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Rich Lusk in 2021. Rich Lusk is an American author, minister, and theologian. [1] [2] His book Paedofaith: A Primer on the Mystery of Infant Salvation and a Handbook for Covenant Parents [3] is a book-length discussion of Christian infant faith. [4]
John Steven Gaines (born December 31, 1957) is an American Southern Baptist pastor who has served as the president of the Southern Baptist Convention. [1] He resigned as senior pastor on September 22. 2024, to pursue an itinerant preaching ministry at Bellevue Baptist Church in Cordova (a suburb of Memphis, Tennessee), one of the largest congregations in the Southern Baptist Convention and has ...
Oscar J. Underwood Jr. was born in Marion, Alabama, and relocated with his family to Fort Wayne, Indiana at age three. He obtained a B.S. in Elementary Education from Indiana University in 1972, [8] an M.S. in Educational Administration and Curriculum Development from Indiana University in 1978, and an Ed.S. and Ph.D. in Higher Education Leadership, Administration and Foundations from Indiana ...
William Vanderbloemen (born 1969) is an entrepreneur, pastor, speaker, author, and CEO and founder of Vanderbloemen Search Group, an executive search firm serving churches, ministries, and faith-based organizations.
Alabama is the only diocese in the Episcopal Church where there are no mission congregations; that is, all churches are expected to be self-supporting and self-governing parishes, with diocesan subsidies reserved for new church starts only [citation needed]. The policy was instituted by Bishop Furman C. Stough in the 1970s.
Robert Sylvester Graetz Jr. [1] (May 16, 1928 – September 20, 2020) was a Lutheran clergyman who, as the white pastor of a black congregation in Montgomery, Alabama, openly supported the Montgomery bus boycott, a landmark event of the civil rights movement.
Oct. 31—In prayer and protest, hundreds of people gathered at Decatur City Hall on Sunday to demand justice in the fatal police shooting of Stephen Perkins. During the gathering billed as "The ...
Escott-Russell was elected to the Alabama House of Representatives in 1981 and served until 1993, when she was elected to the Alabama Senate, where she served until 2006. [1] [2] As a state senator, she served as chair of the Children, Youth Affairs and Human Resource Committee.