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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972 Thirty Years History: First Baptist Church Book (Pg. 1)PREFACE EARLY LIFE OF REV. R. L. BROWN Rev_ R. L. Brown was bnm in Marlboro County, South Carolina, on June 17. 1886. At the early age of 11 years he was converted and joined the Judson Missionary Baptist Church. kis father, who had been a member of the Methodist church, joined the Baptist church at the same service and they were baptized together. Lonnie, as he was called, was the sixth of seven children born to Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Brown. The Browns had five daughters and, as some would say, it was a rare day in June when the first son arrived. lie was followed, seven years later, by a brother who lived only 11 years. Since good schools were almost nunexistent in the country, he lived with his sister and her husband in Bennetsville, South Carolina for some months in order to take advantage of a good graded school. While he was living with them he was stricken with typhoid fever and lingered between life and death for several weeks. During this serious illness a revival meeting was being held in the city. The preacher was the Rev. G. D. Watson. One night during the revival, a special prayer was offered by the evangelist for the boy who was seriously ill in West Bennetwille. At the close of the prayer the minister asked if it were possible that some relative was present. His father stood and announced that he was his father. He was told by the minister to go back and tell the boy's mother that he was not going to die, that the Lord had a special work for him to do. He was able to go home about a week before Christmas. On Christmas day a messenger came to inform the family that the sister in whose home the brother was staying was seriously ill with pneumonia. She died during the holidays and was soon followed by her husband. They left one small daughter who had to be cared for by the grand- parents and the uncle who had lived with them. Soon thereafter he lost Ids only brother and a sister, both passing in a 24 -horn period. The reader can we that R. L. Brown became a steward of suffering. He connects it with his early call to the ministry. Why did he all but die with fever? Why did he lose his only brother, two sisters and three brothers-in-law in rapid succession? Why did he, in a second illness, nearly succumb to pneumonia? He believes that whatever the primary cause, there was an overruling of these chastisements to bring a stubborn will to surrender to God's will. As noted before, five girls were born to Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Brown before a son arrived. This, of course, meant that the son was left at home to help an aged father and semi -invalid mother with the business and domestic chores. For fwe years, when he should have been in school, he was busy helping to direct the work on a large farm, keeping the books for a small store, running a public cotton gin in the fall, and helping his mother with the duties connected with a home. These duties and responsibilities played a large part in his entering the Academy