JACKSONVILLE (FBC)When James McCall was in his
mid-teens, two men whom he had never met were laying the
foundation for something that would make a world of difference in
McCalls life and in countless other lives.
The two men, Frank Faris, associational missionary for South
Florida Association, and T.S. Boehm, pastor of First Baptist
Church in Lakeland, envisioned offering theological education for
God-called individuals who had only high school training. In
1943, the first classes for Florida Bible Institute were held in
classrooms at Boehms church.
Courtesy photo
Sid Smith (r), director of the African-American Ministries Division of the Florida Baptist Convention, presented the John and Nancy Sullivan Multicultural Award to Winston W. Rudolph May 5 at BCF in Graceville.
While the school was developing, McCall was also maturing. He
had graduated from high school, served in the military, married
and found employment. He seemed to have everythingexcept
Christ. At 28 years old, through the urging of his wife to attend
church, McCall made his profession of faith in Jesus at First
Baptist Church in Pompano Beach.
A year later, McCall sensed a call from God into the pastoral
ministry. Yet, at age 29, with a wife, two children and no
college degree, McCall was unsure how to prepare for ministry.
By 1959, Faris and Boehms vision had become reality. The
school, renamed Baptist Bible Institute, had moved to Graceville
in 1953 and come under the ownership and direction of the Florida
Baptist State Convention.
McCall and his family turned to BBI for the education he badly
needed, moving to the Panhandle town.
We had the best year of our life, to that point, because
we were in Gods will and living on the campus of His
school, recalled McCall. We were going to school all
week learning theology, preaching, church history and religious
education and then putting them into practice in the evenings and
on weekends, he said. He served as pastor of West Pittman
Baptist Church in Westville from 1959 until 1963.
McCall invested time and energy in his studies at BBI and then
continued his theological education at William Carey College and
New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
Still, BBI has held a fond place in his heart. I wouldnt
give anything for my studies there, he said.
After serving as pastor of three churches in Mississippi,
McCall and his family returned to Florida in 1975, where he
served as pastor First Baptist Church of Bonifay and First
Baptist Church of Sebring, until he retired in 1993.
In his retirement, McCall stays busy, having served as
chaplain for his alma mater in 1993-94; as interim for six
Florida Baptist churches, and as pastor emeritus for the Sebring
church.
Jay McCall represents the epitome of what any school
could hope for its alumni, observed Thomas A. Kinchen,
president of The Baptist College of Florida (formerly BBI).
Throughout his ministry in a county-seat Panhandle town to
growing a thriving church in Sebring, Jay has kept his Lord
first, his family dear to him and his loyalty to his alma mater
as a focal point.
Now in his mid-70s, McCall is grateful for the two men
who followed their hearts to establish and to others who nurtured
the school.
As the school has remained faithful to its purpose, it
has grown to meet the needs of God-called people, he
reflected. I can think of hundreds of graduates of the
school all over our country and other parts of the world,
faithfully making a difference in the lives of people.