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You
cannot talk about "Plain Talk" without talking about brother
Robert F. Turner. Brother Turner began preaching in Burnet, Tx., in
1962 with a group of Christians who left the older congregation in town
because of the institutional issues. I came to know him, because Burnet
is where I was born and reared and my family was a part of the newly
formed congregation -- actually, I was born in Oatmeal in my grandparents
house but most folks don't know where Oatmeal is. Brother Turner started
publishing "Plain Talk" as a part of the teaching work of
the Oaks West congregation in 1964.
"Plain
Talk" is an extension of the very character and personality of
brother Turner. He has a unique style of writing. It is structured in
preciseness and succinctness containing a lot of rich thoughts, topped
at times with a little dry humor. You might skim through an article
occasionally only to realize that there was a lot more to what was said
than you first suspected and then you would have to go back and do a
lot more "chewin" on the meat it contained. The articles in
"Plain Talk" were always written to fit a definite space.
He never wasted or minced words and if it could not be said exactly
right, then work would have to be done to delete or rephrase -- getting
rid of superfluous material, he would call it -- and there always seemed
to be a way to say what you wanted to say with fewer words.
A
careful observer will notice that he spent a lot of time and thought
on selecting "titles" for
each article -- rarely more than 21 letters -- "That's all the
space you are allowed," he would say... Sometimes you have to read
the article to understand the
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title but the title always pricked your interest and moved you to start
reading what followed.
It goes without saying that brother
Turner has had an impact on a "host" of folks but never as
one who would draw disciples to himself or to cause them to think as
he thought because of who he was. He taught people to pursue an understanding
of truth -- to be independent investigators and learn to think for themselves.
Brother
Joe Fitch and brother Dan Shipley each worked with the Oaks West congregation
during the time that "Plain Talk" was being published and
contributed the same kind of excellent material in its established format.
I am also grateful to brother Turner for allowing me to contribute a
few articles to the paper. Brother Turner has given us permission to
scan the five, bound books (20 volumes) of "Plain Talk" to make them
available to those who might be interested in the material. That work
has finally been accomplished. Though a couple of us began the tedious
task of scanning, proofing, formatting and loading PT on the web site,
others have worked more diligently to accomplish what proved to be an
awesome task. Brother Jon Darrow sent us an electronic file of several
issues that he had paid to have typed. But it is to brother and sister
Carl Ray that we are so indebted for their dedication to finalizing
the work. It is possible that we might, sometime in the future, make
the entire 20 volumes available on a CD.
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