As many of you know by now, one of the great saints of our age, Carl Henry, has gone home to be with the Lord. Although he suffered greatly during his illness, he maintained a consistent Christian witness. He died as he lived—Coram Deo, in the face of God.
Carl’s legacy to this ministry and to the kingdom is beyond recounting. Though he only went to college (Wheaton) once he came to faith in Christ at age twenty, Carl became the most influential evangelical theologian of his generation.
He was a co-founder of Fuller Seminary, founding editor of Christianity Today, and author of The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism, a book that was instrumental in bringing evangelical Christians out of the fundamentalist wilderness in which the movement had been mired for most of the first half of the twentieth century. His book, published in 1947, came just at the same time Billy Graham was growing in influence as a preacher, and many people believe, as I do, that Henry and Graham together sparked the renewal of evangelicalism that we’ve been experiencing for forty years.
In my earliest days as a Christian, Carl helped me develop my own theological understandings. After he joined Prison Fellowship’s Board, he was the solid rock that kept us anchored to our faith. Carl was a former journalist, converted to Christ as a newsman (if there’s hope for newsmen, there’s hope for anybody!), and brought those great journalistic skills with him into the kingdom.
Carl Henry will never be replaced. He was a man God raised up for a particular time to do a mighty work. Others will come along, but they will not be Carl Henrys.
I personally am forever in Carl’s debt because he mentored me so lovingly. Not once in our close relationship over twenty years did he ever tell me anything; he was always very patient to explain that what I had said was very good, but then he asked if I had thought about another perspective. Within a short period of time, I realized that he was coaching me from his wealth of great wisdom. I do not remember a time when I didn’t welcome it, appreciate it, and grow in Christ as a result of it. He was one of the great minds teaching a fledgling, and he did it with understanding, patience, love, humility.
Chuck Colson
Chuck Colson was the Chief Counsel for Richard Nixon and served time in prison for Watergate-related charges. In 1976, Colson founded Prison Fellowship Ministries, which, in collaboration with churches of all confessions and denominations, has become the world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, crime victims, and their families.
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