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The History of Wingate Baptist Church 1810-2009 |
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Carolyn Caldwell Gaddy and Jerry L. Surratt
ISBN 978-1-934936-24-5
Hardback-384 pages-$40.00
Order yours today
Available on Amazon Kindle
This is an updated edition of Wingate Baptist's illustrious history.
Part I The early years from 1810 through 1984.
Part II Chronicles the exciting years from 1985 to 2009
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In Part I of this study published in 1984, Carolyn Gaddy, reconstructs the congregation’s evolution as it confronted missionary and education. It recounts congregational growth from a brush arbor meeting to a thriving church adjacent to a bustling college campus. controversies, the Civil War, industrialization and depression, and modern times. Now in Part II, Jerry Surratt brings us up to date with the 25 years preceding the church’s bicentennial in 2010. This period brought a deeper probing into challenges of ministry, growth, building renovations, denominational change, and gender issues while the congregation expanded its ministry to local needs, regional disaster relief, and the plight of abandoned street children in Ukraine.
Jerry L. Surratt
March, 2009
A Review From Baptists Today on the Web
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Wingate Baptist Church celebrates 200 years of challenges, faithfulness
The History of Wingate Baptist Church
1810-2009: 'Saturday Before the Second Sabith'
Part one by Carolyn Caldwell Gaddy and Part two by Jerry L. Surratt
Righter Books-ISBN 978-1-934936-25-5-Cloth and
Laminate cover-384 pages-$40.00
A review by John D. Pierce, executive editor, Baptists Today, Macon, Ga.
WINGATE, N.C. — With rare exception, books are designed to be read from
beginning to end. But the two-part, 200-year history of Wingate Baptist Church
near Monroe, North Carolina, might be better suited to a different approach.
Just in time for the town-‘n-gown congregation’s bicentennial celebration, a
lovely hardback edition of the church’s history has been produced with former
Wingate University professor and dean Jerry Surratt picking up the story in
1985. The earlier history of the church — presented as the first part of this
combined volume — has been well documented by Carolyn Caldwell Gaddy.
A suggested approach is to begin reading at page 187 where Surratt acknowledges
the good work of Gaddy and gives an overview of her findings. Then the reader
can benefit more so from the first part of the book that is filled with
membership lists, governing documents, reports of the Baptist association and
the emerging school (now the adjacent university), and a recounting of the
visionary and faithful people who brought the congregation (called Meadow Branch
Church until 1931) into life and sustained its ministries through thick and
think over 175 years.
Gaddy’s earlier work was greatly enhanced by the discovery of “lost” church records — due to a church split between pro- and anti-missions factions — in the Baptist archives at Wake Forest University. She paints an honest and inspiring picture of a church that held fast to the faith despite challenges from within and without.
As Gaddy concluded in her look at the first 175
years: “Meadow Branch-Wingate Baptist Church has withstood many difficult times
and encountered serious obstacles, all of which cannot be recounted. What can be
said with certainty is that through these years this comparatively small group
of believers has left a heritage of strong convictions, great loyalty to their
faith in God, and tradition of lending a helping hand to all who are in need at
home and abroad.”
A congregation’s story is never lived out away from the stage of broader
historical events. So it is fitting that, in part two, Surratt (to even a
greater degree than the earlier writing) sets the church’s history in the story
of the larger Baptist movement as well as national and world events.
He also noted the societal changes on the local scene where the congregation
carries out its daily ministries: “North Carolina continued to attract new
residents to expand its population to [more than] 6.5 million in 1990,
increasing 21.3 percent in the decade to 8 million in 2000. As textile
production moved to emerging Asian nations, new financial capital sought to
replace lost textile jobs… Likewise, tobacco production and processing fell
precipitously…”
Also, Surratt does not gloss over the more trying
times the congregation has encountered in recent decades. He ‘fesses up to fact
that between the popular pastorates of Dewey Hobbs, who left in 1964, and Mitch
Simpson who came in 1986, three pastors left in conflict with lay leadership.
“The early eighties for the Wingate Church was a time of retrenchment, doubt and
difficulty,” Surratt states bluntly. “It has been portrayed in large part as an
extension of the surrounding secular culture where economic problems were
formidable and leadership was uninspiring.”
Such honest assessments make the writer’s stories of high moments more
believable and enjoyable. He tells of an enduring church moved by vibrant
leadership to face every challenge with spiritual preparation and passion.
New approaches to worship, ministry, mission and cooperation unfold from a
strong willingness — even eagerness — to live in the present tense.
The church’s relationship with Wingate University cannot be overlooked as an
important part of the congregation’s identify and mission. But their concern for
higher education preceded the 1896 founding of the neighboring school with which
they share a name and town.
“The congregation supported Wake Forest College from its establishment in 1834,
took pride in its accomplishments, and encouraged young men to at attend this
North Carolina Baptist institution,” Surratt noted.
The congregation was strong in advocating for the Wingate School that was named
for a popular former Wake Forest president, Washington Manley Wingate. Through
the years the church and school (which began offering college courses in 1923)
have benefited from shared proximity, personnel and priorities.
In recounting the congregation’s most recent quarter-century of history, Surratt
gives careful attention to the ways Wingate Baptist Church has dealt with its
middle name (Baptist) while its once-comfortable denominational home moved away
from its historical moorings.
He recounts the congregation’s struggle with its denominational identity and its
shift into new Baptist partnerships in light of the Fundamentalist Takeover of
the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) during the 1980s and ’90s.
Surratt credits consecutive pastors Mitch Simpson
(1986-1990), Jim Somerville (1991-2000) and Derrill Smith (2001-present/pictured
at right) with helping guide the church in understanding the ever-changing
Baptist landscape and making new connections where its long-held commitments to
Baptist freedoms could be affirmed and its mission and ministry contributions
honored.
A congregation’s bicentennial recounting and celebration always call for a look
backward. Gaddy and Surratt have enabled the Wingate congregation and others to
do so more clearly and thoroughly with this research and writing.
However, it is equally clear that the 200-year-old church is not keeping its
glance to the rear. Current pastor Derrill Smith, according to Surratt, has
called the church in recent years to respond to the important question: “Who and
what is the Spirit of God calling Wingate Baptist Church to be and do in this
21st century?”
The answer to that question will emerge in days and years yet to come as the
venerable congregation faces the challenges and opportunities ahead with the
same kind of vigor and faithfulness of those who preceded them.
Posted by John D. Pierce
http://www.baptiststoday.org/

Righter Publishing Company, Inc.-410 River Oaks Parkway-Timberlake, NC 27583