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Difference between revisions of "Charles Stanley"

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{{Infobox officeholder
 
{{Infobox officeholder
 
|name=Charles Frazier Stanley
 
|name=Charles Frazier Stanley
|office=President of the [[Southern Baptist Convention]]
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|office=President of the<br>
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[[Southern Baptist Convention]]
 
|term_start=June 1984
 
|term_start=June 1984
 
|term_end=June 1986
 
|term_end=June 1986
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|death_date=
 
|death_date=
 
|death_place=
 
|death_place=
|occupation=[[Pastor]]-emeritus of First Baptist Church of Atlanta<br>President of In Touch Ministries>br>[[Televangelist]], [[theologian]], [[author]], [[photographer]]
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|party=[[Republican Party|Republican]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.mylife.com/charles-stanley/e792049411116|title=Charles F. Stanley|publisher=mylife.com|accessdate=August 2, 2021}}</ref>
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|occupation=[[Pastor]]-emeritus of<br> First Baptist Church (Atlanta)<br>President of In Touch Ministries<br>Televangelist, [[theologian]], [[author]], [[photographer]]
 
|spouse=Anna Margaret Johnson Stanley (married 1955-1992, separated, divorced finalized 2000)
 
|spouse=Anna Margaret Johnson Stanley (married 1955-1992, separated, divorced finalized 2000)
 
|children=Rebecca "Becky" Stanley Brodersen<br>
 
|children=Rebecca "Becky" Stanley Brodersen<br>
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|website=In Touch Ministries – Home }}
 
|website=In Touch Ministries – Home }}
  
'''Charles Frazier Stanley''' (born September 25, 1932) is the pastor emeritus of the megachurch, the First [[Southern Baptist|Baptist]] Church in [[Atlanta]], [[Georgia]]. He left the full-time pastorate in 2020 after fifty-one years in the pulpit. In 1977, he founded In Touch Ministries, which he still heads as president. He  preaches regularly, and his sermons are carried via cable [[television]].<ref>Charles Stanley Stepping Down as Pastor of First Baptist Church Atlanta (faithit.com), accessed August 1, 2021.</ref>
+
'''Charles Frazier Stanley''' (born September 25, 1932) is the pastor emeritus of the 15,000-member megachurch, the First [[Southern Baptist|Baptist]] Church in [[Atlanta]], [[Georgia]]. He left the full-time pastorate in 2020 after fifty-one years in the pulpit. In 1977, he founded In Touch Ministries, which he still heads as president. He  preaches regularly, and his sermons are carried via cable [[television]].<ref>Charles Stanley Stepping Down as Pastor of First Baptist Church Atlanta (faithit.com), accessed August 1, 2021.</ref>
  
 
From 1984 to 1986, he was the president of the [[Southern Baptist Convention]]. His ''Life Principles Bible'' has sold more than one million copies.<ref>Shelia Poole, "Atlanta Pastor Charles Stanley 's Life Principles Bible' hits 1 million mark, ajc.com,  December 19, 2017.</ref> In 1988, he was  inducted into the  National Religious Broadcasters Hall of Fame.<ref>Charles Stanley Biography, Wife, Age, Children, In Touch, Books, Worth (biographyscoop.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
 
From 1984 to 1986, he was the president of the [[Southern Baptist Convention]]. His ''Life Principles Bible'' has sold more than one million copies.<ref>Shelia Poole, "Atlanta Pastor Charles Stanley 's Life Principles Bible' hits 1 million mark, ajc.com,  December 19, 2017.</ref> In 1988, he was  inducted into the  National Religious Broadcasters Hall of Fame.<ref>Charles Stanley Biography, Wife, Age, Children, In Touch, Books, Worth (biographyscoop.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
 
