John Monroe Moore
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John Monroe Moore (born 27 January 1867) was a Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, elected in 1918.
[edit] Birth and Family
He was born at Morgantown, Kentucky. He was the son of Joseph Alexander and Martha Ann (Hampton) Moore. John married Miss Bessie Harris of San Antonio, Texas 25 March 1901.
[edit] Education
Moore was educated at the Morgantown High School, and earned the A.B. degree from Lebanon College (Ohio) in Ohio in 1887. He continued his studies in 1994-95 at the Universities of Leipzig and Heidelberg in Germany. He earned the Ph.D. degree at Yale University in 1895.
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[edit] Ordained Ministry
Rev. Moore was Licensed to Preach in 1887. He was Admitted on Trial by the St. Louis Annual Conference in 1895, when he was also appointed the Pastor of the Marvin Memorial Methodist Church in St. Louis, serving until 1898. The Rev. Moore was ordained a Deacon in the M.E.C., S. in 1894, and Elder in 1898. He was then transferred to the West Texas Annual Conference where he served for four years as the Pastor of the Travis Park Church in San Antonio. In 1902 he was transferred to the North Texas Conference where he was appointed to the First Methodist Church of Dallas, serving four years.
In 1906 Rev. Moore became the Managing Editor of The Daily Christian Advocate (1906-09), an important Methodist periodical of that day. He had previously been a member of the Staff of the St. Louis Christian Advocate, 1896-98, and of the Texas Christian Advocate in 1906. Rev. Moore returned to St. Louis in 1909 as Pastor of St. John's M.E.S. Church. However, in 1910 he was elected Secretary of the Department of Home Missions of his denomination. He served with distinction in this capacity until his election to the Episcopacy in 1918, continuing also as a member in full connection of the North Texas Conference. His address was 810 Broadway, Nashville, Tennessee. Rev. Moore also was a Member of M.E.C., S. General Conferences in 1906 and 1914.
[edit] Denominational Service
The Rev. John Monroe Moore served his denomination as a member of the Joint Committee on Editing for the 1905 Methodist Hymnal. He was a member of the Federal Council of Methodism, and of the Committees on Evangelism and on Church and Country Life of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ. He was on the Executive Committee of the Home Missionary Council of his denomination. He also served in the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology.
[edit] Episcopal Ministry
The Rev. Dr. John Monroe Moore was elected a Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, at the General Conference of 1918. He was assigned the work of the M.E. Church, South in Brazil (1918-22). Bishop Moore was then assigned to East Texas and Oklahoma (1922-26), then West Texas and New Mexico (1926-30). He was then sent to the southeast to serve as Resident Bishop of Georgia and Florida (1930-34), then Missouri and Arkansas (1934-38). He retired from the active episcopacy in 1938. He was in Dallas TX at the time of his death. He died July 30,1948 and was buried in Dallas TX. August 2, 1948.
The honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity was conferred upon him by Central College of Missouri in 1908.
[edit] Selected writings
- Etchings of the East, Smith and Lamar, 1909.
- South Today, Missionary Education Movement, 1916.
[edit] References
- The New Bishops in Christian Advocate (24 May 1918), Nashville: Methodist Episcopal Church, South, p. 56.[1]
- "MOORE, Rev. John Monroe, Ph.D., D.D." in Who's Who in American Methodism, Carl F. Price, Compiler and Editor, New York: E.B. Treat & Co., 1916, pp. 150-51.