On December 10, 1874, he converted to the Baptist religion and joined the Thankful Baptist church in Augusta and on February 7, 1875, he was baptized. In 1875, he resumed his studies, then at the Augusta Institute, where he stayed for seven years (four in Augusta, and three in Atlanta when the school moved to that city under then new name, the "Atlanta Seminary"), studying under its president, New Englander Joseph T. Roberts. Along with theology and literature, he studied Hebrew under
William R. Harper of
Yale University and German and French. He was licensed to preach on June 21, 1878, and was ordained on September 2, 1881. When he graduated from what was then called the Atlanta Baptist Seminary in 1882, he was made full professor in the school. In May 1883, he was elected corresponding secretary of the Missionary Baptist Convention of Georgia, and he attended the convention many times. He received a Master of Arts from the
University of Chicago on June 11, 1884. He married Elizabeth Beasley, a public school teacher and graduate of
Atlanta University on July 15, 1885. and he served as secretary of the board for 18 years. He later received a
doctor of divinity from
Lincoln University in Chester, Pennsylvania. == Baptist leader in Georgia ==