Charles Stanley, well-known preacher and evangelical broadcaster, dies at 90

The Rev. Charles Stanley, shown at the In Touch Ministries offices in Doraville on October 1, 2020,  talks about his future plans after stepping down as senior pastor at First Baptist Church of Atlanta. He served there more than 50 years. Ben Gray for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Credit: Ben Gray

Credit: Ben Gray

The Rev. Charles Stanley, shown at the In Touch Ministries offices in Doraville on October 1, 2020, talks about his future plans after stepping down as senior pastor at First Baptist Church of Atlanta. He served there more than 50 years. Ben Gray for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The Rev. Charles F. Stanley, who used his skills as an orator and the pulpit of First Baptist Church of Atlanta to launch an evangelical global broadcasting empire, died Tuesday at his Atlanta home.

Stanley was the founder of In Touch Ministries, a global evangelical broadcasting powerhouse, and for more than 50 years pastored at First Baptist, considered one of metro Atlanta’s leading megachurches.

His sermons are produced by In Touch Ministries and are broadcast in 180 nations and translated into 55 languages.

“Our hearts are deeply saddened by the passing of Dr. Charles Stanley,” according to a statement from First Baptist Church of Atlanta. “In this time of loss, we are comforted in knowing that his faith has now become sight. The glories of heaven are now his, a reality he taught us and millions of others around the world throughout his years of faithful preaching.”

In 1988, Stanley was inducted into the NRB Hall of Fame. Stanley was “a broadcasting legend,” said Troy Miller, president of the National Religious Broadcasters Association (NRB), an association of Christian broadcasters.

A prolific writer, Stanley authored more than 70 books, several landing on the New York Times bestseller list. He brought many closer to their faith with daily devotional readings, prayers and practical advice.

“No one can deny his worldwide influence,” said the Rev. James Merritt, pastor of Cross Pointe Church in Duluth. Merritt, like Stanley, is a former Southern Baptist Convention president. “He’s always been known as a man who preached the Word of God. His message was centralized around knowing and doing the will of God.”

Pastor Louie Giglio of Passion City Church and the founder of the Passion movement, said he considered Stanley a spiritual father.

“Dr. Stanley was a titan of faith, and a bellwether among preachers of our generation,” Giglio said. “His simple yet convincing proclamation of the unwavering truth of God’s Word was a foundation on which millions of people around the globe could build their lives in a personal relationship with Him.

Dr. Stanley’s teaching will continue through In Touch Ministries led by the CEO Phillip Bowen and the board of trustees, according to the ministry.

Called, but challenged

Even with his successes, Stanley faced controversy in his ministry and personal life.

He served two terms as SBC president from 1984 to 1986 and led the denomination during the turbulent “conservative resurgence” when theological conservatives swept moderates out of leadership positions. .

A stalwart conservative, Stanley’s 1985 election to SBC president was bolstered by a last-minute telegram of support from Billy Graham.

“After Stanley’s election, the battle subsided and eventually the moderates moved on from the fight or away from the denomination,” said Ed Stetzer, executive director of Billy Graham Center at Wheaton College in Illinois.

Stanley had a very public separation from his wife of more than 40 years, Anna Stanley, in the 1990s. His divorce in 2000 drew shock and condemnation from some Southern Baptists, who considered divorce to be a sin.

Stanley stuck to his conservative beliefs about marriage, drawing criticism from some for his public stance against same-sex marriage and his comments describing homosexuality as “destructive behavior.”

Stanley decided to step down as senior pastor at First Baptist in September 2020, around his 88th birthday. He was named pastor emeritus and told the church he wasn’t retiring but was dividing his time between the church and In Touch Ministries.

“We were right in the middle of COVID, and every time I prayed, I felt a conviction that God was going to open many doors for ‘In Touch’ and that my focus should be there,” he said in October 2022. But even at 90, Stanley continued to come into the office once a week to check in with the leadership team.

“I’ve found that at any age, and especially when you are my age, you have to keep planning and having goals,” he said.

Rev. Charles Stanley, pastor of First Baptist Church Atlanta and author of dozens of books, has died. Handout photo.

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Before coming to Atlanta, Stanley was pastor at churches in North Carolina, Ohio and Florida. He came to First Baptist in 1969 as an associate pastor before being elected senior pastor in 1971. But he wasn’t a shoo-in. Some members of the executive committee opposed Stanley’s elevation to the top spot.

At one point, a member of the committee suggested a cash offer to Stanley to leave, he wrote in his book “The Source of My Strength.”

He declined. The fight dragged on for months, even sinking to a moment when one member struck him in the jaw. Eventually, though, the majority of members voted to confirm him as senior pastor.

His popularity skyrocketed on the strength of his preaching and the church grew, eventually drawing in more than 10,000 members

The Rev. Charles F. Stanley, leading his congregation in prayer in this photo, grew First Baptist into one of Atlanta's best known megachurches.

Credit: Contributed

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Credit: Contributed

Early life

Stanley was born Sept. 25, 1932, in Dry Fork, Virginia, near Danville during the height of the Great Depression.

Times were tough, money was tight for the small family. His father, the son of a Pentecostal evangelist worked in a textile mill but died of kidney disease when Stanley was nine months old. He was raised by his mother, Rebecca, a factory worker. They moved 17 times in the first 16 years of his life. He wrote about spending time with his grandfather and their conversations about obeying God.

By the time he was 12, Stanley said he recognized what God was calling him to do.

“I consider the gift Jesus has given — dying on the cross to forgive our sins and restore our relationship with God — the greatest gift ever given,” he told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Why wouldn’t I want to give my life sharing that with others?”

Stanley earned a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Richmond in Virginia and a bachelor’s of divinity degree from Southwestern Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas. He later went on to earn additional degrees from Luther Rice Seminary in Georgia.

In 1972, he made his first move into broadcast ministry with a program, “The Chapel Hour,” which aired on two Atlanta television stations. The show was later renamed “In Touch with Dr. Charles Stanley,” and went nationwide in 1978 after the Christian Broadcasting Network picked it up. The broadcast grew from 16,000 local viewers to a nationwide reach in just one week.

Stanley had another passion — photography. He loved particularly photographing nature.

Tim Olive, a professional photographer and a longtime member of First Baptist, called Stanley a natural, saying the pasttime “was a retreat for him.”

Stanley is survived by his son Andy Stanley, founding and senior pastor of North Point Ministries; daughter Becky Stanley Brodersen; six grandchildren; and half-sister Susie Cox. His former wife, Anna Johnson Stanley, preceded him in death in 2014.

Memorial services will be a private, family-only gathering. For the public, Stanley will lie in repose from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at First Baptist Church Atlanta, 4400 North Peachtree Rd.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to In Touch Ministries.

The memorial site is at : http://charlesstanley.com.