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Cecil Sherman: By My Own Reckoning.


Cecil Sherman: By My Own Reckoning. By Cecil Sherman. Macon, GA: Smyth & Helwys, 2008. 280 pp.

I have reviewed books by and about Baptists for thirty-five years. Never has a book in Baptist studies charged my intellect, memory, and emotions as much as this one. By My Own Reckoning reveals a Baptist leader who possesses the honesty of Thomas Helwys Thomas Helwys, (c. 1550 - c. 1616), was one of the joint founders of the Baptist denomination.

In the early 17th century, Helwys was principal formulator of that distinctively Baptist request: that the church and the state be kept separate in matters of law, so that
, the courage of Roger Williams, the persistence of John Clarke John Clarke may be:
  • John Clarke (1609-1676), the co-founder of Rhode Island
  • John Clarke, the pseudonym adopted by Richard Cromwell after his abdication
  • John Clarke (dean of Salisbury) (1682-1757), dean of Salisbury Cathedral, mathematician, natural philosopher, and
, the writing skills of John Bunyan, the missions drive of Adoniram and Ann Judson, the preaching power of Shubal Stearns Shubal Stearns (sometimes spelt Shubael) (born in Boston 28 January 1706, died November 20, 1771 at Sandy Creek near Liberty, present Randolph County, NC) was an evangelist and preacher who, though his name is little remembered or taught today, was to have a profound impact  and Martha Marshall, the prophetic intensity of Walter Rauschenbusch Walter Rauschenbusch (October 4, 1861 - July 25, 1918) was a Christian Theologian and Baptist Minister. He was a key figure in the Social Gospel movement in the USA. Evolution of Thought , the sacrificial spirit and passion of Martin Luther King, Jr., and the ability of E. Y. Mullins to communicate Baptist values. Ultimately, Sherman is as a teacher; he teaches through everything he writes, says, and does. And he combines faith and intelligence in unusually effective ways.

Sherman comes across as a highly capable Baptist pastor, teacher, and writer who invests himself heavily in the broader scheme of Baptist life as a state convention president, agency trustee, and fellowship leader. Driven by Baptist ideals, he challenges racism, hypocrisy, and denominationalism de·nom·i·na·tion·al·ism  
n.
1. The tendency to separate into religious denominations.

2. Advocacy of separation into religious denominations.

3. Strict adherence to a denomination; sectarianism.
 when it constructs theological parameters and denies freedom. In relentless fashion, he hammers home the biblical imperative of liberty, marshals evidence against biblical inerrancy Biblical inerrancy is the doctrinal position [1] that in its original form, the Bible is totally without error, and free from all contradiction; "referring to the complete accuracy of Scripture, including the historical and scientific parts". , questions the judgment of self-serving denominational bureaucrats, and helps to build an alternative fellowship for the dispossessed.

Sherman provides inside perspectives on background influences on his character and training, on his pastoral strengths and weaknesses, the controversies that emerged in his churches and denomination, the SBC (1) (SBC Communications Inc., San Antonio, TX, www.sbc.com) A large, national telecommunications company that grew from a multitude of local and regional companies, including Southwestern Bell, Pacific Bell and Nevada Bell, into a single, unified brand by 2002.  Peace Committee on which he served and from which he resigned, the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, Inc. (CBF)—"a fellowship of Baptist Christians and churches who share a passion for the Great Commission of Jesus Christ and a commitment to Baptist principles of faith and practice.  that he helped to create, his retirement experiences as teacher, writer, and interim pastor, his long-term care-giving role for his wife, and his assessment of coming to terms with last things.

If you want genuine and highly personal insights into the nature of freedom-based pastoral servanthood, read this book. If you have any remaining questions about the true nature of SBC fundamentalism, read this book. If you want to learn more about the SBC controversy and the inner workings of the SBC Peace Committee, read this book. If you care about the origins of CBF CBF Chesapeake Bay Foundation
CBF Cerebral Blood Flow
CBF Cooperative Baptist Fellowship
CBF Confederação Brasileira de Futebol
CBF Core Binding Factor
CBF Chicagoland Bicycle Federation
CBF Coronary Blood Flow
CBF cubic feet
, read this book. If anyone you know faces Alzheimer's disease Alzheimer's disease (ăls`hī'mərz, ôls–), degenerative disease of nerve cells in the cerebral cortex that leads to atrophy of the brain and senile dementia.  as a patient or a caregiver, read this book. If honesty and courage appeal to you, or if you need a good dose or either or both, read this book.

If you are tired of reading secondary-source treatments of modern Baptist history, read this book. The author is more than an eyewitness to key developments; he is a primary driving force. He does not have to document much (though he does); he is the documentation. No student in Baptist theological education should be allowed to graduate without having read, studied, and carefully thought about the contents of this book.

Sherman's influence has saturated the Baptist experience in the South and West for the past half century. Although he refuses to say it explicitly, he has exerted an extraordinary impact on Baptist development, particularly on the preservation of key Baptist values. I ponder, for example, the surging independence of the Baptist History and Heritage Society in the mid-1990s. Why did the Society do that? Surely, the initiatives of Sherman and other persons like him fed into that development. And today, the Society flourishes on the Atlanta campus of Mercer University Mercer University is a private, coeducational, faith-based university with a Baptist heritage, located in the U.S. state of Georgia.

Mercer is the only university of its size in the United States that offers programs in eleven diversified fields of study: liberal arts,
, just a few miles away from where Sherman became pastor of his first full-time church, First Baptist Church First Baptist Church may refer to many churches: Canada
  • First Baptist Church of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
United States
  • First Baptist Church (Bay Minette, Alabama)
  • First Baptist Church (Greenville, Alabama)
 of Chamblee, in 1956, and on the same campus where he served as the first coordinator of CBF in 1992-96.

Sherman comes across as human. He grieves when his daughter leaves for Baylor. He weeps at pivotal points in his life: when the Glorieta Statement causes him to resign from the SBC Peace Committee, when he leaves Broadway Baptist Church, and when his wife's Alzheimer's disease sets in. He hurts when SBC friends desert him while he is fighting for their rights and freedom. He wishes that he had expressed better relational skills at key points in his life. He shows love for his daughter, Genie, her family, and his broader set of friends. He even admits that he sometimes wonders about the afterlife and states that he wishes he knew more about heaven, but he reaffirms his faith in spite of any occasional doubts.

For the record, Sherman has accomplished more in retirement than some of us pull off in a career: more than a decade of teaching at the Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond (BTSR) is a seminary in Richmond, Virginia. It was founded in March 1989 by Virginia Baptists related to the Southern Baptist Alliance and Baptist General Association of Virginia. , many years of writing Sunday School Sunday school, institution for instruction in religion and morals, usually conducted in churches as part of the church organization but sometimes maintained by other religious or philanthropic bodies.

In England during the 18th cent.
 commentaries for Smyth & Helwys, ten interim pastorates, and eleven years of serving as a caregiver to his wife, Dot (who died on August 1, 2008).

My hat is off to Smyth & Helwys for producing this highly readable, 280-page hardcover volume. It is an excellent model for helping Baptists and non-Baptists understand the heart and soul of a faithful Baptist leader who writes plainly, convincingly, and unapologetically. In fact, Sherman can share more constructive thoughts in fewer words and simpler language than anyone I have read or heard preach.--Reviewed by Charles W. Deweese, executive director, Baptist History and Heritage Society, Atlanta, Georgia.
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Author:Deweese, Charles W.
Publication:Baptist History and Heritage
Article Type:Book review
Date:Jan 1, 2009
Words:869
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