Editor: David E Marlett Th.D.
Feb 9, 2001Vol II #11
Defending Conservative Christian Values,
in the World, the Nation, the Church and the Home




*** Obituary ***

Dr. Jack Hyles age 74, went to be with the Lord on Tuesday, February 6, 2001, at the University of Chicago Hospital. Dr. Hyles had suffered a serious heart attack on January 30, 2001. He was admitted to Methodist Hospital Southlake Campus, Merrillville, Indiana, on Tuesday. He was subsequently airlifted to the University of Chicago Hospital at 1:00 am Friday. Dr. Hyles underwent eight hours of open-heart surgery performed by a team of top surgeons and specialists. In spite of heroic attempts by the medical staff, Dr. Hyles was pronounced dead at 9:43 am.

Dr. Hyles was born September 25, 1926, in Italy, Texas, to Willis Athey and Coystal Mattie Hyles. He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Beverly; four children, Becky Smith of Texas, David Hyles of Florida, Linda Murphrey of Texas, and Cindy Schaap of Indiana; 11 grandchildren, Trina Beebe, Teresa Horton, Trent Smith, Jamie Hyles, Julie Hyles, Amy Hyles, Bethany Hyles, Melissa Murphrey, Michael Murphrey, Jaclynn Schaap, and Ken Schaap; 4 great-grandchildren; one sister, Earlyne Stephens of Illinois; and a host of other relatives and friends. He was preceeded in death by two sisters, Lorene and Hazel, and a namesake grandson, Jack David Hyles.

During World War II, Jack Hyles served as a paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division.

Dr. Hyles was a graduate of East Texas Baptist College and attended Southwestern Baptist Seminary. He pastored five churches: Marris Chapel Baptist Church, Bogata, Texas; Grange Hall Baptist Church, Marshall, Texas; Southside Baptist Church, Henderson, Texas; Miller Road Baptist Church, Garland, Texas; and the First Baptist Church of Hammond, Indiana, which he pastored for 41 years, from August 1959 to present. He is the author of 49 books and pamphlets. He founded Hammond Baptist Schools in 1970 and Hyles-Anderson College in 1972.

The viewing for Dr. Hyles will be held in the First Baptist Church auditorium, 523 Sibley Street, Hammond, Indiana, on Friday, February 9, beginning at 10:00 am until 6:30 pm. At 7:00 pm on Friday, there will be a memorial service to be attended by all out-of-town guests and friends, all non-First Baptist Church members, and all Hyles-Anderson College students. The viewing will resume after the memorial service and will continue throughout the night until 9:30 am Saturday, February 10. There will then be a funeral service at 10:00 am for the First Baptist Church membership, including all First Baptist young people who are college students.

There will be a private graveside service conducted for the family only.

Flowers may be sent to First Baptist Church, 523 Sibley Street, Hammond, Indiana 46320.

Dr. Hyles' ministry has touched and influenced the lives of over a million people nationwide as well as untold millions worldwide.





** A late entry in the articles remembering Dr Hyles written by Pastor Tommy Wensil

*** "The Mighty Are Fallen in the Midst Of the Battle!" ***

My life was greatly touched by Dr. Hyles. Our pastor received the messages from First Baptist in Hammond for several years and shared many of those messages with me when I was just a "preacher boy." We used his "Hyles Church Manual" in Bible College and his wisdom and organizational ability was greatly helpful to me. I have now been in the ministry for 19 years and some of those messages still live in my heart. I know many fundamentalist have been critical of him over the years, yet I have simply observed a man who obeyed the Great Commission and one who was a "fisher of men." Dr Hyles was not lacking in pulpit skill, though many of his sermons would be considered by some to be simple, the influence and power of his preaching lives on in my heart as well as the hearts of many others. I value all the books I own that came from his pen, for I know that his voice in this earthly sphere is silent and his pen is laid aside. He is now enjoying the beauty of the glory world with many others whom he has pointed toward the celestial city. May God help us who remain to stand in the gap and make up the hedge.

Pastor Tommy Wensil Th.M
El Bethel Baptist
Wadesboro N.C.

Editor's Note: There were other comments sent in to TCCN concerning what Dr Hyles and his ministry meant to them, but they were lost to a hard drive peoblem before they could be saved. We apologize to those folks that expected to see their comments here. We expected to see them too.





** From the Hammond Times

*** The Rev. Jack Hyles Did The Unthinkable Tuesday ***

The man who, for more than 40 years was a driving force spiritually and educationally to an uncountable tally of followers in Northwest Indiana and the country, died Tuesday morning at the University of Chicago Hospitals.

His death was a stunning blow, as the 74-year-old pastor of First Baptist Church of Hammond and founder of Hyles-Anderson College led his congregation with all the zeal of a freshly starched, spit-shine polished graduate of Bible School.

"I don't have the words to express how sad I feel today," Amber Kent, a senior at Hammond Baptist High School, said as she headed to the parish office in downtown Hammond. "We'd been praying, and singing for an hour before we got the news of Brother Hyles' death."

When students were told about the fatal complications of Hyles' bypass surgery in Chicago, "the whole school lost it," Kent said.

Tears streamed down the faces of teachers and students as they huddled in classrooms, and worries ran deep, even after school had been dismissed. Students at Hyles-Anderson College in Schererville were in mourning, too, according to President Wendell Evans.

"He was our motivator and our leader," said Evans, who has served as college president since the school's founding by Hyles in 1972. "He helped me a lot in learning the principles of leadership, administration and counseling. He was very unselfish in helping people, including our students."

