W. W. Harris was the first pastor. In 1897,
George Washington Truett accepted the position of Pastor and remained there until his death in July 1944. In 1944, Dr.
W. A. Criswell became the pastor. During his pastorate, the church expanded to multiple buildings covering five blocks in Downtown Dallas, eventually becoming the largest Southern Baptist church in the world. Dr. Criswell became Pastor Emeritus from 1995 until his death in 2002. In 1990, Joel C. Gregory became pastor, followed by O. S. Hawkins in 1993,
Mac Brunson in 1999, and
Robert Jeffress in 2007.
W. A. Criswell Pastor
W. A. Criswell never spoke in support of
racial segregation in his sermons but was critical of the Supreme Court's decision in
Brown v. Board of Education and of federal intervention against
de jure southern segregation. In 1956 he made an address denouncing forced integration to a
South Carolina evangelism conference. A day later, he addressed the
South Carolina legislature remarking that he "strongly favored racial segregation" and charged that those who were attempting to integrate the white church were "infidels, dying from the neck up." He was particularly critical of the
National Council of Churches and the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). After his 1968 election as president of the
Southern Baptist Convention, he said that his church already had many non-white members and was open to all regardless of race. In 1970, he remarked that he had "come to the profound conclusion that to separate by coercion the body of Christ on the basis of skin pigmentation was unthinkable, unchristian and unacceptable to God". He asserted publicly, "I don't think that segregation could have been or was at any time intelligently, seriously supported by the Bible. In September 1992, after two years of pastoring, senior pastor Joel C. Gregory resigned, saying it was due to the refusal of Pastor W. A. Criswell to relinquish control of the church, despite Gregory being the senior pastor
de jure. In 1994, Gregory published his book "Too Great a Temptation: The Seductive Power of America's Super Church", detailing his reasons for leaving.
Robert Jeffress Since 2008, Pastor
Robert Jeffress has been involved in numerous controversies, including hate speech against
homosexuals,
Muslims,
Catholics,
Mormons and president
Barack Obama. In November 2008, Jeffress, in his sermon "Gay Is Not OK", stated that "What they [homosexuals] do is filthy. It is so degrading that it is beyond description. And it is their filthy behavior that explains why they are so much more prone to disease." In September 2010, Pastor Jeffress branded Islam as an "evil, evil religion", claiming that it "promoted
pedophilia". In December 2010, Jeffress established a "Naughty and Nice List", identifying businesses based on whether or not they openly celebrated Christmas, saying "I wanted to do something positive to encourage businesses to acknowledge Christmas and not bow to the strident voices of a minority who object to the holiday." Also in 2010, he referred to
Roman Catholicism as a "Satanic" result of
"Babylonian mystery religion". In October 2011 at the
Values Voter Summit, Jeffress branded
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) "a cult". He received widespread criticism but he has not retracted, despite then U.S. presidential candidate and LDS church member
Mitt Romney requesting that he do so. On November 4, 2012, the Sunday before the
2012 election, Jeffress said that
Barack Obama was "paving the way for the future reign of the Antichrist." In June 2015, he compared the "marginalization" of Christians in the United States with Jews under Nazi Germany. Rabbi
Jack Moline of the
Interfaith Alliance accused him of being disrespectful to victims of the Holocaust. ==Notable members==