CHRIST IN WINTER:
Irrelevant Musings of an Old Man—
When I was in seminary, our homiletics professor, Merrill Abbey, had us listen to a sermon by J. Wallace Hamilton, the preacher at Pasadena Community Methodist Church [PCMC] in St. Petersburg, FL. The sermon was on a long-play vinyl record, the best available technology at that time. I was so impressed that I bought a copy of that record for myself. I wanted to be a good preacher, and I wondered, “How did he get to be such a good preacher?”
Prof. Abbey said that Hamilton’s church was a new, struggling start in 1929, only four years old, when Hamilton was appointed there. He had just been ordained as a probationer. He wasn’t fully ordained until two years later.
Some of the lay people recognized that he had a special gift for preaching. “We have a chance to grow here. You concentrate on preaching. We’ll do the rest of the work the preacher usually does so that you’ll have time for it. You preach, and we’ll bring the people in to hear you.”
By the time I was in
seminary in the 1960s, PCMC had become one of the first megachurches, over
seven thousand people on some Sundays, even though the sanctuary, built during
Hamilton’s tenure, seated “only” two thousand. Others listened to speakers in their
cars in the parking lot, drive-in movie style.
PCMC had three different pastors
in its first four years. That was fairly standard for Methodist churches in
those days. Many appointments were for only one year, especially for a small
church like PCMC. Preachers were eager to “move up the ladder” to bigger
churches with bigger salaries. What was definitely not standard was for a
Methodist preacher to stay in his first appointment for his entire lifetime,
for 39 years, from the time when he wasn’t even fully ordained yet, until his
death. J. Wallace Hamilton did that. [1]
He was a preacher in The 1950 Church.
That’s what sociologists call it, The 1950 Church, because it hit its zenith in the 1950s. It continued, though, while declining almost imperceptibly, for most of the 20th century. It was pulpit centered and denominationally identified and growth oriented. It was perfect for J. Wallace Hamilton.
It was perfect for me, too, starting in 1956, since I thought the main job of a minister was preaching. But The 1950 Church was already starting its decline in the 1950s. That’s how we name things, according to my sociology professor friend, Paul J. Baker. “If you cut down all the shady oaks in building a sub-division, you name it Shady Oaks.” It’s called The 1950 Church because that’s when it began to decline.
That decline wasn’t statistical. Church membership and attendance kept going up until 1964. In some ways, 1950 is an arbitrary date. But the culture had started to change in subtle ways then, especially the advent of television, that was going to have effects we could hardly imagine.
So, don’t be too sorry for The 1950 Church. It had a good 70 years after it started to die. That’s better than most of us.
John Robert McFarland
1] Another who did it was
Ralph Washington Sockman, generally considered to be the best Protestant
preacher in the country from about 1940 to 1960, when he was the regular
preacher on The Protestant Hour radio show as well as the pastor at Christ
Church Methodist in NYC. His first appointment was to Madison Ave. Methodist
Episcopal Church, which became Christ Church Methodist, which was second in
Protestant fame only to Harry Emerson Fosdick’s Riverside Church. [Interdenominational].
One of his colleagues said, “Poor Ralph. The only preacher in Methodism who
never got a promotion.”










