December 22, 2008

Orbiting the Moon

CBS's Sunday Morning show December 21, 2008 reminded me of an event at the 1968 CE Seminar in Dallas. There was a piece on the show recalling our nation's Apollo 8 mission to orbit the moon. The seminar opened almost simultaneously with the orbiter's safe return to Earth on December 27.

Walt Cabe Telegramx300 Inspired by the mission, Walt Cabe, a student participant promoted sending a telegram to the astronauts signed by all 1,100 participants. The project was a success and in the photograph Walt is seen holding up the telegram which stretched far out into the audience.

1968. It was a heady year in the USA marked by the mission of Apollo 8. Iconic photographs of our big blue ball known as planet Earth appeared on magazine covers and on television. And, what believer would forget that as their space ship circled the moon on Christmas Eve, astronauts Frank Borman, James A. Lovell, and William A. Anders took turns reading the Genesis account of Creation. That was the same year that some 1,100 committed Christian students from college campuses across the USA, and a few from other countries, gathered in Dallas under the banner, "Say So," to be inspired and mobilized to carry the word of Christ to their part of the big blue ball.

July 23, 2008

Out of the Blue!

My thanks to Floyd Stumbo, superintendant emeritus of The Children's Home of Lubbock, who sent me a hard copy of a newspaper story basically about William S. Banowsky who was minister of the Broadway Church of Christ, Lubbock, while Jim Bevis and I were associate ministers involved in Campus Evangelism. Here's a link to the story:



Hope you find the story interesting.

January 18, 2008

Then and now

It was interesting to me during the fading weeks of 2007 to see national news magazines featuring 1968 and all the upheavals going on in our culture during that time. The photographs of campus unrest and other images brought back memories not stirred for several years now!

Then, today, early in 2008, finding a few minutes to poke around in my bookmarks, I clicked on The Christian Chronicle and found a couple of bits of confetti still drifting around.

First, I was saddened to learn of the passing of Michael Casey, a professor at Pepperdine U who wrote what many considered the exhaustive chronology and events of the CE movement. He died at age 53 last October of cancer. Perhaps it was only a few months prior to his death that he and I exchanged emails when I asked him if he had an electronic version of the paper he wrote about CE in 1991 and presented at a seminar in Nashville. He didn't have an electronic version and didn't promise one saying he was covered up with other things and might not get to it for a while. Didn't mention the disease that must have been consuming him at the time. I remember telephone interviews with Michael as he was doing his research for the paper. He also did interviews with Jim Bevis and Charles Shelton.Now, perhaps I will attempt to get parts of that paper into some form for wider distribution -- despite one or two differences of interpretation or slight inaccuracies I felt existed.

The second thing I found on The Christian Chronicle webpage was an editorial by Bobby Ross, Jr., editor, who was born in the fall of 1967. I don't read this journal frequently, but was curious to see if it contained any news or names that might ring a bell. Bobby Ross became curious about what was going on in churches of Christ at the time of his birth, so went into back issues to find out. Below is a link to the editorial, with a note to check out the paragraph about William S. Banowsky debating Anson Mount, the religion editor of Playboy magazine. That event was the first big event on the campus of Texas Tech to try to focus attention on the campus and Christianity. Here's the link to the editorial: http://www.christianchronicle.org/article824~Digging_through_the_archives_at_the_big_4-0

So, it seems we're not the only ones looking back to those years.

May 13, 2007

A '68 Seminar Participant Recalls

Tom Jones sent me the following excerpt from a book, In Search of a City: An Autobiographical Perspective on a Remarkable but Controversial Movement, he is preparing to publish later this year. It is good to begin hearing from those who were student-participants. My apology that for some technical reason I cannot format the following in paragraphs as it was written.

The following is copyrighted by Tom and may not be reproduced electronically or in any other form without his express written consent.

