John William McGarvey
1829-1911
Text
from Moore, W. T.
(editor), Living Pulpit of the Christian Church. Cincinnati: R. W.
Carroll & Co., Publishers, 1871. Pages 325-326. This online
edition © 1996, James L. McMillan.
Born: Hopkinsville,
Kentucky, March 1, 1829.
Died: Lexington, Kentucky, October 6, 1911.
FEW men among the
Disciples have obtained a more enviable reputation, and enjoyed
more generally the confidence of the brethren, than the subject of
this notice. Blessed with more than an average amount of practical
common sense, and having faithfully done his duty in all the
positions he has occupied, it is not strange that he should now be
regarded as one of the safest and truest men in the Church of
Christ.
JOHN W. MCGARVEY
was born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, March 1, 1829. His father was
born in Ireland, and, when grown, came to America, and settled at
Hopkinsville, Kentucky, where, with a small capital, he went into
the dry-goods business. His mother was a Miss THOMSON, of old
Virginia stock, and was born and reared near Georgetown, Kentucky.
In 1833, his father died, and, some time after, his mother was
married to Dr. G. F. SALTONSTALL.
In 1839, the family
removed to Tremont, Tazewell County, Illinois, where he was trained
to industry by his step-father, and thoroughly instructed in
primary and academic branches by Mr. JAMES K. KELLOGG, a successful
educator of that place. In April, 1847, he entered the Freshman
Class of Bethany College. While at college he made the good
confession, and was immersed, by Professor
PENDLETON, in April, 1848. So soon as he became a
Christian, he determined to devote his life to the preaching of the
Gospel, and it was not long before he gave very conclusive evidence
of fitness for the work. In July, 1850, he graduated as one of the
honor men, delivering the Greek speech, and receiving marked tokens
from the faculty of their high appreciation of his
scholarship.
Meantime, his family
had removed to Fayette, Missouri, at which place, soon after
leaving college, he taught a male school for ten months. In June,
1851, his step-father died of cholera, while on his way to attend
the commencement of Bethany College. He was a warm friend of the
college, and gave it twenty-five hundred dollars while living, and
left it a child's part in his estate.
At the call of the
Church in Fayette, Brother M'GARVEY gave up his school, and, in
September, 1851, was ordained to the work of the ministry, and
afterward preached for the Church at Fayette and neighboring county
churches until February, 1853, when he removed to Dover, Lafayette
County, Missouri. In March, 1853, he was married to OTTIE F. HIX,
of Fayette.
He resided at Dover
nine years, and, during this period, he spent about half of the
time at home, and, the remainder, preaching extensively over the
State of Missouri, holding five public debates with various
religious parties; he also collected money to erect a
boarding-school in his village, and conducted the school two
years.
In the spring of 1862,
he accepted the pastoral care of the Church in Lexington, Kentucky,
where a large field of usefulness was open to him. During the same
year he published his "Commentary on Acts," which had
occupied all the time he could devote to it for three and a half
years. This is a work of decided merit, and at once fixes his
reputation as a fine Biblical scholar.
On the removal of
Kentucky University to Lexington, in 1865, he accepted a chair in
the College of the Bible, with the understanding that only a small
portion of his time was to be devoted to teaching, such as would
not materially interfere with his labors in the Church. Under his
ministry, the Church had reached a remarkable degree of prosperity,
and his labors were highly appreciated by the entire congregation.
But, finding that his whole time was needed in the university, in
1866, he resigned his charge of the Church; but, as the Church has
not succeeded in obtaining the regular services of a suitable man,
he has not yet been relieved. President
GRAHAM, however, now shares the labor of
preaching with him.
Brother M'GARVEY is
a little below medium size, has dark hair, light hazel eyes, and a
very youthful appearance for one of his age. He is very strict and
regular in his habits, and this fact explains why it is that he has
been able to accomplish so much mental labor without impairing his
health.
That which most
distinguishes him as a writer and speaker is clearness; there is
never the slightest confusion in his ideas. He has very little
imagination, and relies almost exclusively on facts for effect. His
mind is well stored with these, and, in the construction and
management of an argument, he uses them with great ease and
success. In debate he is one of the safest and ablest men among the
Disciples, and not the least source of power here is his remarkable
coolness--he is never thrown off his guard.
As a teacher, he has
very few superiors. Knowledge is what a student needs; hence, the
matter-of-fact man is always the best teacher--all other things
being equal. But Brother M'GARVEY is also an excellent
preacher, and, as a pastor, has been eminently successful. He has a
kind, generous nature, but is not very demonstrative. He attends
strictly to his own business.
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