J. Vernon McGee

Minister

Birthday June 17, 1904

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Hillsboro, Texas, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1988-12-1, Templeton, California, U.S. (84 years old)

Nationality United States

#43673 Most Popular

1645

Through an ancestor from Scotland, Thomas McGehee (1645-1717), McGee was the sixth cousin of John R. Rice, a fellow fundamentalist and Baptist evangelist and pastor.

1904

John Vernon McGee (June 17, 1904 – December 1, 1988) was an American ordained Presbyterian minister, pastor, Bible teacher, theologian, and radio minister.

McGee was born in Hillsboro, Texas, to itinerant parents, John McGee and Carrie McGee (née Lingner).

1918

His father held many jobs, his last one being an engineer at a cotton mill in Oklahoma, where he died in 1918 when Vernon was 14 years old.

After his father's death, Vernon's family relocated to Tennessee.

Before entering the ministry, Vernon worked as a bank teller.

After attending Southwestern at Memphis where he majored in Greek, he graduated magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Columbia Theological Seminary and Master of Theology and Doctor of Theology degrees from Dallas Theological Seminary.

The bank manager for whom McGee had earlier worked paid for his seminary education.

1920

This Fundamentalist–Modernist controversy within the Presbyterian church had been growing since the 1920s.

1933

McGee's ordination occurred on June 18, 1933, at the Second Presbyterian Church in Nashville, Tennessee.

McGee's first church as a pastor was located on a red-Clay Hill in Midway, Georgia.

He served Presbyterian churches in Decatur, Georgia; Nashville, Tennessee; and Cleburne, Texas, where he met and later married Ruth Inez Jordan.

1941

McGee and his wife moved to Pasadena, California, where he accepted the pastorate at the Lincoln Avenue Presbyterian Church in 1941.

The McGees' first child, a daughter named Ruth Margaret McGee, was born prematurely and died when she was a few hours old.

1946

The McGees later had another daughter, Lynda Karah McGee, in 1946.

At the Lincoln Avenue Church, McGee started the Open Bible Hour radio program, which aired once per week.

1949

In 1949, the program was expanded to a half-hour daily schedule and renamed the High Noon Bible Class.

McGee became the pastor of the Church of the Open Door in downtown Los Angeles in 1949, succeeding Louis T. Talbot (1889–1976).

That same year, McGee gave one of the daily invocations at Billy Graham's two-month-long Christ for Greater Los Angeles Campaign.

1952

In 1952, McGee was asked by evangelist and university president John Brown, owner of KGER radio station (now KLTX) in Long Beach, California, to take over a radio program (started in 1950 by young-Earth creationist Harry Rimmer, whom McGee admired) to which listeners could send in questions that were answered on the air.

1953

In the next year, 1953, another family tragedy occurred.

McGee's mother was killed after being struck by an intoxicated driver in Pasadena.

McGee did not press charges against the driver and only requested of the judge that justice be done.

This story was told in Thru the Bible, Vol. 29: The Prophets (Jonah/Micah), Chapter 3: "The Prophet's Third Message."

1955

By 1955, McGee had a well-publicized break with the Presbyterian Church, in which he claimed that the church's "liberal leadership [had] taken over the machinery of the presbytery with a boldness and ruthlessness that is appalling."

1967

In 1967, he began broadcasting the Thru the Bible radio program (TTB).

In a systematic study of each book of the Bible, McGee took his listeners from Genesis to Revelation in a two-and-a-half-year "Bible Bus trip", as he called it.

He had earlier preached a "Through the Bible in a Year" series of sermons, each devoted to one chapter of the Bible, at the Church of the Open Door.

1970

It was during this time that a large number of nondenominational evangelical Protestant churches, such as the Moody Church in Chicago, had begun to appear across the U.S. After retiring from the pastorate at the Church of the Open Door in 1970, McGee devoted his remaining years to the Thru the Bible Radio Network.

He also served as chairman of the Bible department at the Bible Institute of Los Angeles and as a visiting lecturer at Dallas Theological Seminary.

After retiring from the pastorate in January 1970, and realizing that two and a half years was not enough time to teach the whole Bible, McGee completed another study of the entire Bible in a five-year period.

At the time of McGee's death, the Thru the Bible program aired in 34 languages, but has since been translated into over 100 languages.

It is broadcast on Trans World Radio throughout the world every weekday.

McGee advocated creationism and upheld the literal interpretation of the first chapter of the Book of Genesis, interpreting the six "days of creation" to six 24-hour periods of time.

Recurring themes in the TTB broadcasts were the doctrines of Sola fide (salvation through faith alone) and [absolute] assurance of salvation, or eternal security, which proclaims that once a person sincerely accepts Christ as personal savior, there is nothing they can do, no sin they can commit, that will forfeit their salvation.

He often spoke of the days of societal apostasy in Christianity and secularism that he believed he was witnessing during his lifetime, warning that spiritual apostasy was always the first of the three stages leading to the fall of nations, commonly observed throughout the Bible, the second and third being, respectively, immorality and political anarchy.

Frequently in TTB broadcasts, McGee would tell anecdotes, many from personal recollection, about prominent evangelical Christian ministers from the past century, such as G. Campbell Morgan, Lewis Sperry Chafer, Mel Trotter, and Dwight L. Moody and some of his successors at the Chicago Moody Church, such as R. A. Torrey and Harry A. Ironside.

McGee also frequently referenced favorite Bible passages in his sermons, such as Galatians 6:7 (Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap).

The continued success of the long-running TTB program has been attributed to McGee's oratorical abilities, folksy manner, and distinctive accent, as well as his insistence on maintaining the original mission, which was to spread the Scriptures with consistency of message.

McGee received his advanced degrees from the Dallas Theological Seminary.