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Bishop Hobart Samuel Taliaferro

Pentecostal Assemblies of the World 

1896 ~ 1973

Bishop Hobart Taliaferro was born to Coelia and John Taliaferro on November 26, 1896, in Glen Alice, Tennessee. He received his early education in Harriman, Tennessee. After serving his country in the Army during World War I, he received an honorable discharge.

 Hobart was married to Clara Kilby of Harriman, Tennessee January 27, 1921 and they moved to Atlantic City, New Jersey in 1921. To this union was born eight children, four boys and four girls. He was baptized in Jesus' name and received the Holy Ghost as a young man, ans was called  by God to the ministry. He graduated from Aenon Bible college abd did post-graduate work at Rutgers University.

He was assistant pastor of Christ Gospel Church of the Pentecostal Assemblies of the World from 1930-1932, and in 1932 he bacame pastor. He remained in this position for forty years, from 1932-1972. He was District Elder and Chairman of the New Jersey State Council and was elevated to the rank of Bishop of the P.A.W. He served faithfully and with great dedication. Bishop Taliaferro served his organization (the P.A.W.) and his generation well. He left us with a priceless legacy. The memory of the great life that he lived will long be reveared. On July 19, 1973 Bishop Taliaferro fell on sleep.

 

 

 

 

Rev. Tom Fred Tenney

United Pentecostal Church International

1933 ~ Present

Tom Fred Tenney was born December 6, 1933, in a home on Pine Street in the city of DeRidder, Louisiana. His father, Fred Eugene Tenney, was of cajun descent, having moved north from the bayous to DeRidder when he was twenty years of age. There he met and married Jennie Veve Nichols. His mother's family were pioneers of southwest Louisiana. Prior to his birth, his mother miscarried a son and promised the Lord if He gave her a son, she would dedicate him to the Lord and to ministry. Little did she know what that ministry would be-and how far-reaching the effects of her promise fulfilled would be.

T.F. Tenney's boyhood years were spent on a farm-600 acre and 200 head of cattle. When he and older sister, Nelda, played church, as kids often do, he was always the preacher.

The Tenney's family members were what one would call "good Baptist folks" - attending the First Baptist Church in DeRidder. Thesincere preaching of some of those early pastors made a profound impact upon the young man Tom. He recalls, "The Baptists taught me that the Bible was the infallible, inerrant Word of God. This served as a backdrop when I literally read my way into the full gospel experience.

The summer of 1949, at the age of sixteen, Tom Fred Tenney had an encounter that forever changed his life. Slipping into the back row of the Pentecostal church across the tracks to hear a nun give her testimony, more on a lark than anything else, he found himself fascinated as the nun spoke for about twenty minutes; then a lady preacher delivered a semon. He had never heard such preaching-and from a woman! It simply was not done that way in the Baptist church. Yet, feeling something he could not escape, he found himself back there the next night. He did not understand their doctrine. He did not understand their worship. He did not understand their lifestyle. But he could deny what he felt. The connection had been made. The Holy Spirit was drawing and before school started in the fall, Tom Fred Tenney was a new man in Christ.

Almost immediately he felt called into ministry and service. Opportunities were given for him to speak at youth rallies and fellowship meetings. Remembering those early days of his experience, he says, "I felt that you had to do whatever the Word said and whatever leadership told you to do."

His mentor and spiritual father was a great Christian, George L. Glass Sr. He was a man of prayer and of the Word. Consequntly, in those early days of his walk with Jesus, T.F. Tenney made a commitment to prayer and to the Word. He promised the Lord he would pray at least an hour a day. He says today, "By His grace, I faithfully fulfill that." He also made a vow to God that he would study and, as far as he could, master thre chapters of the Bible a day. It took him over thre years to go through the Scriptures in this manner. He had very little reference material. His mother bought him a Jameson-Fawcett-Brown Complete Commentary. He had a Cruden's Concordance, a Bible dictionary, and later a set of books called Handfuls on Purpose. "Some nights I was up until two or three o'clock in the morning, keeping my vow-especially when I got to the 119th Psalm! It wasn't just a cursory reading-but it was looking into the Scriptures, searching everything I could find on the subject. Things that God gave me then-when I was sixteen, seventeen, eighteen years of age-are still with me today."

