The late B. C. Goodpasture used
to tell of the time when James A. Harding held a gospel meeting in Clark
County, Kentucky. The year was 1877. When an elder of the church
asked about it he said it was "not much of a meeting. Oh, Brother
Harding did his usually powerful preaching, the attendance was fair, but
the results were negligible. Only little Jimmy Shepherd was baptized."
Someone has said that you can
count the number of seeds in an apple, but you cannot count the number
of apples in a seed. When applied to the preaching of the gospel
that means that you can count the number of people who respond to gospel
preaching to be baptized, but you cannot count the number of good things
done in the life of one person who becomes a Christian, as in the case
of brother James W. Shepherd.
Brother Shepherd went to the
College Of The Bible, Kentucky University, and graduated in 1884.
On February 29, 1888 he traveled with his family to New Zealand, remaining
there two years. From New Zealand he went to Australia, where he
remained almost three years, during which time he preached in Sydney, Melbourne,
Balarat, New Castle and Adelaide. Leaving Australia he returned to
the United States by way of the Orient. He traveled extensively,
passing through the Suez Canal, he could see Mt. Sinai in the distance,
but he did not visit the Bible lands. He did visit Scotland
and England, and being a lover of books he collected many volumes for his
private library and materials for books which he would later write.
From 1905 to 1912 he served as "Office Editor" for the Gospel Advocate.
Later he preached for churches of Christ in Detroit, Michigan; Washington,
D.C.; Richmond, Virginia and Birmingham, Alabama.
His famous Handbook On Baptism
was published in 1894. His teacher at the College Of The Bible, Professor
J. W. McGarvey, referred to the book as, "The best and most comprehensive
work of its kind in existence." In 1910 brother Shepherd edited and
compiled Queries And Answers, containing questions answered by David Lipscomb
in the Gospel Advocate. He put together material for another volume
bearing the name of David Lipscomb, that being the book entitled, Salvation
From Sin. Also, at the request of the aged Lipscomb, brother Shepherd
took Lipscomb's notes on some of the New Testament epistles and completed
them for publication in the Gospel Advocate series of New Testament commentaries.
Brother Shepherd passed from
this life on Tuesday evening, July 27, 1948. The good that was accomplished
in the response of little "Jimmy Shepherd" to a gospel sermon heard long
ago, can never fully be measured in human terms. It is when we can
"count the seeds in an apple" that we think the greatest amount of good
is done. The great amount of good accomplished for the cause of Christ
by men and women of average existence are the apples in the seed of truth
that we are rarely possessed to the patience to count. Try to count
the apples in a seed!—Dennis Gulledge