An Anchor For My Soul
In Mississippi, cotton was still king.
Even in the red clay hills of the state's north central region almost all
cultivated land grew cotton. One such field laid halfway between
Oxford and Water Valley on Mississippi Highway 7. It grew behind and
along side a small white frame building known as the Anchor Baptist
Church.* At the rear of the church was a nursery for infants and
toddlers with a screen door that led out back to the foot of that
cotton field. My earliest memory of being at church is one where I
am looking out a screen door at fluffy white bolls of cotton.
Anchor Church was a typical rural
Southern Baptist church at the time. The membership was comprised
primarily of farmers, carpenters, and assorted other blue collar
workers. Most of the members had only high school educations, the
exception being a handful of school teachers.
Many descent people attended Anchor over the years,
but a few stood out in my mind as pillars – Mr.
Jack Williams (who often wore overalls to services), Mr. Elvin
Hensley, Miss Lillie Pearl Williams (Jack's sister), Mr. Winfred
Cook, Sr., Mr. Robert Linder McCain, Mrs. Maudeen McCain, and Mr. Johnny Brown, Jr. I can't speak for anyone but myself, but the
Lord even now blesses the memory of them to me. Not that their lives
preached the gospel because the gospel is not how we live. As Martin
Luther believed, the gospel is extra nos – something
outside of us. It is a message proclaimed about what Christ alone
has accomplished for poor sinners. But that being said, their lives
certainly did not hinder the gospel, at least not with me.
It has been over twenty-five years
since I was a member of that church, but I am still thankful for it.
Many doctrines were discussed and bandied about there, but three
things were insisted upon – the Bible is true, Hell is real, and
Jesus alone saves sinners. And those three things have been pivotal
in my spiritual pilgrimage. They have been, so to speak, an anchor
for my soul.
*Anchor Baptist Church still exists, but the white frame building was replaced
circa 1970.
Labels: Anchor Baptist Church, Martin Luther, Southern Baptist Convention