In 1952 T.F. Tenney was elected Louisiana District youth secretary. From 1952 until this day, almost without exception, he has held some position within the United Pentecostal Church International.

Tom Fred Tenney and Thetus Caughron were married in West Monroe, Louisiana on December 27, 1952. They have two children, Tom Gregory and Teri Denise (Spears). They have been blessed with five grandchildren and now two great-grandchildren.

T.F. Tenny was ninteen, and Thetus was eighteen, when they were elected to the pastorate of a fine home missions church in Monroe, Louisiana, in February 1953. He comments today, "Those were such precious people! Many of them to this day bear in their bodies the marks of T.F. Tenney and his immaturity. They were patient and kind."

During their time in Monroe, T.F. Tenney was elected as sectional youth leader. In 1954 he was subsequently elected district youth president. He continued in that position until 1960 when he was elected international youth president-a position he held until 1969.

During the time T.F. Tenney was Pentecostal Conquerors president, the Bible Quizzing program was launched, a number of youth camps across the country wre initiated, and Youth Conventions were founded. Sheaves for Christ reached all-time highs and was expanded to bless a number of other divisions of the church. The Conquerors Tread was first published under his leadership-the forerunner of today's Conquerr magazine.

At the General Conference in 1969, the name T.F. Tenney was one of the three presented for election as Foreign Missions director. The votes were tallied, and it was announced that he had been elected. He was only 36 years old. It was unprecedented for a man of his age to be elected to one of the highest offices-and one of the most responsible offices in the United Pentecostal Church International.

He assumed the responsibility of Foreign Missions director the first week in January, 1970. According to his recollection: "I walked into the office in St. Louis that first week in January totally ignorant. All I knew to do was pou myself into it. I would take stacks of files home at night and read through entire files of missionaries and past missions experiences, reading both current and history. In those days I had somewhat of a photographic memory. I am sorry to say that at my age now I've evidently run out of film! The  Division had faced a major financial crises. We were in deficit. That year, Partners in Missions was launched. It was two years before there was a turnaround. But when it came, Foreign Missions zoomed! I can remember the year we passed the million dollar mark, and then the two million mark. It was unprecendented. God was with us. New nations were opened. We began an emphesis on Bible schools and a number of new Bible schools were opened around the world. Regional field supervisors were appointed. The School of Missions was begun. Short-term evangelistic policies and programs were implemented. Field conferences and regional conferences for missionaries were established. The fields were opened up for more participation from pastors and evangelists to make overseas trips and assist in the work. Missionary morale was on the rise.To God be the glory-revival came! Oh, the stories I could tell of my experiences as Foreign Missions director, if only time would permit."

In the latter part of 1975, Pastor George Glass Sr. resigned the church at DeRidder, Louisiana. The church immediately called the Tenney's and asked if they would consider the church. He promise to make it a matter of prayer. The reality was simple: he was leading a world-wide effort to proclaim the gospel-that he would even consider going to a small town of 12,000 people in Louisiana was almost beyond comprehension. But he did promise to pray. So he did. Some weeks later, seated on a swing on his back porch, meditating and praying, he knew he had to go.

From 1975-1978, Thetus and T.F. Tenney served the city of DeRidder and the people of the First Pentecostal Church untiringly. At that time, even though it was a small town, they averaged around 400 every Sunday. God was gracious and good. He blessed. Revival came. Before thay left, there were in excess of 200 active men, and they had seen attendance as high as 1200. Every Sunday morning the building would be filled for the morning worship service. Even the balconies were full. People from various denominations across the community would go to their Sundsy school and then come to First Pentecostal Church for the morning worship service.

 The final night of Louisiana Camp Meeting in 1978, C.G. Weeks, who had been the district superintendent for twenty-five years, left the platform and called for an ambulance. By the next day, he had gone to his eternal reward and Louisiana was in need of a leader. An election was called for to be held in August. In forty-one years of existence, the Louisiana District had only two superintendents. It was a tense day that hot August afternoon when hundreds of preachers and delegates gathered from across the state for an election held in the tabernacle on the campground. The meeting was presided over by General Superintendent N.A. Urshan. T.F. Tenney was elected. It was a day of deep mixed emotions. To have been asked by the brethren, among whom he had labored and with whom he had been reared, was one of the highest honors of his life. In his first remarks to the ministerial body, he pledged to them an adminiatration of "progress and peace under the hand of God."

