Throughout the next few
weeks, this blog will examine certain “snapshots” of D.L. Moody, which I hope
will bring a deeper appreciation for this servant and a greater love for the
God whom he gave his life to.
Why should you care about the
life and ministry of D. L. Moody?
1)
He
began ministries such as the YMCA and Moody Bible Institute (my family attends
the YMCA).
2)
He
was often criticized for his “simple mind”, but still did great things for God.
3)
His
methods for evangelism are worthy of further study.
4)
He
was an example of being affected by your upbringing but not defined
by it.
5)
He
preached with both simplicity and clarity.
6)
His
revivals were comparable in size and effect to the days of Whitefield and
Wesley.
Dwight L. Moody (1837-1899),
Dwight L. Moody was born on Feb. 5, 1837, in
Northfield, Mass. At the age of 17 he went to Boston and entered the retail
boot and shoe trade. In 1856 he moved to Chicago to enhance his business
opportunities. While in Boston he had come in contact with evangelical
Protestants, chiefly through the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) and a
local Congregational church. He expanded these associations in Chicago, where
he soon became a leader in religious circles, chiefly through his work for the
local YMCA.
In 1860 Moody abandoned his business career to
work full time for the YMCA. He served as president of the Chicago branch from
1865 to 1868. He also ran a large "independent" Sunday school for
slum families, which was supported chiefly by local members of the YMCA. This
experience was essential in preparing him for his eventual work as a
revivalist.
In 1867 Moody visited England, immediately
establishing contacts with important English evangelists. In 1872 he launched
his formal career as a revivalist in Great Britain, accompanied by Ira D.
Sankey, his famous "singing partner" in all his subsequent major
revivals. They first attracted widespread popular support in Scotland; then
they moved south into England for a long series of campaigns, climaxed by a
4-month visit in London in 1875.
That year Moody returned to America, a national
figure, and immediately launched a series of revivals. In huge revival meetings
in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and Boston he created the basic machinery
of urban mass revivalism. It was chiefly a feat of organization which sought to
adapt the traditional theological and institutional practices of evangelical
Protestantism to the new urban environment created by industrialism.
Although Moody never abandoned his work as a
revivalist, after 1880 he developed other interests. He founded three schools:
two private secondary academies in Northfield, Mass., and the Chicago (later
Moody) Bible Institute, a training school for urban lay evangelists. He aided
national officials of the YMCA in inaugurating the Student Volunteer movement
in 1886 - a major expression of the American Protestant missionary impulse. At
the Northfield schools he also held numerous summer adult and youth conferences
offering informal Christian education.
A theological conservative, Moody was bewildered
by the rapidly changing intellectual climate of the late 19th century. He found
it difficult to deal effectively with the splits between liberals and
conservatives in the American churches. His career as a revivalist had
noticeably declined by the time he died in December 1899.
(Taken and adapted from
the Gale Encyclopedia of Biography)
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