About: Ben Haden

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Ben Haden (October 18, 1925 – October 24, 2013) was an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America. He became internationally known through the religious broadcast: Changed Lives. Originating from the services of the First Presbyterian Church in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Haden's pulpit approach was sometimes described as arguing a case before a jury. With his background in the CIA and as CEO for a daily newspaper, Haden was also the speaker on the Radio Bible Study Hour, succeeding Donald Grey Barnhouse of Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia. Haden was an atheist until he became Christian in 1954.

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  • Ben Haden (October 18, 1925 – October 24, 2013) was an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America. He became internationally known through the religious broadcast: Changed Lives. Originating from the services of the First Presbyterian Church in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Haden's pulpit approach was sometimes described as arguing a case before a jury. With his background in the CIA and as CEO for a daily newspaper, Haden was also the speaker on the Radio Bible Study Hour, succeeding Donald Grey Barnhouse of Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia. Haden was an atheist until he became Christian in 1954. Haden was born in Fincastle, Virginia, in 1925. He received his law degree from Washington and Lee College in 1949 and became a member of the Virginia bar. He also studied at the University of Texas at Austin and Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia. Haden pastored Key Biscayne Presbyterian Church in Miami, Florida before moving to become the 11th pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Chattanooga, Tennessee in 1968. Haden followed James L. Fowle. Haden served the church in Chattanooga for 31 years before resigning in 1998 to pursue Changed Lives.org, an internet streaming video and audio on-demand ministry. This ministry produces "conversations", talks lasting from five to fifteen minutes and done in a conversational tone. He emphasizes that these productions are not sermons, but are simple conversations. This supports one of aims of Changed Lives, which is to reach the many Americans who claim to be Christians yet do not have a home church. In 1963, while attending Columbia Theological Seminary, Haden published a non-fiction account of the people he met during his travels as a newspaperman in the Soviet Union, I See Their Faces. He died in Chattanooga on October 24, 2013. (en)
  • Ben Haden (18 de octubre de 1925 - 24 de octubre de 2013)​ fue un ministro ordenado en la .​ Se dio a conocer internacionalmente por medio de una de las más exitosas transmisiones religiosas del siglo XX, Changed Lives, procedente de los servicios de la Primera Iglesia Presbiteriana en Chattanooga, Tennessee. Con su experiencia en la CIA​​ y como director general de un diario,​​​ también fue orador en la Radio Bible Study Hour, sucediendo a de la Décima Iglesia Presbiteriana en Filadelfia. Haden era ateo hasta que se convirtió al cristianismo en 1954.​ Haden nació en Fincastle, Virginia, en 1925. Recibió su título de abogado de la Universidad de Washington y Lee en 1949 y se convirtió en un miembro de la barra de Virginia.​ También estudió en la Universidad de Texas en Austin en el Seminario Teológico de Columbia en Decatur, Georgia. Haden pastor de la Iglesia Presbiteriana de Key Biscayne en Miami, Florida, antes de pasar a ser el undécimo pastor de la Primera Iglesia Presbiteriana en Chattanooga, Tennessee, en 1968, sucediendo a James L. Fowle. Sirvió a la iglesia en Chattanooga durante 31 años antes de dimitir en 1998 para dedicarse a Changing Lives.org, un ministerio de audio bajo demanda de vídeo en streaming de Internet. Este ministerio produce "conversaciones", audios que duran de cinco a quince minutos y se hacen en un tono de conversación. Él hace hincapié en que estas producciones no son sermones, sino conversaciones sencillas. Esto apoya uno de los objetivos de Changing Lives, que es llegar a los muchos estadounidenses que afirman ser cristianos y todavía no tienen una iglesia. En 1963, mientras asistía a Columbia Theological Seminary, Haden publicó un relato de no ficción de las personas que conoció durante sus viajes como periodista en la Unión Soviética, I See Their Faces. Murió en Chattanooga, el 24 de octubre de 2013.​ (es)
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  • Ben Haden (October 18, 1925 – October 24, 2013) was an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America. He became internationally known through the religious broadcast: Changed Lives. Originating from the services of the First Presbyterian Church in Chattanooga, Tennessee, Haden's pulpit approach was sometimes described as arguing a case before a jury. With his background in the CIA and as CEO for a daily newspaper, Haden was also the speaker on the Radio Bible Study Hour, succeeding Donald Grey Barnhouse of Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia. Haden was an atheist until he became Christian in 1954. (en)
  • Ben Haden (18 de octubre de 1925 - 24 de octubre de 2013)​ fue un ministro ordenado en la .​ Se dio a conocer internacionalmente por medio de una de las más exitosas transmisiones religiosas del siglo XX, Changed Lives, procedente de los servicios de la Primera Iglesia Presbiteriana en Chattanooga, Tennessee. Con su experiencia en la CIA​​ y como director general de un diario,​​​ también fue orador en la Radio Bible Study Hour, sucediendo a de la Décima Iglesia Presbiteriana en Filadelfia. Haden era ateo hasta que se convirtió al cristianismo en 1954.​ (es)
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  • Ben Haden (en)
  • Ben Haden (es)
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