Excerpt from Chapter One: Lewis, Bonhoeffer and Dallas, Texas In the fall of 1968 I was chosen the president of the Christian Student Fellowship at Florence State Univerisity, now University of North Alabama, and as such, I received an impressive brochure in the mail describing an event billed as the International Campus Evangelism Seminar to be held at the Hilton Inn in Dallas in December of that year. I can still remember how I read that cutting-edge brochure (sharp even by today’s standards) with wide-eyed expectation. I can still see in my mind the picture of the Hilton Inn and remember the excitement that was generated as I thought about 1,000 Christians from many states in one hotel for four days. The only church events with that kind of attendance that I had heard of were on the campuses of Christian colleges. For Christians to be in a hotel signaled the beginning of something new, but none of us, of course, could have realized that we were witnessing what would seem later to me to be the birth of a movement. (By the way, I recently found that brochure and showed my family that the cost of the hotel was $5 per night, per person, with four to a room, and this was in a Hilton!) This event was being sponsored by Campus Evangelism (CE), a program of the Broadway Church of Christ in Lubbock, Texas. The leaders of CE were Jim Bevis (a native of my own part of Alabama), Charles Shelton and Rex Vermillion. Their ministry at Texas Tech in Lubbock was called Campus Advance. The brochure mentioned that this was actually the second international CE seminar, the first having been held in 1966. As a member of the Church of Christ and one convinced of the failings of denominational teaching on salvation, I was rather amazed to see that Bill Bright of Campus Crusade for Christ had been a speaker at that first seminar. Churches of Christ were known for having no contact with speakers outside their own fellowship unless the format was a well-advertised debate. I would later learn the leaders of CE had brought Bright in to give those in the Churches of Christ a vision of what could be done, and that they had adapted Campus Crusade's “Four Spiritual Laws,” producing their own attractive evangelistic booklet titled “Guideposts to Life on a New Plane.” The new booklet described the importance of baptism into Christ, something that was missing in the Campus Crusade material. They quoted Romans 6:4 from the J.B. Phillips translation and took the booklet’s title from that same passage:
We were dead and buried with him in baptism, so that just as he was raised from the dead by that splendid Revelation of the Father's power so we too might rise to life on a new plane altogether.
I am still not sure how it all happened, but in that bastion of theological conservatism in the church culture we were in, I somehow received permission to organize a group to attend the Dallas event. In retrospect, I imagine that this CE movement, full of suspect innovations, just had not hit the radar screens of the conservative church leaders in the Southeast. That would soon change. Right after Christmas 1968 a group of thirty of us (including my wife to be, whom I would propose to two months later) boarded a bus and traveled to Dallas, Texas. The theme of the event was “Say So!” based on Psalm 107:2 in the KJV.
Let the redeemed of the LORD say so, whom he hath redeemed from the hand of the enemy.
As anticipated, there were about 1,000 people in attendance, primarily college students from across the Bible Belt, Florida and California. The song leader for the seminar was someone named Chuck Lucas. He was introduced by the seminar leaders as the director of a CE "pilot project" in campus ministry at the University of Florida. He would be supported by CE but would be leading a Campus Advance effort in connection with the Fourteenth Street Church of Christ in Gainesville. He had with him a student leader that Sheila and I met; his name was J.P. Tynes. Twenty years later we would be in a group led by J.P. in the Boston Church of Christ. I would learn just recently from my friend Sam Laing that he was also in Dallas for this event and that the ministry in Gainesville had been started two years before the seminar. The seminar put great emphasis on sharing the gospel with others. At the time most campus ministries in the Churches of Christ were focused primarily on holding on to what were called preference students” (i.e. those who said they preferred the Church of Christ when they registered for classes at their college or university). The goal of campus ministry was often to try and keep students from losing their faith, since they were not attending Christian colleges. On those campuses where the church had established a “chair of Bible,” credit courses in the Biblical studies were taught as sort of “satellite” classes connected with a Christian college, but on most campuses there was little emphasis on evangelism. CE hoped to change that. They had printed up thousands of the little booklets I mentioned earlier: “Guideposts to Life on a New Plane.” We were encouraged to begin to use this tool in cold-contact evangelism even while we were at the hotel. At some point during the seminar I met a young woman from Nebraska who had come to the event with some friends but had little knowledge of the Bible. Using the new tool and adding to it other scriptures I knew, I shared with her what I understood about how to become a Christian. I can still remember getting up very early on Saturday morning to drive across Dallas where a minister opened his church building so she could be baptized into Christ. For several years after the seminar I corresponded with her, before eventually losing contact. If the seminar was organized to put neglected emphasis on evangelism, it also seemed to be designed to critique much that was wrong in the Churches of Christ. Seminar speakers emphasized the importance of grace, the sin of racial discrimination (a huge issue in 1968), the power of the Holy Spirit, the real meaning of fellowship, and the need for worship that was transforming not just routine. It would be prophetic preaching on these subjects that would shortly raise the ire of other church leaders. For me, the event was life changing. I would never think about much of anything in the same way again. For several years I replayed the tapes from the event over and over on my big Sony reel-to-reel tape recorder. Thirty-nine years later, I can still remember most of the speakers including Wesley Regan, Jim Reynolds, John Allen Chalk, Roy Osborne and Andrew Hairston, as well as key lines from all of their messages. The Jesus I had become convinced of while reading the Scriptures and the writings of C.S. Lewis and Dietrich Bonhoeffer, was now more alive than ever for me. Over the next four decades I would see and experience some great moments and some low ones, but it would be this Jesus and his grace that would keep me on the road.