From that summer day in 1978 throuh 2005, the Tenney's servd the Louisian District and kept that marvelous portion of the family of God on the cutting edge of preaching, prayer, outreach, and giving. During their tenure, new departments and ministries were launched and the existing departments were strengthened and experienced growth. In the last couple of years, the Louisiana District's giving to each of the UPCI programs placed them as first in the nation, being the first district to accomplish this. Conferences, seminars, camps, and camp meetings continue to be hallmark events benefiting ministry and laity alike. As pledged, they were days of progress and peace!

The Tenney's have entered their retirement years. They continue to travel and speak. They continue to share the gospel and invest themselves in people-teaching and preaching the whole gospel to the whole world. Thetus Tenney continues to serve as the coordinator of the World Network of prayer. T.F. Tenney is the bishop emeritus of the Louisisna District and serves as an honorary member of the UPCI General Board.

"I have often said I could see further because I stood on the shoulders of giants. If I had another life to give, I would want to give it again for this lovely Lord and His great gospel."-T.F. Tenney Audio and Video Recordings of T.F. Tenney are available in our resource department.

 

 

 Rev. Isaac Hilliard Terry

United Pentecostal Church International

1912 ~ 2004

Ike Terry was born July 19, 1912 in Midland, Texas. He grew up in a strict Methodist home with four sisters and three brothers. His parents were educated people who had high school educational aspirations for all their children. Despite the elevated educational goals his parents had for their son Ike, he discontinued school after completing the eighth grade. All of his brothers and sisters became college graduates, some with masters and doctorate degrees. The only course of study Bro. Terry really loved was the word of God. Despite Bro. Terry's limited academic accomplishments to that of his siblings, his father, close to death, told his mother, "Ike became more successful than all the rest." 

Prior to his salvation, Ike Terry worked for the Oil Well Supply Company in Monahans, Texas. One day while using the services of a telephone operator to locate supply stores for a part, he expressed his appreciation for her help and offered to buy her a coke. Her name was Marguerite Foster, but he called her "Maggie." On meeting her, Brother Terry said, "She was a typical telephone operator in a West Texas oil field, and I was a typical fellow on the oil field. We were both wild as deer!" Their courtship began that night, and they married on October 16, 1938.

In Monahans, they became acquainted with the A.H. Browing family, who pastored a Pentecostal Assemblies of Jesus Christ church there. They were both baptized in Jesus' name on Sunday, February 12, 1939. Sister Terry received the Holy Ghost the following May 29th, and Bro. Terry received the Holy Ghost about  a year and a half later. The night he received the infilling of the Holy Ghost, he was praying inside their trailer, which was located in a large trailer park. Speaking of that tremendous event, he said, "About the time the Holy Ghost hit me, I began to scream in tongues, and the lights came on all over the trailer park. I became a gazing stock to that group living around us."

As a newborn babe in Christ, I.H. Terry desired the sincere milk of the Word of God, and he grew strong in the Lord. His pastor taught him the simplicity of the gospel. He also learned from Brother browning the necessity of church government, which became the hallmark in Brother Terry's teaching.

A few years after being filled with the Holy Ghost the Lord called him to preach the gospel. His first revival was held in Ft. Stockton, Texas. With Brother Browning's blessings, Bro. Terry relocated to bakersfield to start a Oneness Apostolic Pentecostal church. At that time, in 1943, there were no churches of that kind in Bakersfield.

After renting a church building, their first service was held on Saturday night, November 13, 1943. Eight people were present. As the news spread of the first Jesus Name church, attendance grew, and grew, until several properties were purchased to accomodate the growing congregation.

On December 15, 1975, Sister Terry suffered a major stroke and was incapacitated until November 1982, when the Lord took her home to be with Him. In November 1983, after pastoring First Pentecostal Church for 40 years, Brother Terry retired.

Over the years, approximately 40 preachers have gone out from First Pentecostal Church. Across America and overseas are preachers who were taught under the leadership of I.H. Terry.

