✝️ Preacher And ‘Pop’: Remembering Marshall Keeble’s Faith And His Humor 🔌
Weekend Plug-in 🔌
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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — To Gwen Cummings, the late Marshall Keeble was more than a famous traveling evangelist.
He was her “Pop.”
Keeble was born in 1878, 13 years after the end of the Civil War. He died in 1968, 16 days after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
A new exhibit at the Jackson Street Church of Christ in Nashville, Tennessee, showcases writings, sermons and other artifacts of the late Marshall Keeble. (Photo by Ted Parks)
Keeble’s formal education stopped at the seventh grade, and the Tennessee native lived most of his 89 years in the Jim Crow era of racial segregation.
Yet the humble, humorous son of former slaves became a renowned gospel preacher, baptizing tens of thousands of people, planting hundreds of churches and quietly working for integration.
READ: New Exhibit Honors Renowned Evangelist Who 'Touched Tens Of Thousands Of Lives’
I first met Cummings, Keeble’s great-granddaughter, when I interviewed 104-year-old Laura Keeble — Marshall’s widow — for The Associated Press in 2003.
Twenty-three years later, Cummings invited me to cover this week’s opening of a new exhibit at Nashville’s Jackson Street Church of Christ paying tribute to Marshall Keeble’s enduring legacy.
I enjoyed catching up with Cummings, 75, and hearing her personal reflections on the Keebles.
Bobby Ross Jr., right, visits with Gwen Cummings and her 8-year-old granddaughter, Makenna, at the new exhibit’s opening. (Photo by Ted Parks)
These highlights from our discussion have been lightly edited for clarity and brevity:
On why Marshall and Laura Keeble were more like grandparents than great-grandparents to her
“My mother’s parents died early in her life, so Marshall and Laura raised her and her sister. They were Valentines, but brother Keeble changed their name to Keeble because he had to raise two little girls.
“As a result, I grew up with him being more like a grandfather than a great-grandfather. And I lived with them a lot, in and out, both with my mom and the Keebles.
“Then as I got older, when brother Keeble would leave to travel, I would stay with sister Keeble. Then as she got older, I just started staying more because I sensed that they really relied on me to be there and help them.
“And after he died, I just stayed with her. And then when she went to a nursing home, my husband — Jackson Street elder Dr. Clinton Cummings Sr. — helped me take care of her.”
Gwen Cummings, second from left, at the Marshall Keeble exhibit’s opening. Also pictured, from left, are Darla Whitaker, Venessa White, Cathy Sherill and Stephanie Blacksmith. (Photo by Ted Parks)
On why she spearheaded the effort to create the new exhibit honoring Marshall
“I know that this man was exactly what he preached. He was a good man, humorous and full of life, and he loved the Lord.
“He’d say, ‘When I meet the Lord, I’m going to tell him how I suffered for him.’ I’d say, ‘Well, don’t you know that the Lord knows that?’ He’d say, ‘Well, you’re too smart. I’m going to tell him anyway how I loved him.’
“He was just a genuine, true Christian, and I admired that.”
A picture displayed at the exhibit shows Marshall Keeble, front center, with four of his “boy preachers,” including Hassen Reed and Robert McBride, both standing, and Robert Wood and Fred Gray. (Photo by Ted Parks)
On Marshall’s ability to view tragedies as blessings, from outliving his first wife, Minnie, and all five of their children to losing an eye
“He said, ‘Well, I’ve got more strength in this other eye to read the Bible and carry on the Gospel.’
“His son Clarence was coming home one afternoon after work — he used to do a little odd job after school — and there was a thunderstorm. And he was electrocuted right in front of the Keeble home.
“Marshall said Minnie was never the same. But he said, ‘It gave me more strength to look out and have more sympathy when people go through things.’
“And the week after Clarence’s death, he went right on and held a meeting.”
Elders of the Jackson Street Church of Christ in Nashville, Tennessee, pose by the new Marshall Keeble exhibit. Pictured, from left, are Terry Primm Sr., Richard Southall, Dr. Clinton Cummings Sr. and Jesse Tucker. (Photo by Ted Parks)
On Marshall’s response when Laura — who was 20 years younger than him — informed him of the 1964 death of his adult son Robert, his last surviving child
“When he came home that Saturday morning, I rushed into the bedroom. And my grandmother told him, ‘We lost brother.’ So he said, ‘When did it happen?’ She said, ‘It happened yesterday.’ And he said, ‘OK.’
