Thy Will Be Done: A Biography of George W Truett

Book Reviewed by Darold Morgan,
Richardson, TX

Thy Will Be Done: A Biography of George W. Truett
By Keith E. Durso
Mercer University Press, 2009.

This book begins, “For Baptist  Christians who like George  W. Truett, are both Christians and  Baptists, and are ashamed of neither.”  As Baptists celebrate in 2009 the 400th anniversary of their organized church  life, here is a timely, well-written, captivating, and balanced biography of  one of the best-known preachers and  pastors the Baptist tradition has ever  produced.

Truett was the pastor of the First  Baptist Church in Dallas, Texas, for  forty-seven years. He was known for  his preaching skills, denominational  leadership, and his civic influence.

Truett’s prestige was confirmed by  the recent naming of the theological school of Baylor University as the  George W. Truett Seminary. A part  of the massive Baylor Medical Center  in Dallas is known as the George W.  Truett Hospital, mainly because he  was the leading proponent of a Baptist  hospital in Dallas early in the twentieth century.

In these days when there are few  Baptist heroes, it is refreshing to read  about Truett’s world-wide influence in  that time-frame both in Baptist and  ecumenical circles. Constantly there is  the refrain in Durso’s book that Truett  personally wanted to be known simply  and primarily as the pastor of a Texas  Baptist church.

The author takes us back to Truett’s  early days in North Carolina and  Georgia, with major influences being  a godly set of parents and preacher relatives who grounded him in  Baptist principles. When he moves to  North Texas there comes a dramatic  moment in the First Baptist Church  of Whitewright when the church  ordained him to the ministry despite  his vehement objections. Not many  men entered ministry in this fashion,  but the obvious principle in Truett’s  life is that friends and associates saw  his potential before he himself did.

And as they say—the rest is Baptist  history! Baylor University, the call to  the Dallas church, its extraordinary  growth, his concepts of stewardship  and mission outreach, civic leadership,  denominational developments, the  incessant demands of revival movements, his chaplaincy in World War I,  the eventual presidency of the Baptist  World Alliance with preaching missions around the world—all combine  to lead the reader through the life of  a preacher and pastor almost unparalleled in Southern Baptist (SBC) life.

Add to this list his leadership  (along with B.H. Carroll) in both  the establishment and growth of the  Southwestern Baptist Seminary in Fort  Worth, Texas. One needs also to mention his involvement in the beginning  of the Annuity Board of the SBC. His  appeal to the convention to establish  one of its boards in the “far west,” led  to the starting of the Annuity Board  right across the street from his church.  He served as the chairman of the  Annuity Board’s Executive Committee  for over twenty-five years!

All through these multiple years  are the staggering challenges of moral,  ethical, and theological issues—two  world wars, prohibition, evolution and  Darwinism, the great depression—and  then there is J. Frank Norris, whose  personal opposition to Truett is all but  a classic example of hatred and jealousy, grounded in some of the later issues  of theological Fundamentalism in the  infamous SBC takeover!

Durso’s presentation of Truett’s  most famous address on Religious  Liberty in 1921 is worth the price of  the book.

Truett was preeminently a powerful preacher, buttressed by a spiritual  dynamic, stemming from a radiant  prayer life built around the title, Thy  Will Be Done. In his time this combination was genuinely successful.  Whether or not this approach would  work in this multi-cultural and diverse  age we currently face is debatable. But  this volume is a genuine pleasure to  read and mull over. 

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