Hyles, who was born in Italy, Texas, and grew up in a poverty-stricken area of Dallas, attended Southwest Baptist Seminary after graduating from Eastern Texas Baptist College. Before coming to Hammond in 1959, Hyles led the Miller Road Baptist Church in Garland, Texas, for about six years, from a membership of 44 people to 4,000.

By May 1965, Hyles' sermons from the pulpit had become so popular that they found their way into books, such as "Kisses of Calvary," which contains an introduction from Hyles' mother: The Jack she saw grow from boyhood to manhood, was a person who gave Christ first place in his life, she wrote, and always had a great love and burden for lost souls.

Those lost souls, as Hyles put it, found their way onto buses that fanned out across Northwest Indiana and the low-income areas of Chicago, to bring a following to Hammond on Sundays and spread the word about the simplicity of salvation.

The 1970s brought new Baptist-run schools to the area and Hyles-Anderson College. The decade also brought a new First Baptist Church auditorium addition to 523 Sibley St. and a national Christian Life Magazine report claiming that the church operated one of the largest Sunday schools in the nation, and possibly the world.

Annual pastors schools were held in the spring, as were youth conferences, which drew thousands to the area and even prompted marquee "Welcome" signs from merchants along the traffic route between the college and the church. The college also grew in enrollment and influence over the years, as its annual school roster has grown from 300 to 1,800 students from across the nation.

"He had several thousand pastors who looked to him as a mentor, even before this college was founded," Evans said. "They have (since) sent students here."

Hyles was especially good at attracting students, Evans said.

One such student, Phil Merhalski, director of economic development for the city of Hammond, said Hyles was the matchmaker in his marriage to his wife, Gail, in 1977. The pastors' impact on their lives, and the city, was "so encompassing," Merhalski said.

Merhalski added Hyles put buildings to new uses in downtown Hammond, setting up various ministries that included outreach programs for Spanish-speaking people and the homeless.

"He was instrumental in stabilizing the downtown and the city itself," said Merhalski, who has been a member of the church since 1973. "He believed in people and saw things (in individuals) other people didn't. He was a caring, loving man."

Hammond Mayor Duane Dedelow Jr. said he was saddened by Hyles' death.

"His contributions over the years to the city of Hammond have been great, both spiritually, and through his commitment to stay in the downtown area when others were leaving. He has forever left his imprint on the city," said Dedelow, who met Hyles when he first entered politics in 1991.

The city's Redevelopment Commission, in fact, was talking about a plan to add a Youth Center to the downtown cluster of ministries, at about 9:43 a.m., the time Hyles died.

It almost seemed a bit ironic, said commission member Mark Rincon, and seems to be a sign that Hyles' ministry will continue.

Shelton Smith, president and editor of Sword of the Lord, a religious publication based in Tennessee, said Hyles was a major player in a worldwide, fundamental movement over the last 45 years, and as such, has had a "major impact on tens of thousands of people around the country and the world."

Hyles, who served on the board of directors with Sword of the Lord and was a guest speaker for Sword-sponsored conferences, has also had his share of personal- and ministry-related controversy.

When controversy flared, many of Hyles' followers grew more adamant about his ministry and committed to it. Hyles also deflected criticism by saying that when one has a church of more than 10,000, it is inevitable that some members may find their way into the news.

Smith refused to talk about Hyles' controversies.

"This is a time to think about the wonderful things he has done," Smith said. "The big thing that he has kept the focus on is winning people to Christ. A lot of people have been motivated by Dr. Hyles to invest their lives in seeking out others and attempting to bring them to Christ."

Hyles, who at times was called flamboyant and at times, a bit shy, had a "dynamic about his personality that was influential on everybody he came in contact with," Smith said. "I would say that the people who knew him well would describe him as a gentle and compassionate man who cared very deeply about the people around him."

Voyle Glover, a former member of the church, said Tuesday was a sad day for him because Hyles "did do a lot of good reaching out to all the neighborhoods and ghettos to bring the gospel to as many people as possible."

"I liked the fact that he was, in many ways, a man's man. Right or wrong, he stood where he stood and didn't back down. I always liked that about him," Glover said.

Glover added he believed that many tears were shed across the globe, and in particular in Northwest Indiana.

"They're probably wondering, 'What now?'" he said. "And it's understandable. They've lost someone who has led them for many, many years. It's like being on a ship, and the captain suddenly dies, and he's the one that's run the ship. It's not that others can't get you to port. It's just you came through so many storms with that captain, you know, it's going to make you uneasy. You're going to hurt."

Kent begs to disagree.

As she and her friend Lili Ruiz, a third-generation member, stood under a mural of Hyles and his wife, Beverly, Kent paused briefly, looked to the sky and said, "I feel like I've lost my security blanket, but it's not gone. It's just a little farther away."





*** God's Word is Pure! ***

(Psalms 119:140 "Thy word is very pure: therefore thy servant loveth it.")

Not only is the Word of God Pure but The Words themselves, Individually.

(Psalms 12:6 "The words of the LORD are pure words: as silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times.")

Not only are the words themselves Pure, but Every word in the whole Bible is Pure.

(Proverbs 30:5 "Every word of God is pure: he is a shield unto them that put their trust in him.")

We have a Pure Bible with Pure Words that can be trusted even today.

(Psalms 12:7 "Thou shalt keep them, O LORD, thou shalt preserve them from this generation for ever.")

Praise God! We have His Word available for us, today!

Paul Payton
http://www.JustBible.com/




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