Published on January 13, 1999 by Jack Brymer  
Posted by Jack Brymer on 1999-06-21 "We were amateurs . . . all of us together didn't have a good sermon," recalled Bruce McIver of Dallas, Tex., at a gathering of former Texas youth revivalists from the 1940s. But God worked a miracle by inspiring the young men from Baylor University to take their message of Christianity around Texas and across the South, McIver said. The movement had a major impact on Southern Baptists after World War II. Fifteen of the former youth revivalists--now in their 70s--met at Samford University June 18-20 for a three-day symposium on youth revivalism. The youth movement coincided with a return to revivalism after the war typified by Billy Graham's early Youth For Christ movement in Chicago. "Many of us had been in World War II and were seeking answers, and so these youth revivals provided some basics for religious experience," said Dr. Arthur L. Walker, Jr., a retired Samford religion professor. Dr. Walker, who later served as executive director of the Southern Baptist Education Commission, recalls attending a 1949 youth-led revival that drew 5,000 people to Birmingham Municipal Auditorium. Ironically, the gathering of evangelists at Samford credited Reiji Hoshizaki, a Japanese American student who started to Baylor a few months before the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, with beginning the youth revival movement. "Reiji was the key to the whole thing," said McIver. Hoshizaki and his roommate, the late M. D. Oates, held a prayer meeting in their dormitory room and decided Baylor should have its own youth rally.  Hoshizaki, a Californian whose parents were interred in World War II camps for Japanese Americans, entered Baylor after becoming a Christian before the war. Hoshizaki, Oates and McIver raised $1,100 for a tent and other expenses, and staged a successful revival in April of 1945. They put on a larger event the next year, and the movement was on its way. Ultimately, a Dallas youth revival drew 15,000 people. McIver recalled that the Baylor students "had a great desire to do something for Christ." "One of the great things about the movement was that the pastors let 19-year old kids preach in their churches," he added. "I heard these guys preach and they were 'with it'," recalled Dr. William O'Brien, director of Samford's Beeson Divinity School Global Center, who organized the symposium. "They had a great sense of humor and hit us right where we were at the time--an age when we had heroes. They were our heroes." Howard E. Butt of San Antonio, Tex., a layman, remembered being touched by the movement. "It was the shaping influence of my life," said Butt, who became a regular on the youth revival circuit. "Prayer saturated all we did," said Butt. "We had a passion for Christ that we wanted to share with other young people. It was fun . .. it had a kind of holy hilarity." Butt's family owns one of the nation's largest independent grocery chains. While most of the youth revivalists went into church work, he became an active Christian layman, taking part in Layman's Crusade for Christ and other such movements. Samford President Thomas E. Corts described the movement as "an instrument for changing lives and destinies," and noted that the summer missions programs that continue to attract young people today grew out of the youth revival movement. Some trace the evolution of the state Baptist convention-supported campus ministry programs to the same source. Other former youth revivalists at the symposium were BO Baker, Irving, Tex.; Dick Baker, W. F. Howard and Foy Valentine, all of Dallas; Frank Boggs, Atlanta, Ga.; Asa Couch, Birmingham; Buckner Fanning, San Antonio; Robert Harris, Newnan, Ga.; Ralph Langley, Huntsville, Ala.; Jess Moody Glorieta, N.M.; Jack Robinson, Augusta, Ga.; and Charles Wellborn, Tallahassee, Fla.
 
Samford is a leading Christian university offering undergraduate programs grounded in the liberal arts with an array of nationally recognized graduate and professional schools. Founded in 1841, Samford is the 87th-oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. Samford enrolls 5,791 students from 49 states, Puerto Rico and 16 countries in its 10 academic schools: arts, arts and sciences, business, divinity, education, health professions, law, nursing, pharmacy and public health. Samford fields 17 athletic teams that compete in the tradition-rich Southern Conference and ranks 6th nationally for its Graduation Success Rate among all NCAA Division I schools.