Sion Blythe Explained

Sion Blythe
Birth Date:January, 1781
Birth Place:North Carolina, U.S.
Death Place:Coahuila y Tejas, Mexico
Occupation:Baptist pastor
Spouse(S):Sarah T. McMinn

Sion Blythe (January 1781 – 23 August 1835) was a Baptist pastor who assisted in creation of several churches in North Carolina and Alabama, United States in the early days of the Baptist movement.[1]

Blythe was born in western North Carolina in January 1781. He was baptized when aged 21 and ordained as a pastor when aged 23, preaching in Buncombe County, North Carolina and elsewhere.He was among the founders of Locust Old Field Church in western NorthCarolina.[1] He married Sarah T. McMinn in 1803.[2] In 1807 he was one of the founders of the French Broad Association of six churches in or near the county of Buncombe.[3]

Blythe moved to Alabama in 1816 and settled on Canoe Creek in St. Clair County.He was called the "reluctant preacher" because when he first arrived as a farmer settler in Alabama he tried to hide the fact that he was a minister, since he had some doubts about his ability. The secret could not be kept.[4] He helped organize Mount Zion Church (now First Baptist Church of Springville) and several other churches in today's St. Clair, Blount, Shelby, and Jefferson Counties, including the Mount Moriah Church.[1] [5] First Baptist Church Trussville was founded on 14 July 1821 by nine men with Blythe as pastor.[6] In 1823 he was appointed moderator of the newly formed Mount Zion Association, and messenger to the Alabama Baptist State Convention.[1] Blythe was a successful revivalist, described as "tender, urgent, vehement".However, he was said to be better at winning converts than teaching doctrine, and was "somewhat of an Arminian".[7]

Blythe left Alabama in 1834 and settled in Texas in April, 1835, at that time part of Mexico.[1] He was granted a tract of land about seven miles south of the present town of Dublin.[8] On 23 August the same year he and one of his children died of a fever. He was survived by his wife and nine children.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sion Blythe . Primitive Baptist Online . 2010-08-29.
  2. Web site: Selected Families and Individuals . Earl Jones . 2010-08-29.
  3. Web site: NORTH-CAROLINA . A GENERAL HISTORY OF THE BAPTIST DENOMINATION IN AMERICA, AND OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD . David Benedict . 1813 . Lincoln & Edmands . 2010-08-29.
  4. Book: 52 . A history of the rise and progress of the Baptists in Alabama: with a miniature history of the denomination from the apostolic age down to the present time, interspersed with anecdotes original and selected, and concluded with an address to the Baptists of Alabama . Hosea Holcombe . Hosea Holcombe . King and Baird . 1840.
  5. Web site: Historical Marker Program: St. Clair County . Alabama Historical Asspociation . 2010-08-29.
  6. Web site: Quick Facts . First Baptist Church Trussville . 2010-08-29 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100531054311/http://fbctrussvilleonline.org/about_us.htm . May 31, 2010 .
  7. Book: 27 . Alabama Baptists: Southern Baptists in the heart of Dixie . Wayne Flynt . University of Alabama Press . 1998 . 0-8173-0927-6 .
  8. Web site: Chesley Turnbow . U.S. Biographies Project . 2010-08-29.