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Henry Eden Warlick
1868-1948

Sketch On The Life Of Henry
E. Warlick
Henry Eden Warlick, a
double cousin of the inimitable Joe S. Warlick, was
one of the most useful and productive gospel preachers in early day central and
Western Oklahoma.
He successfully held many
debates with the forces of error, and did much
productive evangelistic
work in that new country in the early years of this century. In his debating he
was not so well known as his cousin, Joe S., but the truth did not suffer in his
hands.
He knew and believed the
gospel. In her book, Gospel Preachers Who Blazed The Trail, published in
1911, Sister C.R. Nichol said of him: "Brother Warlick
is one of our strongest men and most successful preachers."
Henry Warlick was born
March 3, 1868 in Jackson county Arkansas. His parents were Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Warlick, faithful Christians. They had six other sons and two daughters. In
1880, when Henry was twelve years old, the family moved to Texas, settling near
Springtown, Northwest of Ft. Worth. In 1887 at the age of nineteen, he obeyed
the gospel and was immersed by the late J.D. Tant. The
following year he began preaching, and so continued to the end of his life. Most
preachers of his time did not do what we now call "local preaching," but
preached by Sunday appointments and conducted evangelistic meetings the summer.
When called upon, most of them would meet who ever happened to come along in
debate. They usually made their living in some secular calling, and all these
things Brother Warlick did. He continued in the available public schools until
he was eighteen, when he enrolled in College Hill Institute for one term. In
1892 he was married to Miss Ada Smith, of Springtown. Her parents were John B.
and Ada D. Smith, faithful members of The Lord's church. They had come to Texas
from Tennessee. Eight children were born to Henry and Ada.
The first land run in
Oklahoma took place when the Unassigned Lands were opened to white settlement in
1889. This area was right in the middle of what is now Oklahoma. Brother Warlick
was barely old enough to make the run, however, he did not make it, but in 1891
did spend considerable time in the Chickasaw Nation at Pauls Valley where he did
much preaching, and possibly was looking for a location for himself. The
following year he was married and soon moved from their home in Keeter, Texas to
Lexington, Oklahoma, just across the South Canadian river into the Unassigned
lands. In Lexington he engaged in the mercantile business, including a drug
store, and did all the preaching he was able to do. In these years he made many
reports to the Firm Foundation about his work there, and it is to these
reports that we are indebted for the information we have about it. In 1894 he
reported that there was a church in Lexington that was doing well.
He preached in the school
houses, what few there were, and in such neighboring towns as Paoli, Pauls
Valley, Maysville, Banner, and New Castle, and was instrumental in planting the
cause of New Testament Christianity in many of these places. There were very few
preachers in the country, so it was a lonely life for a preacher. In 1894, in an
April issue of the Firm Foundation, he said that he met but few
preachers, but did mention that he had met three. He named one of them and said
that he was a "shaker." (This referred to the "re-baptism" question then raging
among the brethren. Accepting people for membership on sect baptism was usually
called "shaking them in.") These were years when the battle for the purity of
the worship and government of The Church was being waged, and no quarter was
given. No faithful preacher could escape the fight on these issues, and Brother
Warlick had his share of it. For a time the Lexington church did well, but the
forces of digression came in and got in their evil work.
They had captured the work
in Purcell, just across the Canadian river from Lexington by the time Brother
Warlick got there. One of the things he intended to do was to win it back, but
so far as I have been able to learn, he was never able to do that. He did keep
them from taking over the Lexington work, though this called for much effort on
his part, including a debate on the issues. In April, 1897 he reported in the
Firm Foundation that "the Lexington church was at peace as a result of
following the things that make for peace." In August of that year he held a
meeting in Chickasha, and said that he planned to plant The Church in Norman. In
Paoli the brethren owned their meeting house, which had to be among the first so
owned in the state.
In October, 1898, he moved
his family to Bloomington in Greer county, about nine miles Northwest of Mangum.
Here he had a good farm, operated a store, which included the Post Office, while
preaching and debating all over the area. Marie, a small town was established
and had a Post Office, named for one of his daughters in 1899. The Office was
discontinued in 1911. In 1907, the brethren in that area established the Cordell
Christian College, with J. H. Lawson as the first
President. Brother Warlick was involved in this effort from the very first, and
for many years served on it's board as Secretary of the Board. He moved his
family to Cordell in 1909 so his children could attend that school. While in
Cordell they lost one of their sons. He kept his farm in Greer county and
continued to preach there as well as in Washita county, where Cordell is
located. He also operated a grocery store in Cordell. He continued to return to
Central Oklahoma for work, and in 1910 held meetings in Lexington, Paoli, and
Maysville. In 1901 he was scheduled to debate an atheist in Greer county named
Welch, but Welch backed out, a thing not altogether uncommon for such men. The
same year he debated T. J. Beckham, a Methodist in Greer county. I remember
hearing the late Horace Busby tell of hearing Brother
Warlick preach in Greer county in those early years. He said that Brother
