Dr. Homer Massey is Associate Professor of Religion at Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary and Graduate School in Lynchburg VA. He has been closely involved with distance learning at LU since it began in 1985. Prior to coming to Lynchburg he served as senior pastor and associate pastor for churches in Virginia and North Carolina for nearly 30 years. He has been with LU for 20 years, having served in the School of Religion before joining the Seminary faculty. He holds the BA in Bible and History from Bob Jones University, and the MDiv and DMin degrees from Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary. His teaches in the areas of Evangelism and Baptist History. Homer holds memberships in the Virginia Baptist Historical Society, the Baptist History and Heritage Society, the Evangelical Theological Society, and the American Society of Church History. He is a Board Member and the Treasurer for Timothy International Ministries, and has been appointed by the Lynchburg City Council to serve a three-year term on the Social Services Advisory Board. He has been married to Mary for 44 years, has two children and seven grandchildren.
Dissertation
A Curriculum of Topics for Teaching Senior Adults in Sunday School, Doctoral Series (2002)
The purpose of this project is to develop a curriculum of topics directed toward the...
Monographs
Reflections on Virginia's Baptist Heritage, Faculty Publications and Presentations (2008)
This paper focuses on the struggle for religious liberty in Colonial America and the part...
Unpublished Papers
James Ireland 1748-1806, Faculty Publications and Presentations (2007)
During the Colonial period of American history (1768-1778) a number of Baptist preachers were imprisoned...
John Weatherford 1740-1833, Faculty Publications and Presentations (2007)
This paper describes the dramatic confrontation between an older Baptist preacher arrested for preaching without...
John Waller 1741-1802, Faculty Publications and Presentations (2006)
Among the Baptist preachers imprisoned during the Colonial period of American history was an individual...