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
Stanley was born in Dry Fork (current population 4,200) in Pittsylvania County near Danville in south central [[Virginia]].<ref>Dr Charles Stanley (June-14-2021) Sermons : God's Rewards to the Church (sermons-online.org), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref> His father, also named Charles, died in 1933 nine months after Stanley's birth, and he was reared by a [[Christian]] mother, Rebecca, who later married. In his early years, he ran newspaper routes to support himself. At the age of twelve, he became a [[Salvation|born-again]] [[Christian]] a term coined by [[Jesus Christ]] in the Bible but shunned by some [[liberal]] Protestant denominations. He surrendered to the ministry at the age of fourteen.
+
Stanley was born in Dry Fork (current population 4,200) in Pittsylvania County near Danville in south central [[Virginia]].<ref>Dr Charles Stanley (June-14-2021) Sermons : God's Rewards to the Church (sermons-online.org), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref> His father, also named Charles, died in 1933 nine months after Stanley's birth, and he was reared by a [[Christian]] mother, Rebecca, who worked at the Dan Mills textile mill for small wages and later remarried. In his early years, he ran newspaper routes to support himself. At the age of twelve, he became a [[Salvation|born-again]] [[Christian]] a term coined by [[Jesus Christ]] in the Bible but shunned by some [[liberal]] Protestant denominations. He surrendered to the ministry at the age of fourteen He later expressed regret over neglecting his studies in public school.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://marriedbiography.com/charles-stanley-biography/|title=Charles Stanley|publisher=marriedbiography.com|accessdate=August 2, 2021}}</ref>
  
 
Stanley obtained his bachelor's degree from the private liberal arts school, the University of Richmond in [[Richmond]], the capital of Virginia. He then obtained a Master of Divinity degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in [[Fort Worth]], [[Texas]]. The private theologically [[conservative]]  Luther Rice College and Seminary awarded Stanley both Master of Theology and Doctor of Ministry. The private institution was founded in 1962 in [[Jacksonville, Florida|Jacksonville]], [[Florida]], and was relocated in 1991 to Lithonia in DeKalb County in suburban Atlanta.<ref>Charles Stanley Bio, Age, Family, Education, Career, Management, Worth (hustleinboots.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
 
Stanley obtained his bachelor's degree from the private liberal arts school, the University of Richmond in [[Richmond]], the capital of Virginia. He then obtained a Master of Divinity degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in [[Fort Worth]], [[Texas]]. The private theologically [[conservative]]  Luther Rice College and Seminary awarded Stanley both Master of Theology and Doctor of Ministry. The private institution was founded in 1962 in [[Jacksonville, Florida|Jacksonville]], [[Florida]], and was relocated in 1991 to Lithonia in DeKalb County in suburban Atlanta.<ref>Charles Stanley Bio, Age, Family, Education, Career, Management, Worth (hustleinboots.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
  
Stanley married the former Anna Margaret Johnson (1931-2014), a native of North Carolina, who accompanied her husband in Christian activities in North Carolina, [[Ohio]], and [[Florida]], until he accepted the Atlanta pastorate in 1969. The couple separated in 1994, and their divorce was finalized in 2000. They had two children, Rebecca "Becky" Stanley Brodersen (born 1961) of [[Dallas]], [[Texas]] and the Reverend Charles Andrew "Andy" Stanley of the North Point Community Church  in Alpharetta in northern Fulton County, Georgia.She was cremated.<ref>Anna Margaret Johnson Stanley (1931-2014) - Find A Grave Memorial, accessed August 2, 2021.</ref> According to First Baptist Atlanta's bylaws, Stanley was allowed to continue his pastorate so long as he did not remarry.
+
Stanley married the former Anna Margaret Johnson (1931-2014), a native of North Carolina, who accompanied her husband in Christian activities in North Carolina, [[Ohio]], and [[Florida]], until he accepted the Atlanta pastorate in 1969. The couple separated in 1994, and their divorce was finalized in 2000. They had two children, Rebecca "Becky" Stanley Brodersen (born 1961) of [[Dallas]], Texas, and the Reverend Charles Andrew "Andy" Stanley of the North Point Community Church  in Alpharetta in northern Fulton County, Georgia.She was cremated.<ref>Anna Margaret Johnson Stanley (1931-2014) - Find A Grave Memorial, accessed August 2, 2021.</ref> According to First Baptist Atlanta's bylaws, Stanley was allowed to continue his pastorate so long as he did not remarry.
  
