Schools

West Chester University: Rev. Dr. Wayne E. Croft To Present 2021 DeBaptiste Frederick Douglass Institute Lecture

Rev. Dr. Wayne E. Croft, Sr., pastor of St. Paul's Baptist Church in West Chester, PA, will deliver the 2021 Dr. Clifford E. DeBaptiste ...

October 1, 2021

The lecture, which is free and open to the public, is hosted by WCU’s Frederick Douglass
Institute and is made possible through the generous gift of Dr. Clifford E. DeBaptiste,
the first African-American mayor of West Chester Borough and a recognized champion
of education. Click here to RSVP online by October 5.

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Croft is a distinguished pastor, writer, and scholar and the Jeremiah A. Wright, Sr.,
Associate Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics in African American Studies at the
Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia.

Prior to leading St. Paul’s, Croft served the Church of the Redeemer Baptist in Philadelphia
for 20 years. He is the founder of the Redeemer Renaissance Community Development
Corporation, a life member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., and past president
of the NAACP West Chester Branch.

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An inductee of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Board of Preachers of Morehouse College,
Croft is also the first person to earn both a doctor of ministry and doctor of philosophy
from Drew University. He earned his bachelor of arts (magna cum laude) from Trinity
College; master of divinity from Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary (now Palmer
Theological Seminary); and master of theology from Princeton Theological Seminary.

Croft is also a prolific writer whose latest book, A History of the Black Baptist Church: I Don’t Feel No Ways Tired, was released in
2020
. He also authored Unexpected Calls to Unexpected PlacesPretty Poison: Seven Deadly Sins and The Motif of Hope in African American Preaching During Slavery and Post-Civil War:
There’s A Bright Side Somewhere.
The African-American Pulpit Journal has published his sermons and he has contributed to the books From One Brother to Another: Voices of African-American Men, Volume 2 and Athens & Oxford Sermons, Volume 10. He has published these articles in the Past Master section of Preaching Magazine: “John Jasper: Preaching with Authority,” “E. K. Bailey: Expositor of the Word,”
“Gardner C. Taylor: Poet Laureate and Dean of Preachers,” “Charles E. Booth: The Preacher’s
Preacher,” and a book that chronicles his journey to serve as pastor of the St. Paul’s
Baptist Church.

A History of the Black Baptist Church: I Don’t Feel No Ways Tired, was released in
2020
Unexpected Calls to Unexpected Places Pretty Poison: Seven Deadly Sins  The Motif of Hope in African American Preaching During Slavery and Post-Civil War:
There’s A Bright Side Somewhere.
African-American Pulpit Journal From One Brother to Another: Voices of African-American Men Volume 2 Athens & Oxford Sermons Volume 10 Preaching Magazine

In June 2018, Croft was the morning lecturer at the Hampton University Ministers’
Conference, the largest gathering of interdenominational African-American clergy in
the world. He has also served as dean of the Pennsylvania Eastern Keystone Baptist
Association.

The goal of the University’s Dr. Clifford E. DeBaptiste Frederick Douglass Lecture
is to maintain the legacy of the great abolitionist, orator, and statesman Frederick
Douglass; serve as an educational and cultural resource for advancing multicultural
studies across campus and community; and to deepen the intellectual heritage of Frederick
Douglass, who was a frequent visitor to the West Chester area. Douglass gave his last
public lecture on West Chester’s campus on February 1, 1895, just 19 days before his
death.

This year’s Dr. Clifford E. DeBaptiste Frederick Douglass Lecture is part of the 150th Anniversary Diversity Speaker Series.

About the Frederick Douglass Institute at West Chester University

The mission of WCU’s Frederick Douglass Institute is to maintain the legacy of Frederick Douglass before the campus community, local
community, region, and the nation through the highest quality of academic programming
that promotes excellence in scholarship, teaching, and institutional advancement.
Consistent with its mission, and with the mission, vision, and values of the University,
the Institute is an educational and cultural resource for advancing multicultural
studies across the curriculum and for deepening the intellectual heritage of Frederick
Douglass. Guided by the spirit of Douglass and his legacy, the Institute aims to create
opportunities to build a better community for all of us to fulfill our destiny as
human beings.

Through the leadership of WCU, there are Frederick Douglass Institutes at all 14 institutions
in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. They are collectively known
as the FDI Collaborative.


This press release was produced by West Chester University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.