Sixty years have come and
gone. I hope and pray that long after I cross the great divide, hundreds
will read my sermons, be taught the way of life, and take up their cross
and follow Jesus. I am leaving this bit of history that others may know
that life was no flowery bed for me but fraught with many hardships all
along the way. If Paul could tell his experiences and troubles for the
benefit of those who would live after him, I see no reason why my
readers should not know something of my past life that it may encourage
the poor boy or girl who seeks a higher plane in life, to know that all
difficulties can be overcome by the one who will not give up the fight.
I was born in Paulding
county, Georgia,
1861. 1 was only eight days old when my father started to the war, and
was four years old when he returned, and I was taught that he was my
father, and that I must respect him. Our home was on the New Hope church
battleground. After the battle nothing was left on the farm but some oak
trees. My dear mother and oldest brother walked twenty-two miles to
where they heard of a wheat field outside of the army's march, and
pulled up two bushels of wheat, beat it out on a rail the next day,
brought it home and for three months we lived under an oak tree, with
nothing to eat except boiled wheat and salted water put in it. The salt
was obtained by mother's digging up the ground where the smokehouse had
stood and boiling the dirt to get the salt from it.
At the age of fourteen, I
joined the Methodist church. At fifteen years of age, with my parents, I
moved from Georgia
to Texas. About this time I became interested in an education, and
fortunately we located near a high school, ,but unfortunately I had only
one dollar to supply all my, earthly needs. I invested that in three
yards of cloth, from which my mother made me a pair of pants. I did not
have a single school book. My teacher agreed that he would leave one
window unfastened each night and for me to come and get all books
containing my lessons for the next day, learn my lessons, and put the
books back next morning before school.
About this time I thought
I was up on vocal music and began to teach in different communities. I
stood high with the Methodist and passed my examination for a preacher
at nineteen. I then went to southwest
Texas,
and was teaching music, and breaking wild horses to ride, for a living,
and preaching Methodist doctrine to help the people. About this time I
heard old Brother W.H.D. Carrington preach the gospel, and I was shaken
into a congregation of Christians on my Methodist baptism when
twenty-one years of age. After trying to preach the gospel, and ease my
conscience for three years on Methodist baptism baptism, I made up my
mind by studying the Bible that the Lord knew nothing of sect baptism. I
then got on a
Texas pony and rode one hundred and twenty-seven miles and had John
Durst to baptize me into Christ.
On one occasion I started
out afoot to my appointment to preach, fifty-five miles away. No brother
would loan me a horse, yet a Baptist woman let me ride her saddle horse.
Six miles before reaching my appointment I had to swim a creek and got
wet all over. I wrung out my clothes but my shoes were new, and with all
the work I could do, I could not get them on while wet. So I went on to
the church house and found it crowded. I walked down the aisle with one
shoe on and the other in my hand, set it on the pulpit and preached the
gospel.
Many times I have ridden
forty miles during the night, have laid down and slept on the ground two
or three hours, and gotten up and gone on to my appointment. I have gone
more times than one without dinner and supper to reach my appointment to
preach.
The church of Christ at
Holland told me to go out and preach and they would guarantee me $50 per
month, provided the people would give it to me. Some subscribed
liberally. One old brother, worth $80,000 promised $10 to the work and
never did pay it. Another brother worth $40,000 promised $ 10 and paid
it. One sister worth $600,000 was glad I was in the work, was anxious to
help, but on account of a large herd of cattle she had bought, was
unable to pay anything.
It was J.D. Tant who held
the first meeting at Killeen, Bell County, Texas, bought candles to
light the house, stayed at a third class hotel, and bought my horse feed
at a wagon yard from Wednesday till Sunday before a single member out of
the five families who lived there invited me to their homes. Yet I
formed a congregation of eleven members and put them to work. Killeen
now has a good house and two hundred members yet I do not suppose they
want me to preach the gospel there. I labored five months under
Holland
at $50 per month as they had promised. They then called me in and heard
my report. I had baptized fifty-three and done much good, but they
feared they would have a drought. They were pleased with my work, but
did not feel able to support me longer for the work. They paid me $96 of
the $250 they owed me, and let me go. I guess they will pay me at the
judgment day.
During September, 1886, 1
got up my first debate. I did not have sense enough to get up the
proposition so I rode one hundred and forty miles horseback to get
McGary and Hansbrough to help me word propositions for debate. Since
then I have had experience in debating in seventeen states with thirteen
denominations. I have held over two hundred debates, and think I know
more about debating than I did then.
It was during the year
1886 that I attended the
Austin
state meeting where the
church of Christ divided,
when a small faction pulled off and organized a human society, and
introduced instrumental music in worship. I did not go there to attend
the meeting, but to hunt for a wife. I found the girl I wanted and told
her my business. Four years later we were married. She became the mother
of two children. Both of them are now dead. She was called home in 1894.
A grander woman for a preacher's wife never lived. I count on seeing her
with the redeemed in the city of our God.
In 1896, 1 married Miss
Nannie Yater, who now stands by my side and helps me fight the battles
of life. She is the mother of six children.
I write this bit of
history only for the benefit of the young who May come after me so they
will not think a preacher's life I is all flowers and sunshine. If I had
to live life again I know of but few changes I would make. I learned
forty years ago that to become a Christian, a man must hear Christ
(Matt. 7:24); have faith in him (John 20:30,31); repent of
his sins (Luke 24:47); confess Christ (Matt. 20:32); and
be baptized for the remission of sins (Acts
2:38).
I have never had occasion to change but still preach it that way today.
As I come nearer the
river's brink, I am fighting harder and trying to do more that God may
welcome me, than ever before. Only a few more miles and I shall rejoice
to see the other side. If God accepts me, all will be well with me.
J.D. Tant died at 4:30
o'clock, Sunday afternoon, June 1, 1941.
J.D. Tant - Texas
Preacher - was buried in the Cleburne Memorial Cemetery, Cleburne, TX A
simple stone marks the spot, bearing the legend: "Jefferson Davis Tant,
1861-1941, 'I have fought a good fight."' (From the book of J. D. Tant's
sermons, The Gospel X-Ray, published by the Firm Foundation in 1933.)
Guardian of Truth - November 20, 1986
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