Heroes Of The Faith
Evangelist
Billy Sunday - (1862 - 1935)
“I’m against sin.
I’ll kick it as long as I’ve got a foot,
and I’ll fight it as long as I’ve got a
fist. I’ll butt it as long as I’ve got
a
head. I’ll bite it as long as I’ve got
a tooth. And when I’m old and fist less
and footless and toothless, I’ll gum it
till I go home to Glory and it goes home
to perdition!”
William A.
Sunday was born November 19, 1862, in a
two-room log cabin near
Ames, Iowa. His father was in the Union army then,
where he soon died of pneumonia so Billy
never knew his father.
Billy was
outfielder on the Chicago White
Stockings baseball team when he was
converted. One night, with baseball
cronies, he heard a group singing on the
streets of Chicago, “Where is My Wandering Boy
Tonight?”—his mother’s favorite song. He
went to Pacific Garden Mission and was
converted.
Billy
Sunday held some three hundred crusades
in thirty-nine years. It is estimated
that a hundred million heard him speak
in great tabernacles before public
address systems were invented. And more
than a million people made a profession
of faith in Christ as Saviour under his
preaching.
He was
probably the most spectacular evangelist
since John the Baptist. His
long-time associate, Dr. Homer
Rodeheaver,
called him “the greatest gospel preacher
since the Apostle Paul.” The
evangelist died November 6, 1935, at the
age of 72. His funeral was held in
Moody Church, Chicago, with the sermon by H. A.
Ironside,
pastor.

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