A Rich Christian Heritage
From: http://www.thefamily.org/ourfounder/tribute/trib_2.htm
David often said that his rich heritage played a key role in shaping
his character and religious convictions. Many of his forefathers,
as well as both of his parents, were deeply committed Christians
who boldly challenged the status quo of their day. His maternal
forefathers were German Jews who converted to Christianity in the
mid-eighteenth century. They subsequently joined the Dunkards, a
radical offshoot of the Lutheran Church which later became known
as the Church of the Brethren. State persecution of the sect soon
drove the Brandt family to America, where they settled in Pennsylvania
and Ohio around 1750.
Dr. John Lincoln Brandt, David's grandfather, previously uninterested
in his family's religion, had a dramatic conversion in his mid-twenties,
and immediately entered full-time Christian service. For years he
was a Methodist circuit rider. He later became an outstanding leader
of the Alexander Campbell movement of the Disciples of Christ, an
informal drop-out group that was frequently at odds with the established
denominations of its day. David wrote of his grandfather Brandt:
"I admired him greatly; he was a real hero to me. He was a
truly great man who really loved the Lord and survived many vicissitudes
of life. He had a great history and a great record. He built 50
churches, won thousands to the Lord, and over 400 men volunteered
for the ministry under his persuasion." [1]
Virginia Brandt Berg, David's mother, is the individual whom he
credits for influencing him the most. In his later years David said:
"My mother undoubtedly had the greatest influence over me
of anybody in my whole life, and helped to make me what I am today."
[2]
"I can never remember her teaching me anything but the Bible
and about the Lord and true spiritual values. My mother was in love
with Jesus, thank God, and she instilled that love in me."
[3]
"She was an evangelist. ... She was always witnessing to people
wherever we went, on the train, in restaurants, or anywhere. I can
always remember her talking to people about the Lord." [4]
Although raised in a Christian home, Virginia became an atheist
and wild society girl during her college years. Despairing of her
frivolous lifestyle, she devoted her life to social work. However,
shortly after the birth of her first child, she broke her back in
an accident and spent the next five years as a bedridden invalid,
often hovering near death. After a conversion experience, she was
miraculously raised from her deathbed, and spent the rest of her
life with her husband, Hjalmer, in active Christian service as a
pastor and evangelist. Virginia and Hjalmer were no strangers to
controversy. They were expelled from the Christian Church after
publicly testifying of her divine healing, which was contrary to
church doctrine. They subsequently joined a new denomination, the
Christian and Missionary Alliance, shortly before David's birth
in 1919. In later years, their missionary zeal and disdain for denominational
politicking often set them at variance with the conservative faction
of that church's hierarchy, causing them to work largely as independent
pastors and evangelists. David would later recount:
"My mother and father were rebels, revolutionaries, and thrown
out of their church, outcasts ... as far as the church was concerned.
... Even though they kept the forms and ceremonies of the church
and within the buildings, they often had meetings out of the buildings
too and were pretty radical ... in the eyes of the churches."
[5]
David spent his early years traveling with his parents, who pursued
their evangelical mission with a passion. In 1924 they settled in
Miami, Florida, after Virginia successfully led a series of large
revivals at the Miami Gospel Tabernacle. This became David's home
for the next 14 years, while his mother and father pastored a number
of Miami churches.
He later wrote of the upbringing he shared with his two older siblings:
"The Lord was the greatest influence of all through our teachers
and mother and dad teaching us. ... The Sunday school teachers read
us the Bible and told us Bible stories, and I loved and believed
them, and I'm sure they were a tremendous influence in my life ...
because I really knew it was God and the voice of God, and the Book
of God!" [6]
"I'm sure glad I had years of experience of living by faith
with my mother and father. What a wonderful, wonderful foundation
they gave me in the life of faith!" [7]
As is the case with many pastors and their dependents, the Berg
family depended entirely on the generosity of their parishioners
for their support, and often had difficulty making ends meet. This
instilled in David a lifelong habit of frugality, which he encouraged
his followers to adopt. He wrote:
"I certainly hate to see God's money wasted in any way! It
was partly my rearing in the Depression that made me that way. That
was part of my preparation to make sure we don't waste money. I
don't mind living well; we can live where we can be comfortable
and convenient and safe and have enough, but I'm not wasteful and
extravagant. If anything, I pinch the pennies!" [8]
In the late 1930s, Virginia Berg returned to her favorite ministry,
that of a traveling evangelist. David accompanied her, and for most
of the next 10 years acted as her chauffeur, song leader and general
helper. He felt very strongly that assisting his mother in her evangelistic
outreach was God's calling for him at the time. Of this time, he
would later recall,
"From the time I was 16 until I was nearly 30 -- even for
five years after I got married -- my mother's messages and sermons
and testimonies were the biggest influence [in my life]." [9]
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