cannot taint; a body fashioned like
unto His glorious body.
“I was born of the flesh in 1837. I was born
of the Spirit in 1856. That which is born of the flesh may
die. That which is born of the Spirit will live forever.”
D. L.
Moody may well have been the greatest evangelist of all time.
In a 40-year period he won a million souls, founded three
Christian schools, launched a great Christian publishing
business, established a world-renowned Christian conference
center, and inspired literally thousands of preachers to win
souls and conduct revivals.
A shoe clerk at 17, his ambition was to make
$100,000. Converted at 18, he uncovered hidden gospel gold in
the hearts of millions for the next half-century. He preached
to 20,000 a day in Brooklyn and admitted only non-church
members by ticket!
He met a young songleader in Indianapolis, said
bluntly, “You’re the man I’ve been looking for for eight
years. Throw up your job and come with me.” Ira D. Sankey
did just that; thereafter it was “Moody will preach; Sankey
will sing.”
He traveled across the American continent and
through Great Britain in some of the greatest and most
successful evangelistic meetings communities have ever known.
His tour of the world with Sankey was considered the greatest
evangelistic enterprise of the century.
It was Henry Varley who said, “It remains to be
seen what God will do with a man who gives himself up wholly
to Him.” And Moody endeavored to be, under God, that man; and
the world did marvel to see how wonderfully God used him.
Two great monuments stand in the indefatigable
work and ministry of this gospel warrior – Moody Bible
Institute and the famous Moody Church in Chicago.
Moody went to be with the Lord in 1899.
Resources by D. L. Moody |