Jack Hyles
1926 - 2001
"When the path ahead is crooked and the road’s too rough to tread,
When the best upon the table is replaced by sorrow’s bread, When you’ve crossed some
troubled waters, yet a Marah’s just ahead, DON’T QUIT!" – (Excerpt from Dr. Jack Hyles’
poem “Don’t Quit”)
Born in Italy, Texas on September 25, 1926, Jack Hyles began preaching at
nineteen years of age. After brief pastorates at Marris Chapel Baptist Church
in Bogata, Texas, Grange Hall Baptist Church in Marshall, Texas and Southside
Baptist Church in Henderson, Texas, he became widely known as the pastor of
Miller Road Baptist Church in Garland, Texas. Through his leadership and
zealous soul winning, Miller Road reached a membership of four thousand
in seven years. In August 1959, he became pastor of First Baptist
Church of Hammond, Indiana. In a few years’ time, the church built the
largest Sunday school in the world, with attendances on big days topping
twenty-five thousand. The annual pastors’ school stirred many preachers
to do greater works in their churches and towns. In 1972, he founded
Hyles-Anderson College. Dr. Hyles was a frequent cospeaker with Dr.
John R. Rice at Sword of the Lord Conferences all across the nation.
Dr. Rice called him “a tornado of zeal,” with “a unique anointing
from God.” He authored a number of books with instructions on various
aspects of the ministry, including building both churches and Sunday
schools. He was one of the twentieth century’s most influential voices
in fundamentalism. After a brief illness, Dr. Hyles departed this life
on February 6, 2001, at age 74.