April 14, 2007

'68 Seminar Participant Responds

Here's the kind of responders I hope to hear more from -- actual participants in CE seminars and programs!

Sheila Jones, a '68 seminar participant, commented on the information John Allen Chalk sent me to post below. Rather than depend on readers finding what she (and others) has to say in Comments, I will continue copying and posting them to make it easier for readers. From Sheila:

My husband, Tom Jones, and I were at the '68 seminar, and it had a profound and lasting impact on our lives. I was happy to find this site and to relive some history that I was blessed to be part of.

 I thought I would give some input on two of the photos that are posted. (1) the speaker who is labeled as "unidentified speaker" is, my husband says, Humphrey Foutz. And (2) the caption under Chuck Lucas's picture says that he went on to start or lead what has been called the "Boston Movement." This is incorrect. He actually lead what would be called the "Crossroads Movement." Then Kip McKean lead what would be called the "Boston Movement," which became the ICOC. Just thought I would send this clarification. Thanks again for this site.

Sheila Jones, Nashville, TN

Thanks, Sheila, for your comment and the corrections on the photos. Care to elaborate on the impact you and your husband have felt?

I will edit the captions. Good to hear from you. Know anyone else who might like to contribute to the blog?

April 07, 2007

John Allen Chalk Aids in the Search

Little by little word of the whereabouts of various friends and compatriots from 40 years ago is beginning to drift in. Thanks to John Allen Chalk who was one of the major players in the inner circle for the following updates. I hope we can establish some contact with these new finds and hear from them.

Walt_cabe_telegram_3 Walt Cabe lives in Arlington, Texas and represents nationally a software company.He got his Ph.D in clinical psychology from the University of Oklahoma after his years at ACU and involvement in CE. He had planned to go with me to Atlanta for a campus ministry when I suddenly accepted the pulpit at the Highland Church of Christ in Abilene in 1969. Walt and his wife, Marjorie, are close friends of my wife and me. Walt is a leader in the St. Alban's Episcopal Church in Arlington where he teaches an exciting adult Bible class.



Andrew_hairston_2_3 Andrew Hairston is the minister for the Simpson Street Church of Christ and is a municipal judge in Atlanta. He has served as president of the board of Southwestern Christian College in Terrell, Texas.




My last contact with Bud Stumbaugh was a few years back. He was a board member of Faulkner Christian College in Montgomery, Alabama. Bud was elected to several terms in the Georgia State Senate and was in the executive search business in Atlanta.

Jim Reynolds was my minister for almost 15 years at the Lake Highlands Church in Dallas. He was also my law partner for almost 20 years before resigning recently to become the full-time minister for the Lake Highlands Church and to devote more time to writing. He has remained a prophetic voice for the Lord Jesus Christ in my life. No man speaks to my heart like Jim does.

Steve Franklin is a successful Atlanta businessman in financial services and international business education. He took his Ph.D. from Georgia State University after graduation from ACU. Steve and Walt Cabe were roommates at ACU.

My wife, Sue, and I have lived in Fort Worth for 20 years now, the same amount of time we lived in Abilene.

