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Foreword by John Boles
Back in Print!
As a traveling evangelist, advocate of religious freedom, leader
of the patriot cause, Charleston minister, and pioneer educator,
Richard Furman became an important figure in American religious
history and a potent political force in South Carolina.
After his conversion in 1770 Furman devoted himself to Bible study
and preaching. In 1774 he was ordained into the Baptist ministry.
While he volunteered to fight in the American Revolution, South
Carolina's leaders valued him more as a preacher. It was said that
Lord Cornwallis feared Furman's prayers more than the armies of
Francis Marion and Thomas Sumter.
After the revolution, as a Baptist minister in Charleston, Furman
began laying the foundation for an organized program of Baptist
education and missions in the South and throughout the United States.
By 1814, when he was elected president of the first Triennial Convention
of American Baptists, he was perhaps the most influential Baptist
leader in America.
James A. Rogers was editor emeritus of the Florence, South Carolina,
Morning News, a paper he served with distinction since 1939. He
graduated from Furman University in 1927, and held an honorary doctorate
from his alma mater as well as from Francis Marion College, the
College of Charleston, and Lander College. He also published other
works of regional history, including Theodosia and Other Pee Dee
Sketches and Ebenezer, The Story of a Church.
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