Warlick preached on a Sunday morning in the school house, where he had a regular
appointment. Brother Busby had just married and he and his bride were visiting
relatives there and went to church with them that Sunday morning. At the
conclusion of the sermon different ones began asking Brother Warlick questions,
intending to "trip him up". This went on until about the middle of the
afternoon. Brother Busby said that Brother Warlick was able to answer each
question with a "thus saith the Lord" and give chapter and verse. Of course he
"won the day." Horace Busby left the Presbyterian church and became one of our
greatest gospel preachers.
At least as early as the
Cordell years he became involved in the Oklahoma Cotton Growers Association and
the Farmer's Union. He worked for these for many years, perhaps to the end of
his life. He knew the farmer's problems, for he was one. He gave lectures and
did much writing for their periodicals. In the early thirties, when Bill Murray
was governor of Oklahoma, Brother Warlick backed him in the race for that
office, for they had been close friends since early life, probably going to
school together in the College in Springtown, Texas. Governor Murray appointed
several members of The Church to responsible positions in the state government,
including Brother Warlick, who served as chief clerk of the Board of Affairs,
one of the most important boards in the state government. Here Brother Warlick
was able to render unusual and valuable service to the state, and incidentally
to The Church. The depression was very bad, and private orphanages were faced
with having to close down, due to the difficulty of raising the necessary funds
with which to operate. Governor Murray was talking with his advisors about it
and said the state would have to take the children from the private orphanages
and care for them, which would involve the construction of many buildings on
state property. Brother Warlick suggested that the private orphanages already
had the buildings, and that it would be better to leave the children where they
were, and let the state support them there. This plan was adopted to the benefit
of all concerned. One wonders how he found time to do all he did, but along with
his other work, he found time to preach and to write for the various
"brotherhood papers" from time to time.
Throughout his long life he
was involved in the things that were happening in The Church. In January, 1915
he wrote a rather long article for the Firm Foundation about the serious
problems Socialism was causing in The Church. This doctrine was quite popular
with many, and several of our brethren, including some preachers, were swept
away to everlasting ruin by it. Along with other faithful ones, Brother Warlick
fought to save The Church from this heresy. Gradually, it subsided, and we have
not heard of it for many years. Through all the years he maintained an interest
in the Lexington church and often went back there. Later premillennialism was
introduced there, and such men as R.H. Boll, Neal, Phillips, Earl Smith and
others went there preaching that false and divisive doctrine. In the May 14,
1935 issue of the Firm Foundation he wrote about it under the title, "The
Menace of Premillenialism" and gave the Lexington church as an example of the
damage it could do. He said, "...we have had a church there since the opening of
the territory in 1889. He recalled his hard work there and the struggle to save
it from the digressives. They had managed to survive all this, had gotten a good
building of their own, but now discord prevails due to this "ism." Will M.
Thompson went there to defend the truth and tried to get O. E. Phillips to
defend in public debate the position of the premillennialists, but of course he
would not do it. J.D. Bland, an elder there, sent to Dallas for a Dr. Wood to
come and teach this heresy. Apparently he came and Brother Warlick was asked to
come. He went, but again the "pre-mils" again refused to permit a public
examination of their doctrine.
He made his home in Norman
for many of the last years. Here he continued to preach and debate. He served as
an elder in the Central church there. He was an active supporter of the work of
John P. Lewis in the School of Religion in Oklahoma University. Even after he
passed the three score and ten mark, he continued to debate, meeting M.L. Welch,
a Primitive (Hardshell) Baptist in debate at Amber, near Norman.
But time takes it's toll of
the human frame, and he was no exception. He did enjoy reasonably good health
until close to the end. He became ill, and was treated in hospitals in Oklahoma
City and Norman, where on January 23, 1948 God called him home just a few weeks
short of the four score mark. His companion continued for a few years, when she
too, was called "up higher." Services were conducted by several different
preachers, and they both sleep in the Norman cemetery.
May God bless his memory
for he was a good man, a faithful Christian and preacher.
—Gospel Preachers Of Yesteryear,
Loyd L. Smith, Page 380-384, Originally Published In The Christian Worker,
Published February, 1983

Directions To The Grave Of
Henry E. Warlick
H.E. Warlick is buried in
the I.O.O.F. Cemetery, Norman, Oklahoma. The I.O.O.F. Cemetery is located south of Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma in the town of Norman. Take Exit 114 on I-35. and head east on W.
Indian Hills Rd. Go to North Porter Avenue and turn right (south). When crossing
over W. Rock Creek Rd. the cemetery will be on the left. Go to the southern end
of the cemetery, and the office is in the Norman Monument Company. Enter the
cemetery and follow the directions on the map included below. Behind “BETTIS” Headstone.
GPS Coordinates
Acc. to 17ft.
N35° 14.730’ x WO97°26.291’
Grave Faces East


IOOF Cemetery Map - Location Of Graves Of Two Gospel Preachers:
Ira Y. Rice Sr. & Henry E. Warlick


N. Porter Was Being Worked On When I Visited The Cemetery In
2004



Ada Warlick
1869-1961

Rev. Henry E. Warlick
1869-1948
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