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Cecil Sherman dies of complications following massive heart attack

NewsJim White  |  April 16, 2010

ATLANTA — Cecil Sherman, longtime moderate Baptist leader and a key figure in the development of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, died from complications of a heart attack April 17 in Richmond, Va.

Sherman, the first coordinator of the CBF, suffered a massive heart attack April 15 and died two days later at Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center in Richmond. He was 82.

A worship service celebrating his life will be held in the afternoon of April 20 at River Road Church, Baptist, in Richmond, where Sherman was a member. A second service will follow at First Baptist Church in Asheville, N.C., on April 23. More details on the arrangements are forthcoming. Updates will be posted here.

Born Dec. 26, 1927, Sherman was a native of Fort Worth, Texas. He graduated from Baylor University in Waco, Texas; Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas; and Princeton Theological Seminary in Princeton, N.J.

Sherman served as pastor of several churches, including First Baptist Church of Chamblee, Ga. (1956-1960); First Baptist Church of College Station, Texas (1960-1962); First Baptist Church of Asheville, N.C. (1964-1984); and Broadway Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas (1985-1992). He also served at Baptist General Convention of Texas as staff associate in the evangelism division from 1962-1964.

As the Southern Baptist Convention shifted to the right beginning in 1979, Sherman was among those who resisted the change, paving the way for the formation of the CBF in 1991. He served as its coordinator from 1992 to 1996.

“Cecil had the courage and capacity to look reality in the face and make hard decisions. His leadership was widely recognized,” said Jim Slatton, retired pastor of River Road Church, Baptist, who chaired the search committee that recommended Sherman for the CBF role. “Cecil is a genuine churchman, who has a real life-wish for the local church and for the Baptist denomination and for Baptist principles.”

Sherman met Dorothy “Dot” Hair in 1950, and the two were married on Dec. 23, 1953, in Greer, S.C. After 54 years of marriage, Dot died Aug. 1, 2008. Just days before her death, Sherman was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia and underwent repeated treatments at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.

At the time of his diagnosis, Sherman was serving as a pastor of Westover Baptist Church in Richmond. He had also served as interim pastor of several Richmond churches including Chamberlayne Baptist Church, Westhampton Baptist Church and River Road Church.

Sherman’s cancer treatments had been largely successful, and he was able to continue serving as a visiting professor of pastoral ministries at Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond, where he has taught since 1996.

“His devotion to his students was nothing short of legendary. He saw himself preparing a new generation of ministers for local church ministry,” said Ron Crawford, the seminary’s president. “His service at BTSR has made a grand contribution to students.  It is a contribution that will pay dividends in the lives of ministers and churches for decades to come.”

Also an author, Sherman’s writings include a 2008 memoir, By My Own Reckoning, and the Formations Bible study commentary series for adult Sunday school classes. Recently, he had been writing a new book, which had not yet been published.

Sherman is survived by family including his only child, Eugenia Brown of Madison, Wis.; a brother, Bill Sherman of Nashville, Tenn.; a sister, Ruth Hamm of Edmond, Okla.; and a grandson, Nathaniel Brown.

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Tags:BaptistsCBF CommunicationsCarla Wynn Davis
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