 
==Christian ministry==
 
==Christian ministry==
 
After stints at churches in [[North Carolina]], [[Ohio]], and Florida, Stanley moved in 1969 from Florida to the First Baptist staff in downtown Atlanta. Two years later, he was named senior pastor. Georgia Governor [[Brian Kemp]] attended FBC to celebrate Stanley's milestone of service.<ref>Buck Lanford, Dr. Charles Stanley honored for 50 years of ministry (fox5atlanta.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
 
After stints at churches in [[North Carolina]], [[Ohio]], and Florida, Stanley moved in 1969 from Florida to the First Baptist staff in downtown Atlanta. Two years later, he was named senior pastor. Georgia Governor [[Brian Kemp]] attended FBC to celebrate Stanley's milestone of service.<ref>Buck Lanford, Dr. Charles Stanley honored for 50 years of ministry (fox5atlanta.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
  
In 1972, he launched a half-hour religious television program, ''The Chapel Hour,'' the forerunner to his establishment in 1977 of In Touch Ministries with the mission tof teaching, evangelism, and strengthening the church.<ref name="religionnews.com">Emily McFarlan Miller, [https://religionnews.com/2020/09/14/influential-pastor-charles-stanley-steps-down-at-first-baptist-church-atlanta-after-50-years/ Influential pastor, Charles Stanley, steps down at First Baptist Church Atlanta after 50 years], religionnews.com, USA, September 14, 2020</ref> The [[Christian Broadcasting Network]] began televising this show in 1978. The program has been translated in fifty languages. In the United States, "In Touch" is broadcast on approximately 2,600 [[radio]] stations, three hundred television outlets, and several satellite networks, such as the [[Trinity Broadcasting Network]].
+
In 1972, he launched a half-hour religious television program, ''The Chapel Hour,'' the forerunner to his establishment in 1977 of In Touch Ministries with the mission tof teaching, evangelism, and strengthening the church.<ref name="religionnews.com">Emily McFarlan Miller, [https://religionnews.com/2020/09/14/influential-pastor-charles-stanley-steps-down-at-first-baptist-church-atlanta-after-50-years/ Influential pastor, Charles Stanley, steps down at First Baptist Church Atlanta after 50 years], religionnews.com, USA, September 14, 2020</ref> The [[Christian Broadcasting Network]] began televising this show in 1978. The program has been translated in fifty languages. In the United States, "In Touch" is broadcast on approximately 2,600 [[radio]] stations, three hundred television outlets, and several satellite networks, such as the [[Trinity Broadcasting Network]].<ref>Patricia Holbroook, Dr. Charles F. Stanley leads life of unwavering faith (ajc.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
<ref>Patricia Holbroook, Dr. Charles F. Stanley leads life of unwavering faith (ajc.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
+
  
His sermons and other programming are available on the ''In Touch'' website. The ministry also publishes ''In Touch'' magazine. Stanley often focuses on finances, parenting, and emotion matters as well as theological Christianity. He stresses the inerrancy Scripture. Over the course of his ministry, Stanley has developed "30 Life Principles" that have guided his Christian life.<ref>30 Life Principles (intouch.org), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>He credits his grandfather, George Washington Stanley, with his command, “Obey God and leave all the consequences to Him.” In his book ''Courageous Faith: My Story from a Life of Obedience,''<ref>Courageous Faith: My Story From a Life of Obedience (HB) (intouchaustralia.org, accessed August 2, 2021.</ref> Stanley writes, “Granddad told me, ‘Charles, if God tells you to run your head through a brick wall, you head for the wall, and when you get there, God will make a hole for it..''<ref>charles_stanley_abstract_final.pdf (hughsnews.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>  
+
His sermons and other programming are available on the ''In Touch'' website. The ministry also publishes ''In Touch'' magazine. Stanley often focuses on finances, parenting, and emotion matters as well as theological Christianity. He stresses the inerrancy Scripture. Over the course of his ministry, Stanley has developed "30 Life Principles" that have guided his Christian life.<ref>30 Life Principles (intouch.org), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>He credits his grandfather, George Washington Stanley, with his command, “Obey God and leave all the consequences to Him.” In his book ''Courageous Faith: My Story from a Life of Obedience,''<ref>Courageous Faith: My Story From a Life of Obedience (HB) (intouchaustralia.org, accessed August 2, 2021.</ref> Stanley writes, “Granddad told me, ‘Charles, if God tells you to run your head through a brick wall, you head for the wall, and when you get there, God will make a hole for it.''<ref>Charles_stanley_abstract_final.pdf (hughsnews.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>  
  
