“There aren’t too many 102s around,” Eugene Florence said with a grin at Southwestern Baptist Seminary.
But the preacher, who attended Southwestern’s so-called “Negro extension centers” for eight years during the era of segregation, said the key to living to his ripe old age is simple: “Obedience is what the Lord requires. I have always been obedient, even from the time of my youth. Be obedient and the Lord will add to your days.
In December 2004, Southwestern president Paige Patterson awarded Florence a master of divinity degree, affirming that he had done all that any white student had done in the 1950s to receive the degree. During a Feb. 14 chapel service, Florence again thanked Patterson for giving him his “rights.”
In introducing the preacher, Patterson did not back away from the sad history that delayed Florence’s master’s degree and his welcome to the chapel pulpit at the Fort Worth, Tex., campus.
“Can you believe that there was a day when that precious man of God would not be welcome in this pulpit?” Patterson said, underscoring to students, faculty and guests who filled the auditorium the importance of standing up for right, even if everyone around them teaches otherwise.
Standing throughout the 40-minute message, Florence delivered the central points in the impassioned style common among African-American preachers, speaking from Psalms 116:12 to exhort his audience to “take the initiative and ask, ‘What shall I render unto the Lord?'”
Eliciting shouts of encouragement from the audience, the 102-year-old preacher testified that, among other things, the Lord deserves the Christian’s love, praise, confidence, trust, service and companionship.
“God has given us a new nature that thirsts after him and hungers after his righteousness,” Florence said. “Get on your knees every day and thank God because we have much to be thankful for. You must serve him in the morning. Serve him at noonday. Serve him at midnight.”
Although Florence’s mother died when he was 4 and he did not meet his father until he was 17, Florence never strayed far from the Lord.
“I have always hung around the church; sometimes inside and sometimes out,” he said to a laughing audience. “Sometimes we get out of line, but if you come back to serve the Lord, he will forgive you. He will not turn us away if we surrender and serve him.”
Florence called on God to give his children the power to continue following him day to day.
At the close of Florence’s message, Patterson made note of the role former Southwestern professor of ethics T.B. Maston played in educating the Southern Baptist Convention on the error of racism. Maston not only taught many of the courses in the seminary’s “Negro extension centers,” but he also sponsored the program.
“Dr. Maston knew that racism was wrong,” Patterson said. “He wrote ‘The Bible and Race,’ and showed that there is no place for racism in the Bible. “