Monroe E. Dodd

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Monroe Elmon Dodd, Sr. (September 8, 1878August 6, 1952) was an American clergyman who was a pioneer radio preacher, the pastor of the First Baptist Church of Shreveport, Louisiana, and the founder of the former Dodd College for Girls. He is also considered the father of the Southern Baptist Convention Cooperative Program for foreign missions.

Dodd was born in Brazil, a community in Henderson County, Tennessee, between Memphis and Nashville, to William H. Dodd and the former Lucy Williams. In 1904, he received both his bachelor of arts and bachelor of divinity degrees from Union University, a Baptist-affiliated institution in Jackson, Tennessee, the seat of Madison County. From the same university, he received a doctor of divinity degree in 1909 and an LL.D. degree in 1930. He obtained a second doctor of divinity degree from Baptist-affiliated Baylor University in Waco, Texas, in 1918. He also did correspondence work through the University of Chicago and the Crozer Theological Seminary in Upland, Pennsylvania, near Chester.

Dodd served in the Spanish-American War in 1898.

He pastored churches in Fulton, Paducah, and Louisville, Kentucky, and Los Angeles, prior to accepting the pastorate in Shreveport. He was an officer of the Foreign, Home, and State mission boards, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, and the "75 Million Campaign" to reach the unchurched. That effort, established in 1925, is now known as the "Cooperative Program". Dodd served as a president of the Louisiana Baptist Convention and the Southern Baptist Convention and was a member of the executive committee of the Baptist World Alliance.

He began preaching on radio from Shreveport when the new medium first appeared in the 1920s. At the time, he was the First Baptist pastor, holding pulpit duties from 1912-1950. He also opened Dodd College. For a year he hired future Louisiana Governor James Houston "Jimmie" Davis, a graduate of Baptist-affiliated Louisiana College in Pineville, as an instructor of history. Dodd wrote fourteen books.

On October 10, 1904, Dodd married the former Emma Savage, the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. George M. Savage of Jackson, Tennessee. They had four daughters and a son: Dorothy, Helen, Martha, Monroe E. Dodd, Jr. (born 1910), and Frances.

The Southern Baptist Convention offers the M.E. Dodd Cooperative Program Award, which recognizes individuals who have demonstrated continuous excellence in supporting missions at home and abroad through the SBC. Carlisle Driggers, the executive director/treasurer of the South Carolina Baptist Convention, won the M.E. Dodd award in 2006. The award is a bronze sculpture of a sower scattering seed around the world.

[edit] References

  • "Monroe Elmon Dodd", A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. I (1988), p. 249
  • "Exemplary Cooperative Program Support", SBC Life: The Journal of the Southern Baptist Convention, January 2007, p.8