Hyde’s 25-year missionary career included seminary teaching and a variety of other assignments. But he loved nothing so much as helping Filipino believers spread the gospel.
“Bill went out to the hard-to-reach places to train Filipinos to start churches,” says former missionary Don Phelps (Linda’s husband), now missions minister at a church in Richmond, Va. “There was no place that was beyond the reach of God’s Spirit—and Bill’s truck. He would load it up with Filipino pastors and lay leaders and take them out to start churches in tribal and rural areas. There were hundreds of churches planted.”
Hyde’s two priorities, Phelps adds, were Filipinos coming to know Christ and then taking the Great Commission as their personal responsibility:
“God multiplied church plants because of Bill’s passion for the Filipinos to reach their own people and start churches. He was very humble about it. He was behind the scenes. He did not seek credit, but he was very faithful to do the things he knew God wanted him to do, and trust ministry to the Filipinos.”
That’s not just solid mission strategy. It’s servanthood. Someone said that God does not judge greatness by how many people serve you, but by how many people you serve.
By that measure, Bill Hyde achieved greatness.
Eric Bridges is a senior writer with the Southern Baptist International Mission Board
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