Advertisement

Rev Ronald Quentin Moore

Advertisement

Rev Ronald Quentin Moore

Birth
Langley, Aiken County, South Carolina, USA
Death
14 Nov 2021 (aged 82)
Franklin Springs, Franklin County, Georgia, USA
Burial
Piedmont, Greenville County, South Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Ronald Quentin Moore was born on August 12, 1939, in the "mill town" of Langley, South Carolina. He was one of two sons born to George Q. and Jennie Evelyn (Workman) Moore. Like most of the residents in Aiken County, both of his parents were employed in the textile industry.

Ron felt a tug in his heart toward God and spiritual matters at an early age. When he was 12, he began to sense that God had a plan for his destiny. Four years later, at age 16, Ron accepted Christ as his Savior.

Ron graduated in 1957 from the Langley-Bath-Clearwater High School. Over the summer months that year, the Lord kept dealing with him about pursuing ministerial training. So, following his high school graduation and with the persistence and assistance of his pastor and life-long mentor, Walter Hale, Ron enrolled at Holmes College of the Bible in Greenville, South Carolina.

At Holmes, Ron sought the Lord seriously about His plan for his life. The Lord's plan meshed perfectly with his natural and spiritual giftings and was exactly what he enjoyed—preaching, teaching, and pastoring.

The Holmes experience proved to be more than ministerial training for Ron. That is where he met Doris Lorene Jones, a fellow student from Laurinburg, North Carolina. He and Doris soon agreed they were meant to be lifetime and ministry partners. They were married on July 5, 1959, in Doris's home church, East Laurinburg Pentecostal Holiness.

After receiving a Bachelor of Theology degree (THD) from Holmes, Ron continued his formal education at Central Wesleyan College (now Southern Wesleyan University) in Central, South Carolina, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology. He also earned a Master of Education degree from Clemson University in 1975. Years later, he earned a Master of Ministry degree from Southwestern College of Christian Ministries Graduate School (SCCM). He was part of the school's first graduating class. Both Holmes and SCCM awarded Ron honorary doctorate degrees.

In 1959, the Upper South Carolina Conference licensed Ronald Q. Moore as a minister of the gospel. He was ordained into the ministry by Rev. Robert L. Rex in 1961 and was assigned his first pastorate the same year. That assignment was a new church plant in Belvedere, South Carolina, where he pastored for three years. Other congregations he pastored in the conference included Easley (five years), Taylor Memorial in Anderson (five years), and Calhoun Falls. During his pastorate at Taylor Memorial, the church became the first Pentecostal Holiness congregation to average 500 in Sunday school for a calendar year.

The Upper South Carolina Conference recognized and affirmed Ron's gifts by appointing and/or electing him to several leadership roles. Early in his ministry, he served one year as Conference Christian Education Director.

Ron had served eight years (1967-1975) on the USC Conference Board when he received an invitation from Rev. R. L. Rex to move across the country to Oklahoma and become his administrative assistant in the World Missions Department. That assignment on the general level of the denomination lasted for 15 years. During his tenure, Ron served as assistant to three directors, Robert L. Rex, Bernard E. Underwood, and Jesse Simmons. By virtue of his role in missions, Ron was granted seat and voice on the General Board of Administration and on the General World Missions Board. He also served three terms on the Holmes College of the Bible Board of Trustees.

Following the resignation of the president of Southwestern College of Christian Ministries in 1990, Ron accepted the Board of Regents' invitation to lead the school. During his eight-year presidency, the number of FTE (full-time equivalent) students increased from 82 to a high of 223, the college qualified to add the SCCM Graduate School and initiated a degree completion program.

In 1998, the Moores returned to their home conference, where Ron continued in leadership positions, including four years as Assistant Conference Superintendent and eight years as Conference Bishop, until his retirement in 2010.

Ron and Doris Moore were blessed with three talented sons: David Quentin (Carol), Timothy Ray (Pam), and Phillip Edward (Ellen); nine grandchildren, Zachary (Lindsey), Jessica, Micah (Yariana), Isaac, Emily, Joshua (Kennedy), Daniel (Bethany), Meagan, Joseph; and five great-grandchildren, Ansley, Hannah, Emerson, Harvey, Oliver. These, and countless other family members and friends, grieve Ron's passing. Ron's only sibling, James Carroll Moore passed away in 1993.
Throughout his life, Ron kept one simple principle foremost in his thinking: "Passionately pursue the will of God for my life." "I learned that to be the definition of success," he said.
Ronald Quentin Moore was born on August 12, 1939, in the "mill town" of Langley, South Carolina. He was one of two sons born to George Q. and Jennie Evelyn (Workman) Moore. Like most of the residents in Aiken County, both of his parents were employed in the textile industry.

