H. I.
Copeland, Sr.
1890-1963
H. lEO BOLES
". . . make known unto you, the beloved brother and
faithful minister and fellow-servant in the Lord." (Col.4:
7.)
The subject of this sketch, H. I. Copeland, was born July
3, 1890 near Dyersburg, Tenn. He is the son of George W.
and Mary Hastings Copeland. He was baptized into Christ in
August, 1907, by N. B. Hardeman.
The following year he entered Freed-Hardeman College, and
preached his first sermon in April, 1909. He has been a
faithful gospel preacher since that time. Brother Copeland
attended the Nashville Bible School and Thorp Spring
Christian College from 1912 to 1914. He entered David
Lipscomb College in 1915, and was graduated from it under
the presidency of H. Leo Boles in 1917.
Brother Copeland has combined teaching and preaching; he
has been successful in both fields. Brother Copeland served
the church at Haleyville, Ala., one year, and then began
work with the church at Ripley, Tenn. He lived there for
nineteen years and taught in the public schools of Ripley
and Lauderdale County, Tenn.
During this time he continued to study, and received a B.S.
degree from Memphis State College in 1928. In 1933 he
received his M.A. degree from Peabody College, Nashville,
Tenn. In 1936 he moved to Mississippi, and has continued
teaching in that state to the present time. During the last
three years he has taught history and psychology in the
Northwest Mississippi Junior College, Senatobia, Miss.
Brother Copeland has studied the Bible under the guidance
of N. B. Hardeman, A. G. Freed, H. Leo Boles, E. A. Elam,
and David Lipscomb.
Gospel Advocate, March 19, 1942, 276
H. I. Copeland was born July 3, 1890 near Dyersburg, TN. He
was baptized in August 1907 by N. B. Hardeman.
A Great Man
Has Fallen in Israel
W. B. West, Jr.
Gospel Advocate, April 4, 1963, 218-19
About one o’clock, Saturday afternoon, January 19, while
resting after lunch in his home in Senatobia, Mississippi,
Henry Ivan Copeland was called home, going quietly and
peacefully from a heart attack in his sleep. Although
retired from teaching and preaching only by appointments,
he was active and in good health except for a heart
condition he had had for a few years.
Brother Copeland was born July 3, 1890, in Dyer County,
Tennessee, the son of George W. and Mary Frances Hastings
Copeland. He was one of seven children, the other six being
two brothers and four sisters. He was reared in Dyer County
and attended public schools there. N. B. Hardeman preached
in a meeting at Roellen where Brother Copeland lived as a
boy. The meeting closed and Brother Hardeman started home
in his buggy. Brother Copeland "ran after him, caught up
with him, and asked to be baptized." At the age of
seventeen he was baptized by Brother Hardeman that night in
August 1907.
To prepare himself to preach the gospel, he enrolled in
Freed-Hardeman College in 1907, where he studied under
Brother Hardeman, Brother Freed, and others. He began
preaching in Chester County, Tennessee in 1909 and
continued to preach until his home-going in 1963; making a
total of fifty-four years.
With the purpose of further preparation, Brother Copeland
entered the Nashville Bible School in 1913. While there he
enjoyed rooming with B. C. Goodpasture, whose friendship he
treasured through the years and whose work as a preacher of
the gospel and as editor of the GOSPEL ADVOCATE he
appreciated.
Among his professors were H. Leo Boles, S. P. Pittman, Lacy
H. Elrod, and Dr. J. S. Ward. Instructed and inspired by
these able teachers in Henderson and Nashville, Brother
Copeland had superior preparation for preaching the gospel
effectively. He was gratified with this preparation but not
satisfied. He continued to study and was a diligent student
all his life. Some years after his graduation from the
Nashville Bible School, which became David Lipscomb
College, he became interested in teaching in the public
schools. To prepare himself well for this important work,
he pursued his formal education and received his B.A.
degree from Memphis State University and his M.A. from
George Peabody College.
A major event in the life of Brother Copeland was his
marriage to Miss Westelle McCord of Tennessee City,
Tennessee, December 25, 1916. She was his understanding,
inspirational, influential, and helpful Christian companion
and partner for more than forty-six years. She is the
mother of their two noble and distinguished sons, Henry I.,
Jr., and G. Daniel. She was and is an active and dedicated
Christian.
Brother Copeland combined teaching in the public schools
and in college with preaching during the most of his
productive years. He served as superintendent of schools in
a number of places in Tennessee and in Mississippi. He was
professor of social sciences in Northwest Mississippi
Junior College in Senatobia for seventeen years. While
there he was instrumental in placing the Bible in the
curriculum of the college which he taught for a number of
years.
Wherever he taught, he preached the gospel there and in its
surrounding areas. His first love was the church. He served
the church as minister in Haleyville, Alabama; in Ripley
and other locations in Tennessee; in Senatobia, Thyatira.
