Charles Templeton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the baseball player, see Chuck Templeton (baseball)

Templeton as an evangelist
Templeton as an evangelist

Charles Bradley Templeton (October 7, 1915 - June 7, 2001) was successively a Canadian cartoonist, evangelist, agnostic, politician, newspaper editor, inventor, broadcaster and author.

At the age of 17 during the Great Depression, Chuck Templeton (as he was then known) got his first job as a sports cartoonist for The Globe and Mail. This would be the first of many careers. Templeton was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in the latter part of the 1990s and died from complications of the disease in 2001.

Contents

[edit] Evangelism

In 1936, Templeton had a religious experience and conversion and became an evangelist, eventually becoming a close friend of Billy Graham. The two cofounded Youth for Christ International and often toured together. At his peak Templeton hosted a weekly religious television show on CBS, Look Up and Live in the early 1950s.

In 1941, Templeton founded the Avenue Road Church of the Nazarene, in Toronto, where he served as senior pastor despite his lack of formal theological training. Avenue Road Church of the Nazarene eventually became affiliated with the Christian and Missionary Alliance denomination. Its current name is Bayview Glen Church.

At one time the United Church of Canada heartily endorsed Templeton's evangelism, but came to feel a degree of discomfort with mass evangelistic crusades as its own evangelical Protestantism began to settle into a theologically and socially more liberal stream. In 1948, he attended Princeton Theological Seminary. In 1957, after a long struggle with doubt, Templeton declared himself an agnostic. His public pronouncement of his loss of faith caused a deep backlash from the evangelical community.

[edit] Later Careers and Politics

Returning to Canada, Templeton became a broadcaster hosting public affairs programming on CBC Television. In the 1960s he was hired as editorial page editor of The Toronto Star and then made a leap into politics running for the leadership of the Ontario Liberal Party in 1964 placing second to Andy Thompson. During the campaign Templeton ran in a Toronto by-election in an attempt to strengthen his campaign for leader by winning a seat in the Ontario legislature but he was defeated by NDP candidate Jim Renwick.

Following his unsuccessful political career, Templeton tried his hand as an advertising executive before returning to journalism first as editor of Maclean's Magazine and then as a newscaster for CTV News. During his tenure at CTV News, Templeton mentored many of the next generation of news executives who led local network affiliates to ratings dominance, such as Ted Stuebing and Wayne Dayton.

When Thompson was forced to vacate the Liberal leadership in 1967, Templeton was offered the position by senior members of the party but declined.

Templeton began a long time collaboration with Pierre Berton co-hosting a daily radio show in which the two would debate the issues of the day. Dialogue would be on the air for 18 years starting on CFRB in 1966 and then moving to CKEY in 1970 where Templeton was also hired as the morning newscaster.

His family claims that Templeton was the inventor of the childproof-cap[1], but according to the New York Times (7 January 1996), Dr. Jay Morris Arena (1911-1996) produced "the first child-proof safety cap" in the 1940s. [[1]][[2]]

[edit] Writing Career and Agnostic Revelation

In the 1970s and 1980s, Templeton was best known as an author of both fiction and non-fiction. His The Kidnapping of the President was made into a feature film; Act of God, The Third Temptation and The Queen's Secret were among his other bestselling novels.

He also wrote Jesus: A Bible in Modern English (1973) which is a selection of sayings by Jesus.

In 1982, he wrote his Anecdotal Memoir, which includes this description of Reverend Billy Graham: "there is no feigning in him: he believes what he believes what he believes with an invincible innocence. He is the only mass evangelist I would trust."[3] However later, in 1995, Templeton published A Farewell to God: My Reasons for Rejecting the Christian Faith which put forth his arguments for agnosticism, while also depicting Graham as a fraud who didn't believe in his own crusade. In the latter part of the book, Templeton includes several quotes that have been described as "devastating" to Graham and his career of evangelical teaching, setting up the case that the latter was simply caught up in good way to make a living.

[edit] Family

Charles Templeton is the father of Ty Templeton, a well-known comic book artist, and Brad Templeton, founder of ClariNet Communications.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Eulogy for Charles Templeton

Templeton, Charles. Charles Templeton: An Anecdotal Memoir. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1983.

[edit] External links