 
In addition to his work in Christian ministry, Stanley is an avid photographer, much of his work being mountain scenes. Many of his current photographs come from such distance locations as [[Alaska]] and [[Zanzibar]] and can be accessed on the In Touch website.<ref>Charles Stanley Photography (intouch.org), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
 
In addition to his work in Christian ministry, Stanley is an avid photographer, much of his work being mountain scenes. Many of his current photographs come from such distance locations as [[Alaska]] and [[Zanzibar]] and can be accessed on the In Touch website.<ref>Charles Stanley Photography (intouch.org), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
  
In 2017, Anthony George was brought to Atlanta to succeed Stanley as senior pastor whenever Stanley finally decided to step down at some point in the future.<ref>Sheila Poole, Atlanta megachurch Pastor Charles Stanley announces successor (ajc.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
+
In 2017, Anthony George was brought into the line of succession at FBC as senior pastor whenever Stanley finally decided to step down at some point in the future.<ref>Sheila Poole, Atlanta megachurch Pastor Charles Stanley announces successor (ajc.com), accessed August 2, 2021.</ref>
  
 
Since the death in 2018 of the Southern Baptist evangelist Billy Graham in North Carolina, Stanley is probably the most recognized Christian pastor in the nation.
 
Since the death in 2018 of the Southern Baptist evangelist Billy Graham in North Carolina, Stanley is probably the most recognized Christian pastor in the nation.
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[[Category:Radio]]
 
[[Category:Radio]]
 
[[Category:Television]]
 
[[Category:Television]]
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[[Category:Republicans]]
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[[Category:Conservatives]]

Latest revision as of 15:42, August 2, 2021

Charles Frazier Stanley


In office
June 1984 – June 1986
Preceded by James T. Draper, Jr.
Succeeded by Adrian Rogers

Born September 25, 1932
Dry Fork, Pittsylvania County
Virginia
Political party Republican[1]
Spouse(s) Anna Margaret Johnson Stanley (married 1955-1992, separated, divorced finalized 2000)
Children Rebecca "Becky" Stanley Brodersen

Charles Andrew "Andy" Stanley

Residence Atlanta, Georgia
Occupation Pastor-emeritus of
First Baptist Church (Atlanta)
President of In Touch Ministries
Televangelist, theologian, author, photographer
Religion Southern Baptist
Website In Touch Ministries – Home

Charles Frazier Stanley (born September 25, 1932) is the pastor emeritus of the 15,000-member megachurch, the First Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia. He left the full-time pastorate in 2020 after fifty-one years in the pulpit. In 1977, he founded In Touch Ministries, which he still heads as president. He preaches regularly, and his sermons are carried via cable television.[2]

From 1984 to 1986, he was the president of the Southern Baptist Convention. His Life Principles Bible has sold more than one million copies.[3] In 1988, he was inducted into the National Religious Broadcasters Hall of Fame.[4]

Background

Stanley was born in Dry Fork (current population 4,200) in Pittsylvania County near Danville in south central Virginia.[5] His father, also named Charles, died in 1933 nine months after Stanley's birth, and he was reared by a Christian mother, Rebecca, who worked at the Dan Mills textile mill for small wages and later remarried. In his early years, he ran newspaper routes to support himself. At the age of twelve, he became a born-again Christian a term coined by Jesus Christ in the Bible but shunned by some liberal Protestant denominations. He surrendered to the ministry at the age of fourteen He later expressed regret over neglecting his studies in public school.[6]

Stanley obtained his bachelor's degree from the private liberal arts school, the University of Richmond in Richmond, the capital of Virginia. He then obtained a Master of Divinity degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas. The private theologically conservative Luther Rice College and Seminary awarded Stanley both Master of Theology and Doctor of Ministry. The private institution was founded in 1962 in Jacksonville, Florida, and was relocated in 1991 to Lithonia in DeKalb County in suburban Atlanta.[7]

Stanley married the former Anna Margaret Johnson (1931-2014), a native of North Carolina, who accompanied her husband in Christian activities in North Carolina, Ohio, and Florida, until he accepted the Atlanta pastorate in 1969. The couple separated in 1994, and their divorce was finalized in 2000. They had two children, Rebecca "Becky" Stanley Brodersen (born 1961) of Dallas, Texas, and the Reverend Charles Andrew "Andy" Stanley of the North Point Community Church in Alpharetta in northern Fulton County, Georgia.She was cremated.[8] According to First Baptist Atlanta's bylaws, Stanley was allowed to continue his pastorate so long as he did not remarry.