I appreciate John Allen's sending these updates. I will attempt to follow up and try to get a post from these men.

March 23, 2007

Here's One I'm Glad to Hear From!

The following is copied from Mike McAlister's Comment just to be sure it gets read.

Thank you for setting this site up and for reminding us of the vision and passion we had for sharing the transforming power of Jesus on the campus. God opened the door for me to minister with the CE staff at Texas Tech in 1967. He also revolutionized my life through CE by teaching me what the Lordship of Jesus means.

After the CA staff was let go in 1971, God took me into teen ministry for nine years, and then preaching ministry for 25 years. To my suprise, He now has me back in campus ministry at the Univ. of Houston.

I thank God for you and Jim and for all who were used to help us enter into the "much more" that God intends for His church. May that Revolution never end!

Thanks, Mike!

Mike McAlister was a member of the team at Tech as he mentions when CE established the pilot project there. He worked with us and was constantly on the campus in dorms. the student union, and at the Bible chair. He met his future wife at Tech.

The funniest story I remember about Mike is that when he was being interviewed by the elders at the Broadway church prior to being hired, one of the "old-line" elders asked Mike where he "stood on Modernism." There was a long silence as Mike attempted to grasp the meaning of the question (which had no meaning to him, that being an issue 30+ years or more before Mike was born). Finally, he said something like, "Well, I believe modern things like cars and tvs and things like that are okay." Mike, you can retell the story if you like from your perspective and I'll publish it. But, that's pretty much the way the response went. Needless to say, Mike passed the theological test -- not knowing anything about Modernism!

February 27, 2007

Some Names

When I look back at the archived photos from the CE seminars, there are many people who I recognize and can recall their names. There are others not pictured whose names and faces I've forgotten. Unfortunately, the student participants are the ones most anonymous to me now simply because our encounter in most cases was for only three or four days at most.

The most prominent in my memory are the leaders and speakers. While Jim Bevis and Charles Shelton have sketchy current information about some of the leaders, we really have not heard from them first-hand. That's what I would like to accomplish in this cybersearch.

Here are some of the names:

  • Jennings Davis was a dean at Pepperdine University at the time.
  • Rick Rowland was a swimming coach at Pepperdine.
  • Dudley Lynch was the editor of The Christian Chronicle and documented CE -- personally attending and reporting on the "inquisition" of CE at Freed-Hardeman College
  • Wesley Reagan was a source of encouragement and inspiration time and again. Last I heard, he is a Methodist minister somewhere.
  • Prentice Meador is currently minister of a large Church of Christ in Dallas.
  • "Bud" Stumbaugh
  • Rick Oster is affiliated with the Harding Graduate School in Memphis. He was a student at Texas Tech in CE days.
  • Jim Reynolds is a lawyer and minister at a Dallas Church of Christ.
  • Andrew Hairston was, I think, a lawyer and minister in a Church of Christ in Atlanta(?).
  • Steve Franklin, a student then, is now reported to be a highly successful realtor in Atlanta.
  • Walt Cabe was a student who jumped in to help with various seminars. I think he's shown in the photos (#79) of the telegram sent to the astronauts during the '68 seminar in Dallas.
  • The McGehee Family who generously supported CE -- what news of the various members of the family?

There are many others whose names escape me. What a great thing it would be to find these and others, to hear from them and know something of their lives. I will ask Jim Bevis and Charles Shelton to suggest additional names and to fill in any details of participants and leaders they can.

If you know anything about those listed above or others who participated in CE in any way, please let me know or contact them and ask them to Comment here on the blog.

January 08, 2007

Answers to a Comment from Cary

In the Comments, Cary asks an interesting question which I will copy here for convenience:

"One thing that I want to hear about is what happened in your minds and hearts when Wes Reagan gave his speech at the '65 Abilene lectureship. You both were in what I imagine were fairly comfortable and secure ministry positions and were doing well with what you already had going. From what I can tell neither of you had particularly extensive experience with campus ministry. Why did that particular challenge strike you and what pushed you to go for something so big?"

Jim Bevis answered more eloquently than I will. I'm going to copy his Comment as well.

