

The project included scenic design and custom fabrication, interior design, auditorium seating, audio, video, lighting design, acoustic panels and stage design, all while keeping the Swaggarts’ on-air throughout. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by siblings, Benny Naylor, Janie Cozart, and Johnny Naylor.With the help of Paragon 360, Jimmy Swaggart Ministries has renovated the Family Worship Center – home to the Swaggarts’ ministry for over 30 years and the SonLife Broadcast Network programming location for over a decade. Naylor was very community minded and was always helping others. He was famous for his Pa/Dad sayings “Jack’s cookie, which crumb do you want to speak to?,” “Taste like another one,” “Gotta hold your mouth right,” “Penny for your thoughts,” and “CRS disease.” He loved watching Jimmy Swaggart, and Family Feud with Steve Harvey. Always known for singing all the time and having a great sense of humor with a contagious laugh, he enjoyed watching funny movies, riding his bike backwards, and Christmas wrapping paper fights. He was an avid tennis player, and for many years had coordinated the men’s tennis league. It was not unusual to see him hooking up a wagon to the tiller and pulling the children around behind him as he worked the earth, or riding his lawnmower with his grandsons in his lap. Naylor was a recipient of the Key to the City in April 2010. He helped start the Civitan Club where he was a charter member for 40 years having served as president and had organized the food drives for A Storehouse for Jesus. Naylor was a member of First Baptist Church where he had sung in the choir, served as a deacon, a Sunday school teacher, and played on and coached the church softball team. Naylor was a graduate of Mars Hill College, and attended Wake Forest University. 20, 1935 in Davie County to the late John Floyd and Sadie Belle Benson Naylor.

Jack Doyle Naylor, 88, of Mocksville, died Tuesday, Jat Gordon Hospice House in Statesville.
