Broadus was ordained in 1850 and became pastor of the Baptist church in Charlottesville.
In 1859, Broadus along with James P. Boyce, Basil Manly Jr., and William Williams, founded the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Greenville, South Carolina.[1] Broadus became professor of New Testament interpretation and homiletics at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. With Manley, Broadus was also one of the first leaders of the Sunday School Board publishing operations.[2]
He delivered a lecture at the University of Virginia in memorial to Professor Gessner Harrison in 1873.
In 2018 the President of the Seminary commissioned a "Report on slavery and racisim within the history of the Southern Baptist Seminary" which found that Broadus and its principal founders combined owned 50 slaves[3] Broadus owning at least two slaves,[3] and the faculty and trustees at the seminary defended the “righteousness of slavery” and supported the Confederacy's efforts to preserve slavery.[4] After the war ended and public sentiment began to shift, Broadus 'repudiated' American slavery in 1882.[3] In 1883, he delivered an address for the Confederate cause at Louisville's Cave Hill Cemetery arguing both sides had justifiable reasons for war
In 1888, he became Southern Seminary's second president.
Broadus married Maria Carter Harrison on November 14, 1849. She died October 21, 1857. He remarried, to Charlotte Eleanor Sinclair (1836–1913) on January 4, 1859.
Legacy
Charles Spurgeon called Broadus the "greatest of living preachers."[5] Church historian Albert Henry Newman called Broadus "perhaps the greatest preacher the Baptists have produced."[5]
The official gavel of the Southern Baptist Convention controversially bears the name of Broadus and, in June, 2020, President J.D. Greear proposed the organization "retire the Broadus gavel" "amid nationwide protests around racial injustice that has led to the removal of Confederate statues and symbols."[6]
Lottie Moon was converted at an evangelistic meeting led by Broadus in 1858. Broadus had founded the Albemarle Female Institute which Moon attended and from which she graduated.
Cope, Emily (2015). ""Inspiration of Delivery": John A. Broadus and the Evangelical Underpinnings of Extemporaneous Oratory". Rhetoric Society Quarterly. 45 (4): 279–299. doi:10.1080/02773945.2015.1059471. S2CID143361149.
David S. Dockery and Roger D. Duke eds., John A. Broadus: A Living Legacy Studies in Baptist Life and Thought, ed. Michael A.G. Haykin. Nashville: Broadman and Holman Academic, 2008. 260 pp. ISBN978-0-8054-4971-6