“And we went to pick out the casket. He was so strong. And he said, ‘Well, the Lord’s will is being done.’ And he broke down crying.
“Very few times have I seen him cry, but he cried, and he was just through with it. And then he turned to me and my sister and told us to look out for Grandmama.
“He didn’t say, ‘Look out for me.’ He said, ‘Look out for Grandmama.’”
Members and guests stand to sing at the Jackson Street Church of Christ in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Ted Parks)
On why she considered Marshall and Laura — who lived to be 108 — “the best grandparents one could have”
“Because they could joke with you. He especially could joke with you and play with you and have fun and sneak you some of his sweet coffee.
“My grandmother didn’t want me to have coffee. And he would drink it just black, strong, nothing in it but sugar. And he’d just slide me a little on the saucer, and I’d turn it up at the table.
“And he would tell funny stories and tell little boys that I couldn’t stand that I liked them. And oh, he’d get a kick out of that. He’d say, ‘Gwen would love for you to call her.’
“I’d say, ‘Grandmama, make him stop. He knows I’m not saying that.’ But oh, he’d get a kick out of it. He was just a big tease with me.”
The late Laura Keeble, then 104, talks with Corrinne Osei at the Lakeshore Estates Retirement Nursing Home in Nashville, Tennessee, in 2003. (Photo by Rob Scobey)
On Marshall’s friendship with prominent White minister and longtime Gospel Advocate editor B.C. Goodpasture
“Every year at Christmastime, brother Goodpasture would buy him a suit and a shirt and a tie. It got to the point where brother Keeble said, ‘I’m not going to be naked or in need of a suit because brother Goodpasture is going to make sure I have a suit.’ And that would tickle brother Goodpasture.
“Brother Goodpasture and brother Keeble were friends way before brother A.M. Burton (a key White supporter of Marshall’s ministry) came on the scene. And brother Goodpasture did brother Keeble’s eulogy in 1968.”
Minister and historian Edward J. Robinson, left, visits the new Marshall Keeble exhibit at the Jackson Street Church of Christ in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Ted Parks)
On taking Freddie Goodpasture, B.C.’s widow, to worship with Laura Keeble at the nursing home
“So this minister said, ‘Lord, have mercy. There’s sister Goodpasture and sister Keeble. What could I possibly preach about and say to them?’
“Even though sister Keeble went to a nursing home, I made it my mission to be at that nursing home just about every day. She loved being at Lakeshore, which was a Church of Christ facility, because people would remember her husband. And she’d just sit in her wheelchair in the lobby and wait for her meals.”
Inside The Godbeat
Kate Shellnutt, editorial director of news at Christianity Today, has left the magazine after 13 years.
Shellnutt has moved into a new role as managing editor of Praxis, which works with faith-motivated entrepreneurs to address major social issues.
“After 13 years, thousands of articles, and tens of millions of page views, I don’t think I have the words to say how much Christianity Today means to me and how much I’m going to miss working there,” she wrote on LinkedIn. “As I move on to my next role, I wanted to say thank you to all my colleagues, writers, sources and readers for the most professionally and spiritually formative experience of my life and for all the important work we produced in the name of truth and light.”
Some photo highlights of Kate Shellnutt’s time at Christianity Today. (Photo via LinkedIn, used with permission)
The Final Plug
"Do you need prayer?"
That was the message on a little yellow slip of paper included with my Chick-fil-A order recently.
I could scan the QR code and ask for prayers from the folks who make my favorite chicken biscuit.
Would you like a prayer with that chicken biscuit? (Shutterstock photo)
I'm curious: Has anyone else been offered a prayer from a secular business? If so, I'd love to hear details and how you responded. Email me.
Happy Friday, everyone! Enjoy the weekend.
Bobby Ross Jr. writes the Weekend Plug-in column for Religion Unplugged and serves as editor-in-chief of The Christian Chronicle. A former religion writer for The Associated Press and The Oklahoman, Ross has reported from all 50 states and 20 nations. He has covered religion since 1999.