Advertisement
Advertisement

John Wesley Shipp Sr. 1932 - 2022 Virginia - Georgia - New Jersey

Updated Mar 25, 2024
Loading...one moment please loading spinner
John Wesley Shipp Sr. 1932 - 2022 Virginia - Georgia - New Jersey
!/Obituary
Rev. John Wesley Shipp, Sr., died on Friday, June 3, 2022, at the Actors Fund Home in Englewood, NJ. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, July 9, 11 AM, at Oakhurst Baptist Church, 222 East Lake Drive, Decatur, GA. A graveside service will be held on Monday, July 11, time TBD, at Rosewood Memorial Park in Virginia Beach, VA. He is preceded in death by his wife of 64 years, Shirley Louise Bryant, and her ashes will also be interred on July 11.
Wesley Shipp was born in Princess Anne County, VA, on March 2, 1932, to Ruth Kellam Murden and Andrew Wesley Shipp. In 1957 he was ordained to the full-time gospel ministry in the Baptist church. He graduated from the University of Richmond, VA, in 1967, with a double-major in religion and philosophy; in 1970, he received his Master of Divinity degree from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary.
Committed to examining the biases with which they had been raised, Wesley and Shirley took unpopular stands for the human rights of Black people and, later, of members of the LGBTQ+ community. In Wake Forest, NC, in 1969, their home was riddled with buckshot while their teenage children entertained their friends and classmates, both Black and White, inside. Rev. Shipp was fired from his pastorate the next morning for having allowed an integrated party to take place in his home.
Shipp went from there to pastor 23rd and Broadway Baptist Church, a congregation whose members were committed to building a “beloved community” in the West End of Louisville, KY. He pastored an American Baptist church in Elizabeth, NJ, from 1980 until 1993, leading two area churches through a highly successful merger to become First Baptist Church of Cranford/Elizabeth. During that time First Baptist became a multiracial and multicultural congregation.
When diabetic retinopathy began to take his eyesight, Rev. Shipp retired, but went on to serve as interim pastor, not only for his former church in New Jersey, but for churches in central Philadelphia, upstate New York, and San Jose, CA.
Wesley is survived by his three children, Karen Bryant Shipp, John Wesley Shipp, Jr., and F. Bryant Shipp; his daughter-in-law Virginia Louise Shipp; and his grandchildren, Benjamin Wesley Shipp and Danielle Louise Shipp.
Memorial gifts in J. Wesley Shipp’s name may be made to the human rights organization of your choice.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
Comments
Leave a comment
The simple act of leaving a comment shows you care.
Share this photo:
Advertisement

Topic related photos

Virginia
Virginia
Browse the history of Virginia through vintage photographs.
861 photos
New Jersey
New Jersey
Browse the history of New Jersey through vintage photographs.
628 photos
Georgia
Georgia
See family photos of Georgia taken over the years shared by members of the community.
Georgia is the largest of the U.S. states east of the Mississippi River and the youngest of the 13 former English colonies (joined the US on January 2, 1788), is known as the Peach State or the Empire...
629 photos
Advertisement

Followers

Debby Stevens
I'm a Christian, and I'm a daughter of Allan B. Holbrook, now in heaven. My married name is Debby Stevens.
My parents, Allan and Marie, were devout Christians, and had 10 children. They were both school teachers, but Mom quit teaching at public school after marriage. But both Mom and Dad home-schooled us all - starting when I was in 1st grade - that's when they came to the decision to home-school us. Dad earned an income through being an English teacher here in Traverse City, for man years. Dad started some Bible meetings that took place in the homes of friends of ours and in our own. He was the main teacher in it, and it was in a discoursing style - he would talk about spiritual things with the fathers of the families, each time, and all the children of the families would sit and listen to it all.
Advertisement
Back to Top