|

The Rev. George Marshall
The Third Pastorate 1833 - 1872
The Rev. George Marshall, a licentiate of Washington
Presbytery, preached first on July 11, 1832. One of his listeners said, AHe
stood pale and thin like a ghost but his voice and gestures were powerful. His
prayers were better than preaching. He was young but spoke with authority; we
were taken by storm; we determined to have him.@
For a time he acted as stated supply and preached so acceptably that he
received an unanimous call. On June 26, 1833, Mr. Marshall was ordained and
installed as pastor. He was twenty-six years of age.
Mr. Marshall took an active interest in foreign and domestic missions. It was
his custom during his pastorate to have a AMissionary
Concert@
for an hour the first Sabbath of each month. He was elected a director of
Western Foreign Missionary Society in October, 1835 and served as recording
secretary in 1836. He was chosen Moderator of the Presbytery of Ohio April 18,
1837. He served as a director of the Western Theological Seminary from 1835 to
1870 and as a trustee from 1845 to 1870. He was twice appointed a commissioner
to the General Assembly at Philadelphia. Over the years, he was called upon to
serve the church at large.
Soon after Mr. Marshall became pastor of Bethel Presbyterian
Church, through his efforts, Bethel Academy was instituted in 1835. The
first building was a one-story brick structure placed near the church. Mr.
Marshall at once began the education of youth particularly to prepare them for
entrance into Jefferson College, of which he was trustee. While developing to
the fullest extent their intellectual faculties, he did not neglect their moral
and religious training. His reputation as a successful teacher and trainer of
youth induced many parents and guardians to place their children and wards under
his care.
The second Academy building was a two-story brick building
erected on the south-east corner of the cemetery plot in 1856 with a class room
on the second floor and assembly room on the first floor. There was a small
library room to the left of the entrance and a stairway to the right. This
building was used for a school until 1880. It was demolished in 1897.
The Rev. George Marshall received the degree of Doctor of
Divinity from Jefferson College in 1854.
In a sermon on the occasion of his seventeenth
anniversary as pastor of Bethel Church, Dr. Marshall referred to the conditions
he found at the beginning of his ministry as "dark
and discouraging."
He said, "the
number of church members was 130, prayer meetings were sadly neglected, with
no Sabbath school in the church, no temperance association in
existence and little manifestation of the spirit of benevolence for the
spread of the Gospel among the perishing nations of the earth."
Dr. Marshall's
preaching awakened the slumbering church and brought its people back to the
service of the Lord.
Return
to History Contents
|