On May 6, 2004 I.H. Terry passed from this world to his heavenly reward. Audio recordings of Brother Terry are available from the audio library of the Apostolic Archives International.

    

  

Rev. Wayne Trout

United Pentecostal Church International

1933 ~ Present

 

Wayne Trout was born on January 30, 1933 in the rolling hills of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania near the small community of Georgetown. Raised on a farm, he learned how to work hard at a young age. He walked one and a half miles to the Presbyterian Church on Sunday; he received an 8-year award for perfect attendance.

At age 14, he and his younger sister Clara were forced to leave home. He applied for a job at General Motors and told them he was 16 yrs old to get the job, it was a matter of survival in order to provide for his sister.

At age 16, living in a boarding house, he met a young man who invited him to church. They went to the Broad Street Pentecostal Church in Oxford, PA where he was baptized in Jesus name by Pastor Edward Brack. Bro. Trout attended Pentecostal Bible Institute (PBI) in Tupelo for 1 year.
 
At the age of 19, Bro. Trout received his call from the Lord; he wanted to start a church. He was determined to do the will of God in his life. There were those who said he was too young or that it was impossible, but none of it discouraged the young man who would later be nicknamed the jumping jack of the East due to his tireless enthusiasm for the things of God.
 
Bro. Trout established the first Jesus name work in the State of Delaware in 1952the Gospel Light Tabernacle in Wilmington, Delaware. They started by renting a building. The Mission at 2nd and Adams Street in downtown Wilmington. Later they bought property and he built a church. He learned building skills that he would use in later years help support his family and build churches. The same church building still stands and has a thriving congregation to this day. Over the last 57 years, those hands have constructed10 buildings and additions for the three churches.
 Bro. Trout served as Youth President for the Eastern District of the United Pentecostal Church which at that time consisted of the states of New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. He started an outreach in Salem, New Jersey. Two men from this work became home missions pastors.

 

 

Joseph Marcel Turpin

Pentecostal Assemblies of the World

1887 ~ 1943

Bishop Joseph Marcel Turpin, the beloved son of the late John Francis Turpin, and Cora E. White, was born January 1, 1887, at Denton, Maryland. Elder Turpin was the founer of the Apostolic Church, Monument and Eden Streets, Baltimore, Maryland. He was a great lover of the truth for the truth's sake. He received the baptism of the Holy Ghost among those who taught the second definate work of grace or Eradicational theory. He later accepted the finished work of Calvary, which cost him many friends, and later still, he accepted the message of baptism in Jesus' name and the Oneness of God.

He was noted for his fatherly spirit in dealing with the saints of the church. He called them, son, or daughter and they looked upon him as a father. This relationship was marked at the funeral, as the members of the church filed past the bier, their plaintive cries were heard "My Father: My Father!" This expression of breavement was greatest when one of his favorite songs was sung, "Good morning, Heaven," It took twelve nurses to minister to the many sorrowing sisters of the church.

Elder Turpin with Elder Schooler founded the Eastern District Council over which he presided for about twelve years. During this time his ministry to the East was greatly blessed and owned of God: he filled the position of Chairman until he became a presbyter of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Jesus Christ. On his return to the Pentecostal Assemblies of the World, he was elected to the Eldership of the organization, which office he held at the time of his demise.

He filled the following offices of honor and responsibility to which he was first appointed by Bishop G.T. Haywood, and later elected for several consecutive years. First, District Elder, then Presbyter and later he was nominated at Indianapolis, Indiana, and elected Bishop in the Pentecostal Assemblies of the World. He presided over the Eastern Dioceses for about ten years. Bishop Turpin in a measure, held the same position in the East as Bishop Haywood did in other parts of the country. A mild tempered man, he was quick to forgive and to be kind to those who opposed him.

Speaking at his funeral, Elder John W. Pritcher, a white brother, of a trinity organization who had ordained him for the ministry many years ago said: "Bishop Turpin was noted for his zeal and vision. He had succeeded at Monument and Eden in a building where he failed with a garage and a moving picture company failed to succeed with a theatre.

Twelve years prior to his passing, Bishop G.T. Haywood and Bishop Turpin were both sick unto death. God took Bishop Haywood to Himself, raised up Bishop Turpin and permitted him to remain until Wednesday March 17th, 1943 before calling him home.