David Mainse
David Mainse is a Canadian televangelist and evangelical Christian leader.
Born in August 1936 in Campbell's Bay, Quebec. He was raised in a rural area near Ottawa, Ontario then continued his education at Sudbury Secondary in Sudbury. Mainse was highly influenced by his father Roy Lake Mainse (1896–1972) who worked as a missionary in Egypt then as a Holiness Movement Church pastor in Ontario and Quebec.
Mainse determined to go into ministry while still a teenager. He studied theology at Eastern Pentecostal Bible College (now Master's College and Seminary) in Peterborough, Ontario and was Ordained. He met and married Norma-Jean Rutledge in 1958, pastored Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada churches in Brighton, Deep River and Hamilton.
He began his communications ministry in 1962 with a 15-minute program following the late night news on affiliate CHOV in Pembroke, Ontario, while he pastored in Deep River. He later began a television program called Crossroads. The program expanded quietly to stations across the country but with minimal penetration into the American heartland.
In 1975 Mainse left the pastorate to focus full time on television and evangelism projects. He began the ministry known as Crossroads Christian Communications in the early seventies with Circle Square, a children's telecast that has been carried in over 50 countries and continues to be shown in some. David later made the fictional ranch a reality as the summer camp, Circle Square Ranch. At its paramount there were 11 Circle Square Ranches across Canada.
In 1976, Mainse began a project to telecast daily. He took the initiative to create a studio at 100 Huntley Street in downtown Toronto. The lead program of this new station took the studio's address as its name. On June 15, 1977, the first of broadcast of the interview/talk show 100 Huntley Street (based on The 700 Club in the United States) was launched. This TV program featured more than 14,000 guests such as Billy Graham and Charlton Heston. Crossroads produced a short-lived program for teenagers, Inside Track, in 1978.
In 1979 outside the Toronto mayor's office, Mainse protested the gay publication The Body Politic, saying that "parents and all decent people are particularly disgusted by the perversity, which publishes and disseminates anti-child, anti-parent dehumanizing materials." During the rally, Mainse protested alongside Ken Campbell who equated gays with child molesters during an interview with the television media. In his statement to the press, Campbell stated, "when a group advocates the molestation of children...one has to question the...social constructive nature of the whole cause they represent."[1]
In 1998, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission granted Crossroads a licence to operate a Burlington, Ontario based, 24-hour a day over-the-air commercial TV station on cable, covering North America on satellite. CITS-TV has been broadcasting programming since September 1998.
Mainse served for several years at the request of mutual funds billionaire John Templeton as a judge in the awarding of the Templeton Prize. He received numerous awards for excellence in television production from the US based National Religious Broadcasters, and several honorary doctorates, the most recent being from Tyndale University College and Seminary in Toronto in 2003.
Mainse stepped down as president of Crossroads and host of 100 Huntley Street in the summer of 2003. He passed the torch to his youngest son, Ron Mainse of Burlington, Ontario. He remained on the CTS board.
Though retired he continued to be featured on 100 Huntley Street through various segments acting as a spokesman for Crossroads on various issues of social concern. Mainse has published a book, SALT.
In 2009, Mainse returned to host 100 Huntley Street while his sons Ron and Reynold stepped down from the ministry. While the ministry itself was exonerated 'various media outlets, and Crossroads ordered a forensic audit to ensure that no viewer donations had been invested in the scam. Crossroads board declared in July 2009 that the organization was clean.'[2]
In January 2010 he launched new television programs, Really Good Medicine and A Living Witness to Amazing Grace. He is in the preparation stages of 150 city "Thank You Canada" tour set to take place during his 50th year of television ministry.
In June 2012, Mainse was presented the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal at a gala event at Roy Thomson Hall.[3]
References
- ↑ CBC Archives: Backlash against gays. (Archived television news broadcast). Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Originally aired January 7, 1979. Mainse appears at 1:15.
- ↑
- ↑ Governor General of Canada - Find a Recipient
External links
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