The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Noted Atlanta pastor, of King family, passes

Toussaint Hill Jr.’s career filled with work at historic churches.

- By Bill Banks

As a child, Toussaint King Hill Jr. sensed he was destined for the pulpit. His father, Toussaint Sr., was a Baptist preacher in Detroit, but there was also the inescapabl­e aura of that middle name.

Toussaint Sr. and Martin Luther King Jr. were first cousins, close friends and collaborat­ors, with King often overnighti­ng in the Hill home during the civil rights days. Toussaint Jr. was 9 years old when King was assassinat­ed in 1968. But for the rest of his life he remembered overhearin­g those kitchen table discussion­s that went long into the night.

He absorbed the famous cousin’s cadences, the rhythm and poetry that he later assimilate­d into his own speech.

The dynamism of his calling sustained Hill through a long career as a counselor, community activist, mentor and teacher, particular­ly at Atlanta University’s Interdenom­inational Theologica­l Center.

But foremost he was a preacher. His career included tenures at three of the nation’s most historical­ly significan­t Black churches, including the last 14 years at Atlanta’s West Hunter Street Baptist Church, home of noted civil rights leader the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy from 1961 to 1990.

“I d on ’t thin k Toussaint would’ve ever been a modern age, big-church preacher,” said Pastor Ellis Washington, formerly

of Atlanta. “In terms of relating to pop culture, or the latest rapper, that wasn’t Toussaint. He never dumbed down the language — he used language to elevate you. And if he used a word you didn’t understand, then you’d best look it up.”

Dr. Toussaint King Hill Jr., 61, died Oct. 27 of complicati­ons from gastric cancer, for which he’d been diagnosed two years ago. He was born June 26, 1959, in Detroit, the only child of Nella Mae Hill and Rev. Toussaint King Hill Sr., whose mother was Cleo King, sister of Martin Luther (Daddy) King Sr.

He and his father were named for Toussaint L’ouverture, leader of the slave revolution that brought Haiti independen­ce from France in 1804.

Hill Jr. had memorized the 1,667 words of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech while still in elementary school. By the time he entered the predominan­tly white Lutheran West High, he was experienci­ng the early stirrings of a call to ministry, and he knew his path.

Hill’s mother died during his senior year, and when Daddy King came to Detroit for the funeral, he promised to “make some calls” and get Hill into Morehouse. But Hill replied that he’d already applied and had been accepted to what was essentiall­y the family college. As his wife, Laurel Hill, said recently, “I think he showed (King Sr.) that even at 17 he knew what he wanted, and he didn’t expect a handout or a heavy lift.”

When Hill arrived on campus in the summer of 1977 he was already licensed to preach. Early on, he met Washington, later a gospel radio announcer at Atlanta’s WAOK and host of “Quiet Storm” on V-103, and today pastor of St. Paul A.M.E. Church in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts.

“I remember one night,” Washington said, “when Toussaint and I went to West Hunter to hear Otis Moss Jr. (famed pastor, civil rights activist, theologian, Morehouse grad) preach. I don’t think we had $5 between us. So the choice was, do we put the money in the plate or do we use it to get something to eat.

“We were both hungry, so we let the plate pass and tried to sneak out the side door,” Washington said. “Dr. Abernathy sent two deacons after us and we knew we were in trouble. But then we heard Abernathy say, ‘You boys stick around for awhile. We’re having a fish dinner downstairs.’”

Hill, a double major in religion and political science, graduated from Morehouse in 1981. He went on to earn a Master of Divinity. His first pastoral assignment was at Second Baptist Detroit, the last stop on the Undergroun­d Railroad, having hosted some 5,000 escaping slaves before their departure to Canada.

Next, he pastored Baptist Temple Church in Pittsburgh, before returning to Atlanta as assistant pastor at Ebenezer Baptist, where he met Laurel Hord, whom he wed in 2005. It was the second marriage for both — Hill had two sons from his first marriage.

He moved to West Hunter Street and after a brief internship became senior pastor on July 26, 2006.

“Toussaint often wondered why it had been his path, getting called to historic churches,” Laurel Hill said. “When you’re a creative being, sometimes you can feel boxed in. But he was gradually leading the church in a different way, and a lot of that was through his passionate preaching.

“He always kept his sermons at 30 minutes. He always had three points, weaving in current events and relating them to scripture. He would take notes during the week and if he got the content he needed, the spark he was looking for, he’d look up at me and say, ‘That can preach.’”

Hill was diagnosed with cancer in 2018, and, except for a three-month sabbatical at the end of 2019, he didn’t miss a Sunday. He preached his last sermon in March. A private person, he told very few about his illness, to the point that practicall­y no one found out until he died.

“He felt,” said Laurel, “that when preaching the word, when attempting to encourage and inspire, nobody needs to be thinking about their pastor’s personal life.”

Hill is survived by his wife, Laurel Hord Hill, his sons, Toussaint King Hill III (Miranda), and Thaddeus Kornell Hill, and granddaugh­ter Eden Elizabeth Hill.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Of the Rev. Toussaint Hill Jr. (right), senior pastor of West Hunter Street Baptist Church in Atlanta, his wife Laurel Hill noted that her husband led the church with passionate preaching.
COURTESY PHOTO Of the Rev. Toussaint Hill Jr. (right), senior pastor of West Hunter Street Baptist Church in Atlanta, his wife Laurel Hill noted that her husband led the church with passionate preaching.
 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Dr. Toussaint King Hill Jr. met his wife, Laurel, when he was an assistant pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. They were married in 2005. Hill became senior pastor at West Hunter Street Baptist Church in Atlanta in July 2006.
COURTESY PHOTO Dr. Toussaint King Hill Jr. met his wife, Laurel, when he was an assistant pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. They were married in 2005. Hill became senior pastor at West Hunter Street Baptist Church in Atlanta in July 2006.

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