
Dawson Trotman
The Discipled Life
The Reverend Billy Graham preached the funeral of Dawson
Trotman in 1956 after Trotman died while rescuing a swimmer at an upstate New York
lake.
I think Dawson Trotman has personally touched more lives
[for Christ's sake] than anybody that I have ever known," Graham said.
Graham knew Trotman and the ministry he founded - The Navigators - quite well, using material Trotman
developed as follow-up instruction for his crusades.
The Navigators' influence has since grown to worldwide
proportions with about 3,600 staff representing 60 nationalities working in 101
countries.
Trotman founded The Navigators in 1934. He originated its
Bible teaching material and led it through its formative years as it expanded from an
initial emphasis on discipling military personnel to reaching college students and
laymen.
At the heart of Trotman and the ministry he founded was and
is the discipleship of believers - grounding Christians in the spiritual disciplines of
prayer, worship, Bible study, and service.
The Conversion
Trotman's high school years featured impressive credentials.
He was class valedictorian, student body president, chairman of the student council, and
captain of the basketball team.
However, the next several years saw Trotman's life drift
dangerously. He gambled. He drank. He became a noted pool shark. However, a late night
encounter with a local policeman was the catalyst for a spiritual encounter with Jesus
Christ.
Drunk and unable to find his car, Trotman was arrested at an
amusement park. Fortunately, the officer saw a deeper problem than alcohol.
"Son, do you like this kind of life?" the officer
questioned. "Sir, I hate it," Trotman replied. The policeman returned Trotman's
keys and encouraged him to change his lifestyle.
Two days later, Trotman attended a youth gathering at a
local church where contests were conducted for Scripture memorization.
Given ten verses on salvation, Trotman was the only person
in the group who memorized them for the next week's meeting. Given ten more verses to
memorize on spiritual growth for the next week, Trotman quickly grasped them as
well.
Several weeks later, one of the Scripture verses on
salvation flashed through his mind. And it was then that he asked for Christ to change his
life. "Oh God," he said, "whatever it means to receive Jesus, I want to do
it right now."
The Beginning Of Ministry
Trotman spent the next several years engaging in intensive
personal evangelism while committing himself to a disciplined life of prayer. As usual,
his focus was on the intake and absorption of God's Word.
In 1934, Trotman was asked to visit a sailor, Les Spencer,
and share God's Word with him. Betty Skinner, the author of Trotman's biography Daws,
described the scene: "Parked by a schoolhouse, they were pouring over the Scriptures
when a security guard approached and asked what they were doing. 'Reading the Bible,'
Trotman answered and seized the opportunity to witness...Dawson turned from one passage to
another to explain the Gospel and answer all the defenses of the hapless guard.
"On the way back to the landing [Spencer] said, 'Boy,
I'd give my right arm to know how to use the Word like that.'"
It marked the beginning of The Navigators ministry, so named
for its nautical origins. Spencer led another to Christ who in turn led still others to
salvation. The discipleship ministry of The Navigators was birthed, and the process of
winning and discipling men and women for Christ continues throughout the world
today.
Memorization And Meditation
Trotman's conversion experience centered on memorization and
meditation on God's Word. He was a discipler of men because he himself was first discipled
by God through the Scriptures. His emphasis on memorizing Scriptures, arranged on topical
themes, continues to be part of the core curriculum of The Navigators today.
Memorization was not approached in legalistic fashion by
Trotman, who understood that God's Spirit must create the desire and will to mine the
treasures of His Word.
Regular Scripture memorization and meditation are
fundamental to experiencing an abundant Christian life. The psalmist "treasured"
God's Word in his heart (Psalm 119:11) and meditated on the Scriptures "day and
night." (Psalm 1:2)
As you write God's Word on the tablet of your heart, you
will find your mind renewed and ready to face temptations, challenges, and adversity from
God's perspective of truth.
It is truth that sets you free; and the more Scripture you
store in your heart, the more like Christ you will become.
Graham summed up Trotman's life this way: "Dawson loved the Word of God. I think more
than anybody else he taught me to love it. He always carried his Bible around and always
had it marked. The Word of God was sweetness to him." |