Antioch, Como, Clarksdale, and other places in Mississippi.
He preached for twenty-two years in the small town of
Senatobia, where the church grew from a small group meeting
in a little frame building to approximately two hundred
members meeting in a modern air-conditioned brick building
with eighteen classrooms. Brotheer Copeland did successful
evangelistic work In gospel meetings in Tennessee,
Mississippi, and Alabama, in addition to local church work.
He served his Lord faithfully and ably until he called him
home to heavenly service, having preached the Lord's day
before and having conducted Bible study and prayer service
two days prior to his home going.
The funeral sermon tor Brother Copeland was preached by the
writer, assisted in scripture reading and prayer by
Clarence Dailey, minister for the Union Avenue church in
Memphis. There was a large and sympathetic audience of
admiring and appreciative friends and relatives in the
Senatobia church, Tuesday afternoon, January 22. Internment
was in the local cemetery. The text chosen was the
statement made by King David concerning the death of Abner:
"Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen
this day in Israel?" (2 Sam. 3: 38.) These words were
descriptive of Abner and are also of H. I. Copeland. He was
"a prince and a great man" in many ways, but only five
shall be named and these briefly.
1. He was a prince and a great man as a husband. As a
husband he was kind to his wife and thoughtful of her needs
and wishes. He enjoyed being with her, sharing his
interests, his dreams, and his plans. In fact, they planned
together and partook of common interests. He appreciated
his wife and was grateful for all she did. He practiced the
instruction of the poem whose first line reads: "If with
pleasure you are viewing the work· your wife is doing, tell
her now." Following the Pauline exhortation: "He loved his
wife as he loved his own body."
2. Brother Copeland was a prince and a great man as a
father. He was the father who set the proper example for
his sons. The impress of his noble and princely character
continues to be upon them. With the help of his wife, he
brought them up "in the nurture and admonition of the Lord"
and Instilled into them high ideals and great aspirations
to prepare for maximum Christian service. The older son,
Dr. Henry I., Jr., is an eminent, creative, and
distinguished dentist who has made a number of very
important discoveries in dentistry. The younger son, Dr. G.
Dan, graduated from Harvard at twenty with his M.D. and is
now an eminent and authoritative heart specialist whose
counsel is sought in high medical services. Best of all,
both sons are faithful and active members of the church,
following in the steps of their father and mother.
3. He was a prince and a great man GOSPEL ADVOCATE as a
teacher. This is revealed in the character and successes of
thousands of his students. He was a gentleman in his
relations with his teachers, his colleagues and his
students. "As is the teacher, so is the school" was true of
him. He greatly improved the schools of which he was
superintendent. There are excellent schools today in
Tennessee and in Mississippi as monuments 01 his excellence
as a superintendent and a teacher. Husbands and wives,
fathers and mothers, community leaders, business men and
women, and other former students by the thousands would
testify to his greatness and princely character as a
superintendent and teacher and to the excellence of his
instruction and guidance.
4. Brother Copeland was a prince and a great man as
preacher. He was genuinely Christian as a preacher. There
was no littleness in him. He thought and walked with the
truly great. He was a diligent student of the Bible. He
delighted in preaching the glorious gospel of Christ. Like
Paul, he desired to lay the foundation so another could
build thereon. He seemed to specialize in building smaller
churches into larger ones. He was a good and great
preacher. As a preacher, he was faithful to God and to his
book, the Bible. He always sought to do all the good he
could wherever he preached. He fulfilled this desire and
did immeasurable good.
5. He was a great man and a prince as a Christian. Obeying
the Instruction of the Holy Spirit through Paul, Brother
Copeland thought on the things that are "true,"
''honorable,'' "just," "pure," "lovely," and "of good
report," (Phil.4: 8.) He knew that as one thinks within
himself, so is he. The fruits of the spirit -love, joy,
peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
meekness, and self-control-were manifested in his life. His
,hearers saw his sermons in action. Wherever he lived, he
was known as a good man and a man of good deeds. Like his
Savior and Lord, "he went about doing good." We say with
the apostle John: "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord
from henceforth: yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest
from their labors; for their works follow with them." (Rev.
14: 13.) As Abel, "He being dead yet speaketh" his
influence will live until its waves break in the shores of
eternity.
In the true sense, Brother Copeland is not dead. He is only
gone from us in body. He will continue to live in our
hearts and will be a great inspiration and benediction to
his immediate family, to us, to our children, to our
children's children, and to all who came in contact with
him.
In the words of James Whitcomb Riley:
I cannot say, and I will not say
That he is dead-he is just away!
With a cheery smile, and a wave of the hand,
He has wandered into an unknown land,
And left us dreaming how very fair
It needs must be, since he lingers there.
So think of him faring on, as dear
In the love of There as the love of Here;
Think of him still as the same, I say:
He is not dead-he is just away!