American Decades
Blake, Eugene Carson 1906-
GENERAL SECRETARY, WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES
Protestant Pope.
By the middle of the decade Eugene Carson Blake was sometimes laughingly referred to as the "Protestant Pope." He seemed to be everywhere. In 1956 he was elected stated clerk (executive officer) of the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A. (Northern), the largest Presbyterian body in the United States. He served in that position until 1966, when he became the general secretary of the World Council of Churches in its Geneva office.
National Council of Churches.
He served as president of the National Council of Churches from 1954 to 1957. Not only was he one of most prominent church bureaucrats of the period, he wielded significant influence among American Protestants. His sermon proposing a consultation on church union among the mainline Protestant churches set a decade-long ecumenical dialogue in motion. He was active in the civil rights movement and was a...
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1960's Religion
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The Arab-Israeli Six-Day War, 1967
- The Assimilation of the Jews
- Black Manifesto
- Black Muslims
- Books and Movies
- Catholics and Politics
- Charismatics
- Church Unions
- Civil Rights and the Churches
- Communism and the Churches
- Consultation on Church Union
- The Death of God
- Freedom Songs
- On Human Life
- The Mod Church
- New Translations
- