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T.M. Anderson

Tony Marshall Anderson (March 11, 1888–June 27, 1979) was an American Methodist preacher, evangelist, and educator, renowned for his fervent preaching on prayer and holiness within the Methodist Episcopal Church and later the Church of the Nazarene. Born in Chillicothe, Ohio, to David L. and Sarah E. Anderson, he grew up in a Methodist family, though specific details about his early spiritual life are sparse. Converted at age 18 in 1906 during a revival meeting led by Rev. J.H. Smith, he felt an immediate call to preach, confirmed by a vision of Christ that night. He pursued education at Ohio Northern University, Asbury College (B.A.), and Drew Theological Seminary (M.Div.), where his academic rigor earned him an honorary D.D. from Asbury. Anderson’s preaching career began in 1913 as a Methodist pastor in Ohio, serving churches like Trinity Methodist in Lima until 1925, when he shifted to full-time evangelism after a transformative encounter with the Holy Spirit in 1921 at Camp Sychar, Ohio, deepened his commitment to sanctification. From 1925 to 1950, he preached across the U.S., holding revivals that drew thousands, emphasizing boundless prayer and personal holiness—messages preserved in books like Prayer Availeth Much (1948) and After Sanctification (1935). In 1950, he joined Wilmore College (later Asbury College) as a professor of Bible and Philosophy, retiring in 1958 but continuing to teach and preach until his late 80s.