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WILLIAM R. "BILL" BRIGHT
OBITUARY
October 19, 1921 -
July 19, 2003
William R. “Bill” Bright, founder of the
world’s largest Christian ministry and known
around the globe as one of the most vigorous
Christian evangelists, died
Saturday, July 19, 2003,
in
Orlando, Fla.,
from
complications related to pulmonary fibrosis,
a degenerative disease of the lungs.
He was
81.
Bright spent half a century building and
leading Campus Crusade for Christ to its
current size of
26,000
staff members and
225,000
volunteers working in
191
countries.
“He has carried a burden on his heart as
few men that I’ve ever known. A burden for
the evangelization of the world,” said
Rev. Billy Graham, a long-time friend of the
Brights. “He is a man whose sincerity
and integrity and devotion to our Lord have
been an inspiration and a blessing to me
ever since the early days of my ministry.”
Born near Coweta, Okla., in 1921, Bright
attended a one-room schoolhouse until eighth
grade. In high school and college he
distinguished himself as an achiever in
academics, student government, journalism,
oratory, and debate, all which would serve
him well later in his life as head of the
world’s largest Christian ministry. It was
in Coweta that Bright met his wife, the
former Vonette Zachary. After graduating
with honors from Oklahoma's Northeastern
State University in 1944, Bright moved to
Southern California and began a successful
confections company. While studying at
Princeton and Fuller Theological Seminaries
in 1951, Bright says he was inspired to
leave his budding business empire and
embrace the scriptural command to “go and
make disciples of all the nations” (Matthew
28:19).
In
1951, Bill Bright and his wife Vonette
pursued their passion for ministry by
starting Campus Crusade for Christ at the
University of California at Los Angeles.
What began with college students has since
grown into the largest international
Christian ministry in the world, reaching
beyond students to serve inner cities, the
military, athletes, political and business
leaders, the entertainment industries, and
families.
Bright's unique blend of Christian
commitment and communications insight is at
the heart of his success. His Four
Spiritual Laws booklet—a four-point
outline written by Bright in 1956 on how to
establish a personal relationship with
Jesus—has been printed in some
200
languages. Although religious tracts have
been published for centuries, Bright's
booklet has become what is considered to be
the most widely-disseminated religious
booklet in history, with more than
2.5
billion booklets distributed to date.
In
1979, Bill Bright and Campus Crusade for
Christ introduced The JESUS film, a
feature-length documentary on the life of
Christ. Since its debut in U.S. theaters in
1979, it has been seen by more than 5.1
billion people in 234 countries and has
become the most widely viewed as well as
most widely translated film in history (more
than 800 languages).
Bright effectively employed other
communications vehicles over the years as
well, including books (he authored more than
100 books and booklets), television and
radio, the Internet, billboards, phone
banks, movies, videos, and international
training conferences reaching hundreds of
millions.
In
1972, he organized a week-long stadium event
in Dallas for 85,000 youths, officially
known as EXPLO 72, but dubbed by the press
as the “Religious Woodstock.” Campus
Crusade's 1974 EXPLO 74 in Korea drew
nightly crowds of up to 1.5 million
persons. Six years later, crowds from 2
million to almost 3 million attended the
Here's Life Korea World Evangelism Crusade.
Bright is considered a major catalyst for
the modern-day resurgence of the disciplines
of fasting and prayer in the Christian
church. Since 1994, Campus Crusade for
Christ has sponsored seven fasting and
prayer events, drawing tens of thousands of
Christians throughout the world to join
together via satellite and the Internet. In
1996 Bright was presented with the
prestigious Templeton Prize for Progress in
Religion, for his work with fasting and
prayer. Worth more than $1 million, the
Templeton Prize is the world's largest
financial annual award. Bright donated all
of his prize money to causes promoting the
spiritual benefits of fasting and prayer.
In
2000, Bright received the first Lifetime
Achievement Award from his alma mater,
Northeastern State University. In that same
year, Bright and his wife were given the
Lifetime Inspiration Award from Religious
Heritage of America Foundation.
Additionally, he received the Lifetime
Achievement Award from both the National
Association of Evangelicals and the
Evangelical Christian Publishers
Association. In 2002, Dr. Bright was
inducted into the National Religious
Broadcasters Hall of Fame.
Bright also co-founded, with Dr. James
Davis, the Global Pastors Network, an
internet-based training center at
www.globalpastorsnetwork.org, designed
to equip pastors and ministers worldwide
with interactive resources, events, and
networking opportunities.
Bill Bright is survived by his wife Vonette;
his sister Florence Skinner of Coweta,
Okla.;
his brother Forest Bright of Hemet, Cal.;
his son Zachary, who is pastor of Divine
Savior Presbyterian Church in California;
his son Bradley, who is on staff with Campus
Crusade, and four grandchildren.
In lieu of flowers, the Brights have
requested that friends honor Bill's memory
through the William R. Bright Legacy Trust
to further the work to which he gave his
life; gifts to William R. Bright Legacy
Trust (account #2747894), 100 Lake Hart
Drive, Orlando, FL 32832.
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