"In response to [Cary's] most recent contact, I would have to say that "the Lord spoke to my heart" through Wes Reagan's message in a way I had never experienced the Holy Spirit's direct operation. By this time in my spiritual journey, I had, in a sense,  reached the pinnacle of my career in the Churches of Christ, and having arrived at "Broadway" I knew there had to be "something more." I ultimately found that "something more" as I pursued the challenge of the college campus.

Wes Reagan spoke with a relevant, Spirit-empowered word that had "the ring of truth." We were already experiencing some success with our efforts in the College class at Texas Tech. It was obvious that we had not even touched the "hem of the garment." Wes put the challenge before us and the Lord put it in our hearts to go to the campus with Jesus Christ in all of His fullness, without the sectarian bend which characterized the Churches of Christ in the 60s. Our mission field was two fold: First, the lost and I mean those truly lost and secondly, the multitudes of students on the campus from Churches of Christ who did not have a personal, vital relationship with Jesus Christ. I would say that the message presented by Wes Reagan at ACC and that which followed, was a divine call to the campus."

Thinking back more than 40 years to hearing Wes Reagan's speech, I can only say that I remember where Jim and I were sitting in the packed auditorium and being stirred by the explosion of insight Wes was putting before us. It was kind of electrifying. The call jumped out at us both and we were both charged.

I was not a "career" minister. At the constant urging of Norvel Young I had in high school committed to myself that some time in life I would give two years to "full-time church work" as Norvel called it. I had begun fulfilling the commitment as an associate at the Broadway church officing next to Jim Bevis.

As a young student, probably junior high, I had been present for the founding of the Bible chair at Texas Tech. I went there occasionally with Tech friends when I was home from ACC. But, at the time of Wes' speech, as an associate minister, I was involved in teaching the Sunday morning college class at the Bible chair. Can't remember why I was the teacher, but I was. So, I had enough exposure for Wes' comments about the college campus to resonate (and resonate strongly). It was also plain to see that while the Tech Bible chair was performing a service to the church that it was designed for, it was not touching the lives of the thousands of other students right up the street. Reaching the campus became a challenge and faith adventure.

It was also apparent to me that reaching the campus was not just employing the right set of techniques and tools, but the right Spirit.

Here's what I mean by Spirit. Before CE involvement, I was in charge of personal evangelism for the Broadway church, training, teaching, mobilizing, and encouraging members to conduct "cottage Bible studies" in homes. It was a fairly aggressive program which drew quite a few members to participate and the tools and techniques we were using attracted attention from several quarters. That resulted in my being invited to do a workshop in personal evangelism on one occasion where I attempted to teach the workshop attendees about how the Holy Spirit can empower and indwell you resulting in a natural outpouring of evangelism as you can relate what the Lord has done in your life. Sadly, probably due to my poor teaching that went right over most of their heads. It appeared that all they wanted was copies of the literature, lists of filmstrips, and the reporting forms we used!

So, there you have it -- in a different vocabulary, but with the same message.

December 19, 2006

Where are they?

Roy Osborne was one of the most popular speakers at the seminars. He spellbound us all with his insights and teaching. Roy was minister of the Sunset Ridge Church of Christ in San Antonio for many years.

He recently wrote me the following:

"I think I was a bit player in the movement you and Jim were promoting in the 60s.

I am now 84 and retired in 1991 but still teach a class each week and write all my own material. People have requested copies and I now e-mail 225 people in 29 states each week with a copy of my current essay.

I am still going to the Church of Christ but have been able to teach the Sunset Ridge congregation that Christianity is all about the grace of God and not at all about legal rules and regulations.  You see, I am still preaching the same things I did in Dallas in 1968."

At my invitation he added the following:

"I would like to add that I feel the Campus Evangelism did more to loosen the iron grip of legalism in which the church was enslaved than any other one thing.  I believe the young people went home from Dallas with a view that Christianity was about their relationship to Christ, not their relationship to the church.  As these young people matured they became the leaders of today and that is why many of our advances in Biblical understanding and practice have been able to thrive.

I was hung on many a cross as a liberal for preaching the grace of God instead of the rigid rules of the church, but I survived and I would do it again."

To which I say, "Right on, Roy!"