Monday, May. 28, 1951
Protestants at Work
Protestants at Work In Chicago last week the 125-member General Board of the newly created National Council of Churches held its fourth bi-monthly meeting. Some of the board's decisions were purely administrative; others will be passed along to the National Council's 29 constituent denominations for action at grass-roots level. Highlights: P:Approval of a program to bring religious training to young people by putting congregations and communities to work, instead of leaving it up to the present inadequate combination of Sunday schools and "released time" education. P:The admission of the Greek Orthodox Church as the 30th constituent member of the National Council (and its fifth Eastern Orthodox communion), pending approval of the 1952 General Assembly. Officially established in 1922, the Greek Orthodox archdiocese in the U.S. currently claims 1,000,000 communicants with 320 churches, 500 parochial schools, 320 Sunday schools, one theological school. P:The appointment of the National Council's first full-time evangelist: the Rev. Charles B. ("Chuck") Templeton, 36, Presbyterian ex-sport cartoonist from Toronto, who in 1946 made a two-month preaching tour of Europe with Evangelist Billy Graham.
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