The following incident in the life of Brother J. W. McGarvey was told by Brother
Jesse P. Sewell. Although it happened almost one hundred years ago, these words
of warning from the grand old man are still timely.
In January, 1902 or 1903, I was preaching for the Pearl and Bryan Streets Church
in Dallas. Brother McGarvey, an old man at the time, was invited to speak at
Central Christian Church in Dallas. We had three men in the Pearl and Bryan
Streets who had graduated from the College of the Bible in Lexington under Brother
McGarvey, and they were great admirers of him. They suggested that we invite
Brother McGarvey to preach at Pearl and Bryan that night. We did so. I was just
a boy of twenty-four or twenty-five then. I was sitting by the side of this
old man on the front seat, waiting for service to begin. As we sat there talking,
brother McGarvey said to me, "Brother Sewell, I want to say something to
you, if you'll accept it in the spirit in which I mean it." I told him
I'd appreciate anything he had to say to me. He said about these words, "You
are on the right road, and whatever you do, don't let anybody persuade you that
you can successfully combat error by fellowshipping it and going along with
it. I have tried. I believed at the start that was the only way to do it. I've
never held membership in a congregation that uses instrumental music. I have,
however, accepted invitations to preach without distinction between churches
that use it and churches that didn't. I've gone along with their papers and
magazines and things of that sort. During all these years I have taught the
truth as the New Testament teaches it to every young preacher who has passed
through the College of the Bible. Yet, I do not know of more than six of those
men who are preaching the truth today." He said, "It won't work."
That experience has been an inspiration to me all the days of my life since.
It has helped me when I was ever tempted to turn aside and go along with error
to remember the warning of this great old man. -Four State Gospel News, July
2001.