Ron felt a tug in his heart toward God and spiritual matters at an early age. When he was 12, he began to sense that God had a plan for his destiny. Four years later, at age 16, Ron accepted Christ as his Savior.

Ron graduated in 1957 from the Langley-Bath-Clearwater High School. Over the summer months that year, the Lord kept dealing with him about pursuing ministerial training. So, following his high school graduation and with the persistence and assistance of his pastor and life-long mentor, Walter Hale, Ron enrolled at Holmes College of the Bible in Greenville, South Carolina.

At Holmes, Ron sought the Lord seriously about His plan for his life. The Lord's plan meshed perfectly with his natural and spiritual giftings and was exactly what he enjoyed—preaching, teaching, and pastoring.

The Holmes experience proved to be more than ministerial training for Ron. That is where he met Doris Lorene Jones, a fellow student from Laurinburg, North Carolina. He and Doris soon agreed they were meant to be lifetime and ministry partners. They were married on July 5, 1959, in Doris's home church, East Laurinburg Pentecostal Holiness.

After receiving a Bachelor of Theology degree (THD) from Holmes, Ron continued his formal education at Central Wesleyan College (now Southern Wesleyan University) in Central, South Carolina, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology. He also earned a Master of Education degree from Clemson University in 1975. Years later, he earned a Master of Ministry degree from Southwestern College of Christian Ministries Graduate School (SCCM). He was part of the school's first graduating class. Both Holmes and SCCM awarded Ron honorary doctorate degrees.

In 1959, the Upper South Carolina Conference licensed Ronald Q. Moore as a minister of the gospel. He was ordained into the ministry by Rev. Robert L. Rex in 1961 and was assigned his first pastorate the same year. That assignment was a new church plant in Belvedere, South Carolina, where he pastored for three years. Other congregations he pastored in the conference included Easley (five years), Taylor Memorial in Anderson (five years), and Calhoun Falls. During his pastorate at Taylor Memorial, the church became the first Pentecostal Holiness congregation to average 500 in Sunday school for a calendar year.

The Upper South Carolina Conference recognized and affirmed Ron's gifts by appointing and/or electing him to several leadership roles. Early in his ministry, he served one year as Conference Christian Education Director.

Ron had served eight years (1967-1975) on the USC Conference Board when he received an invitation from Rev. R. L. Rex to move across the country to Oklahoma and become his administrative assistant in the World Missions Department. That assignment on the general level of the denomination lasted for 15 years. During his tenure, Ron served as assistant to three directors, Robert L. Rex, Bernard E. Underwood, and Jesse Simmons. By virtue of his role in missions, Ron was granted seat and voice on the General Board of Administration and on the General World Missions Board. He also served three terms on the Holmes College of the Bible Board of Trustees.

Following the resignation of the president of Southwestern College of Christian Ministries in 1990, Ron accepted the Board of Regents' invitation to lead the school. During his eight-year presidency, the number of FTE (full-time equivalent) students increased from 82 to a high of 223, the college qualified to add the SCCM Graduate School and initiated a degree completion program.

In 1998, the Moores returned to their home conference, where Ron continued in leadership positions, including four years as Assistant Conference Superintendent and eight years as Conference Bishop, until his retirement in 2010.

Ron and Doris Moore were blessed with three talented sons: David Quentin (Carol), Timothy Ray (Pam), and Phillip Edward (Ellen); nine grandchildren, Zachary (Lindsey), Jessica, Micah (Yariana), Isaac, Emily, Joshua (Kennedy), Daniel (Bethany), Meagan, Joseph; and five great-grandchildren, Ansley, Hannah, Emerson, Harvey, Oliver. These, and countless other family members and friends, grieve Ron's passing. Ron's only sibling, James Carroll Moore passed away in 1993.
Throughout his life, Ron kept one simple principle foremost in his thinking: "Passionately pursue the will of God for my life." "I learned that to be the definition of success," he said.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement