This is a popular biography of the great Billy Sunday--baseballer-turned- evangelist whose colorful, energetic, fearless preaching brought perhaps 300,000 to faith in Christ.
It’s been a long time since I read anything about Billy Sunday or the sort of preacher he was. This was a great book that showed his unique approach to evangelism, and a bit about his strong character. It also includes excerpts from his sermons so you can get to know some about him in his own words.
My favorite thing was learning about how he insisted on the town being literally covered in prayer by the local Christians before he came to town. What a way to be sure people were ready to hear the Word...plus it was great to see how seriously some took that request, with thousands having daily prayer for weeks and months!
I'm not sure exactly how I feel about the late nineteenth and 20th century evangelist Sunday. Clearly, one must appreciate and be knowledgeable of Sunday's impact: namely, Billy Graham. The terms and approaches to a person coming to salvation are so commonplace today that we take them for granted --and to Sunday these should be attributed: "accept Christ" etc. Of course, the emotional appeal and persuasion-centered approaches of revivals are dubious. Sunday's moralism, namely, his scathing language and battles against alcohol seem to delve into a realm outside the gospel. the fact that in the index, his most famous sermon was that on "booze". I'm always careful however, to judge those of another generation by my standards and worldview. Sunday's influences on temperance and the evangelical aversion to alcohol is seen even in my own upbringing. I take for granted the positive impact it had --even if i wouldn't use the pulpit as a platform for prohibition.
As of 12-31-20 still have about 40 pages left, but plan to finish in the next day or two and wanted it to be added to my 2020 List. Actually finished reading the book on 1-2-21. Grew up hearing about "Billy" Sunday the evangelist here and there, but never read a book about him. "Billy" Sunday was essentially a professional baseball player turned super zealous Christian evangelist. It was fascinating to read of how candid, down to earth and non-nonsense he was in his delivery of sermons. It was also amazing to hear of the hundreds of thousands if not millions of converts he saw God make throughout his years of evangelistic campaigns. Whole cities like Scranton, Pittsburgh and other cities were literally transformed by the power of the Gospel message Sunday preached. Gamblers, saloon owners and drunkards converted to Christ and became evangelists in their own circles of employment. Poker clubs turned into Bible studies, saloons and clubs went out of business and entire jails and poor houses decreased in population in the cities he held major evangelistic campaigns. One quote that really made in impression on me, and this is more of a paraphrase probably, but Sunday said, "politicians work harder for one vote than the church does to lead one person to Christ." This and many other parts of this book were convicting to personally be more evangelistic in my own personal Christian life. Highly recommend this book to everyone.