ARTICLE: The Pulpit King The passion and eloquence of Gardner Taylor, a legend among preachers. Edward Gilbreath
December 11, 1995
Charles Haddon Spurgeon, the "Prince of Preachers," summed up his philosophy of preaching this way: "Above all, [the preacher] must put heart work into his preaching. He must feel what he preaches. It must never be with him an easy thing to deliver a sermon. He must feel as if he could preach his very life away before the sermon is done." Gardner C. Taylor knows something about this kind of preaching. For more than 50 years he has "preached his life away." In 1980, Time named him "the dean of the nation's black preachers," and in a recent issue of the Christian Century, he was dubbed the "poet laureate of American Protestantism." "Gardner Taylor is a consummate communicator," says William Pannell, professor of preaching at Fuller Theological Seminary in Southern California. Timothy George, dean of Samford University's Beeson Divinity School, concurs: "More than anybody else I have heard in my life, Gardner Taylor combines eloquence and passion in the endeavor of preaching." As pastor of the 14,000-member Concord Baptist Church of Christ, Taylor, 77, labored as shepherd and prophet in Brooklyn's rugged Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood for 42 years until his retirement in 1990. Today, as Concord's pastor emeritus, Taylor is called upon to fill pulpits, give lectures, and provide keynote addresses at churches and educational institutions throughout the country. Though the legend of Gardner Taylor is great, those who know him readily admit the actual man is even greater. Taylor is a grand, stately figure, so it is incongruous to see him behind the wheel of his late-model Ford rather than perched behind a pulpit. As he drives by Concord Baptist Church, I notice the street name on the corner: "Rev. Gardner C. Taylor Boulevard." "Yes, ...
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