Early life and beginnings of ministry Hyles was born and raised in
Italy, Texas, a small, low-income city in
Ellis County, south of
Dallas. Hyles often described his less-than-ideal upbringing which, he said, included a distant father. At the age of eighteen, Hyles enlisted in the
United States Army and served as a
paratrooper with the
82nd Airborne Division during
World War II. He and his wife, Beverly, were married during the war. After the war was over, Hyles completed his college education at
East Texas Baptist University (then College) in
Marshall, the seat of
Harrison County. After his graduation from East Texas, Hyles started preaching at several small Texas churches, whose memberships began to grow.
The move to Hammond, Indiana In 1959, Hyles moved to the church-provided parsonage at 8232 Greenwood Avenue,
Munster, Indiana, and became the pastor of
First Baptist Church of Hammond. When he arrived, the church had a membership of about seven hundred, many from affluent backgrounds. About a third of the members left the church after hearing Hyles's preaching style, which was very different from that to which they had been accustomed. Hyles then led the church to its status as an independent fundamental Baptist church—freeing it from its ties with the
American Baptists. Hyles started his bus ministry and soon shepherded the church from a congregation of several hundred to more than 20,000. In the early 1990s a national survey ranked First Baptist as the largest church in the nation, by average weekly attendance figures. Towns presented a plaque to Hyles in 1971, naming First Baptist Church of Hammond the nation's largest Sunday school. Hyles–Anderson College never sought accreditation because Hyles insisted
school accreditation would undermine his ability to control how the college ought to run.
Ministry One of the most notable aspects of Hyles's work is his church bus ministry that he helped innovate. As early as 1975,
Time magazine described the phenomenon in an article titled, "Superchurch." The
Time article notes that First Baptist Church of Hammond Sunday School, which regularly ran almost 14,000 people, pushed the church to a record attendance of 30,560 on March 16, 1975, thanks to a boisterous contest between two bus route teams. In that year, the First Baptist bus route ministry consisted of 1,000 workers using 230 buses to ferry as many as 10,000 people every Sunday. Hyles wrote approximately fifty works in his lifetime with over 14 million total copies in circulation, including the popular
Is There A Hell?, based on a sermon he preached at a National Sword of the Lord Conference. Hyles was better known as "Brother Hyles" to his tens of thousands of congregants. Hyles taught that the Baptist church started not at
Pentecost, but rather in AD 31 when Christ was alive and that the Catholic Church was started by the Emperor
Constantine in AD 313.
Death On January 30, 2001, Hyles suffered a heart attack; this was followed by a second on February 5, at the outset of more than eight hours of surgery at the
University of Chicago Hospital, where Hyles underwent four heart bypasses and two heart valve replacements. Hyles died on February 6, 2001; a funeral was held at First Baptist Church of Hammond on February 10. Hyles was survived by his wife Beverly, their four children, 11 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. ==Legacy==