W.
Hines Sims
W. Hines Sims was born in Urania,
Louisiana, in 1907, but spent his formative years in Texas where his
father pastored several Baptist churches. Sims entered Simmons
College in 1923 and was a member of the original Cowboy Band. He
earned the Bachelor of Arts degree from Simmons in 1928, the
Bachelor of Music degree from Centenary College in 1937, and the
Master of Arts from George Peabody College in 1946.
Sims was hired as assistant
secretary of the Church Music Department of the Southern Baptist
Sunday School Board in 1946. In 1952 he became the Secretary of the
Department, a post he held with distinction until his retirement in
1970. Under the leadership of Sims the Church Music Department
established music ministry as a focal point in Southern Baptist
churches. He helped to create the state music secretary
organizational structure and established Music Weeks at Ridgecrest
and Glorieta Baptist Assemblies. He spearheaded the beginning of
graded choir programs which became the hallmark of music education
in Baptist churches. Sims was the founding editor of The Church
Musician and served as editor of the 1956 Baptist Hymnal, which
became the most widely used hymnal in the history of the Southern
Baptist Convention. He helped to elevate the position of music
minister to full-time ministry, and he established the model for
church music used throughout the Convention.
Hardin-Simmons University
recognized Sims by granting him an honorary Doctor of Music degree
in 1948. He was honored with the Distinguished Alumnus Award in
1975. The Sims Hymnal Collection was established in 1983 with the
gift of his personal collection of hymnals to the Smith Music
Library.
Dr. Sims married Lola Riley in
1930, and, after her death in 1935, he married Ann Brown. They
raised three daughters. He died April 30, 1997.
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