Christian ministry

After stints at churches in North Carolina, Ohio, and Florida, Stanley moved in 1969 from Florida to the First Baptist staff in downtown Atlanta. Two years later, he was named senior pastor. Georgia Governor Brian Kemp attended FBC to celebrate Stanley's milestone of service.[9]

In 1972, he launched a half-hour religious television program, The Chapel Hour, the forerunner to his establishment in 1977 of In Touch Ministries with the mission tof teaching, evangelism, and strengthening the church.[10] The Christian Broadcasting Network began televising this show in 1978. The program has been translated in fifty languages. In the United States, "In Touch" is broadcast on approximately 2,600 radio stations, three hundred television outlets, and several satellite networks, such as the Trinity Broadcasting Network.[11]

His sermons and other programming are available on the In Touch website. The ministry also publishes In Touch magazine. Stanley often focuses on finances, parenting, and emotion matters as well as theological Christianity. He stresses the inerrancy Scripture. Over the course of his ministry, Stanley has developed "30 Life Principles" that have guided his Christian life.[12]He credits his grandfather, George Washington Stanley, with his command, “Obey God and leave all the consequences to Him.” In his book Courageous Faith: My Story from a Life of Obedience,[13] Stanley writes, “Granddad told me, ‘Charles, if God tells you to run your head through a brick wall, you head for the wall, and when you get there, God will make a hole for it.[14]

In addition to his work in Christian ministry, Stanley is an avid photographer, much of his work being mountain scenes. Many of his current photographs come from such distance locations as Alaska and Zanzibar and can be accessed on the In Touch website.[15]

In 2017, Anthony George was brought into the line of succession at FBC as senior pastor whenever Stanley finally decided to step down at some point in the future.[16]

Since the death in 2018 of the Southern Baptist evangelist Billy Graham in North Carolina, Stanley is probably the most recognized Christian pastor in the nation.

References

  1. Charles F. Stanley. mylife.com. Retrieved on August 2, 2021.
  2. Charles Stanley Stepping Down as Pastor of First Baptist Church Atlanta (faithit.com), accessed August 1, 2021.
  3. Shelia Poole, "Atlanta Pastor Charles Stanley 's Life Principles Bible' hits 1 million mark, ajc.com, December 19, 2017.
  4. Charles Stanley Biography, Wife, Age, Children, In Touch, Books, Worth (biographyscoop.com), accessed August 2, 2021.
  5. Dr Charles Stanley (June-14-2021) Sermons : God's Rewards to the Church (sermons-online.org), accessed August 2, 2021.
  6. Charles Stanley. marriedbiography.com. Retrieved on August 2, 2021.
  7. Charles Stanley Bio, Age, Family, Education, Career, Management, Worth (hustleinboots.com), accessed August 2, 2021.
  8. Anna Margaret Johnson Stanley (1931-2014) - Find A Grave Memorial, accessed August 2, 2021.
  9. Buck Lanford, Dr. Charles Stanley honored for 50 years of ministry (fox5atlanta.com), accessed August 2, 2021.
  10. Emily McFarlan Miller, Influential pastor, Charles Stanley, steps down at First Baptist Church Atlanta after 50 years, religionnews.com, USA, September 14, 2020
  11. Patricia Holbroook, Dr. Charles F. Stanley leads life of unwavering faith (ajc.com), accessed August 2, 2021.
  12. 30 Life Principles (intouch.org), accessed August 2, 2021.
  13. Courageous Faith: My Story From a Life of Obedience (HB) (intouchaustralia.org, accessed August 2, 2021.
  14. Charles_stanley_abstract_final.pdf (hughsnews.com), accessed August 2, 2021.
  15. Charles Stanley Photography (intouch.org), accessed August 2, 2021.
  16. Sheila Poole, Atlanta megachurch Pastor Charles Stanley announces successor (ajc.com), accessed August 2, 2021.