Edward Kimball was a Sunday School teacher who led a young boy named Dwight L. Moody to Jesus.
D.L. Moody then led Wilber Chapman to Jesus, who later became an evangelist.
One day, a professional baseball player had a day off and decided to attend one of Wilber Chapman’s meetings, where he was saved. His name was Billy Sunday.
Billy Sunday gave up playing baseball and became an evangelist on Wilber Chapman’s team.
After Wilber Chapman became the pastor of a church, Billy Sunday began holding his own evangelistic meetings.
Mordecai Ham was saved at one of Billy Sunday’s meetings. Billy Sunday was invited to preach in Charlotte, N.C., but could not attend, so he sent Mordecai Ham in his place. Many churches refused to participate in those meetings, but during one of the gatherings, three young men were saved. One of those young men was Billy Graham, who later became the renowned evangelist that preached the Gospel face-to-face to more people than anyone who had ever lived.
But it all started with a Sunday School teacher named Edward Kimball.
You never know who you’re impacting through your life.
“Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” (John 12:24)