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Hyman Appelman

Hyman Jedidiah Appelman (1902–1983). Born on January 7, 1902, in Moghiliev, Russia (now Mogilev, Belarus), to Orthodox Jewish parents, Hyman Appelman became a prominent American Baptist evangelist. His family immigrated to Chicago in 1914, where he excelled academically, mastering Latin, German, Russian, Yiddish, Polish, Greek, and Hebrew, but learned English from scratch. Completing grades one to eight in two years, he later attended Northwestern University (A.B.) and DePaul University (LL.B.), earning a law license in 1921 to practice as a trial lawyer in Chicago. Converted to Christianity in 1925 at 23 after reading a Gideon Bible in a Kansas City YMCA and counseling with Dr. James Davis in Denver, he faced disownment by his family, with his father vowing to treat him like a “dog” if he returned hungry. Ordained in 1930 after studying at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary (1930–1933), he married Verna Cook that year, raising two children, Edgar and Rebecca. Appelman served as a Texas state evangelist for the Southern Baptist Convention from 1933 to 1942, then launched citywide crusades across the U.S., averaging 7,000 conversions annually in cities like Philadelphia, Denver, and Los Angeles. His global ministry spanned Greece, Japan, Russia, and beyond, with eight or nine world tours. He authored over 40 books, including God’s Answer to Man’s Sin (1940), Power Through the Holy Spirit (1962), The Life Story of Dr. Hyman J. Appelman (1949), and Come Unto Me (1945), emphasizing the Holy Spirit’s power in salvation. Based in Kansas City, Missouri, he preached relentlessly, rarely spending more than two weeks yearly at home, reminiscent of Paul’s zeal. Appelman died in 1983, saying, “The all-pervading, all-controlling, all-achieving Holy Spirit is the only Source of power.”