[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 45 (Monday, March 19, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H1375]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING DR. CHARLES GILCHRIST ADAMS
(Mr. CONYERS asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute.)
Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Speaker, even though he is very much alive, I rise
this evening to celebrate the inspired life and contributions of the
Reverend Dr. Charles Adams, who, on April 30 of this year, will be
completing his teaching at the Harvard Divinity School, where he has
for years conducted these important courses that he has taught.
Earlier, he was the head of the largest NAACP chapter in the Nation,
the Detroit chapter. He has inspired countless numbers of people on
this planet to a greater faith and in the necessity to follow up with
the work to produce the change, the compassion that in some ways,
sometimes large and other times small, can dispense hope in a
community, a State, a Nation, and sometimes even a world.
Dr. Charles Gilchrist Adams
Pastor, Hartford Memorial Baptist Church
William and Lucille Nickerson Professor of the Practice of Ethics and
Ministry, Harvard Divinity School
Charles G. Adams, one of the most prominent ministers in
the United States, an acclaimed preacher and leader on faith-
based urban revitalization has been Pastor of Hartford
Memorial Baptist Church since 1969. From 1962 to 1969 Dr.
Adams served as Pastor of the historic Concord Baptist Church
in Boston, Massachusetts. He has lectured on homiletics and
Black Church Studies at Boston University, Andover Newton
School of Theology, Central Baptist Seminary in Kansas City,
and Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado.
Charles Gilchrist Adams, was born December 13, 1936, in
Detroit, Michigan. He was baptized by his granduncle, the
late Gordon Blaine Hancock, of Richmond, Virginia. He
attended Fisk University where he was President of the
Sophomore Class and Vice President of the Student Council.
He graduated with honors from the University of Michigan
and Harvard University and went on to become a doctoral
fellow in Union Theological Seminary in New York City. He has
been awarded twelve honorary doctorates from such
institutions as Morehouse College, Marygrove College, Dillard
University, Morris College, Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo
Michigan, and the University of Michigan.
From 1962 to 1969, Dr. Adams served as Pastor of the
historic Concord Baptist Church in Boston, Massachusetts,
followed by an appointment as the Pastor of Hartford Memorial
Baptist Church in Detroit, Michigan, in 1969. He has lectured
on homiletics and Black Church studies in Boston University,
Andover Newton School of Theology, Central Baptist Seminary
in Kansas City, and Iliff School of Theology in Denver,
Colorado. He lectured seven times at Boston University School
of Theology in a course on the Black Church taught by
Professor Preston Noah Williams.
In April 1989, Dr. Adams was invited to speak before the
United Nations on South African apartheid. In August 1990, he
was a speaker for the World Congress of the Baptist World
Alliance in Seoul, Korea. His theme was ``Together In Christ
We Love.''
In 1991, Dr. Adams addressed the Seventh General Assembly
of the World Council of Churches in Canberra, Australia, and
spoke on the 157 theme, ``Come Holy Spirit, Renew The Whole
Creation. At this Assembly, he was elected to their
organization's Central Committee. He recommended the World
Council use its offices and resources to combat racism in the
U.S. and around the world, and their response was to join
forces with the National Council of the Churches of Christ in
the USA. Together, the organizations converged on Los Angeles
in 1992 to meet with churches, gang leaders, public officials
and citizens in order to bring about a lasting peace after
the riots following the verdict in the beating of Rodney
King.
Dr. Adams was the 1993 94 Conference Preacher for Hampton
University Ministers Conference held in Hampton, Virginia. He
has been awarded twelve honorary doctorates from colleges and
universities across the country, has spoken before the United
Nations (on South African Apartheid), and has received the
coveted ``Rabbi Marvin Katzenstein Award'' from the Harvard
Divinity School. This is given to a Harvard graduate who
exhibits ``a passionate and helpful interest in the lives of
other people, an informed and realistic faithfulness, and an
embodiment of the idea that love is not so much a way of
feeling as way of acting and has a reliable sense of humor.''
Dr. Adams' board affiliations include the Baptist World
Alliance, the World Council of Churches, the National Council
of Churches, the Congress of National Black Churches,
Morehouse College (Atlanta, GA) and Morris College (Sumpter,
SC). He is married to Agnes Hadley Adams and is the father of
Tara Adams Washington, M.D., and the Rev. Charles Christian
Adams.
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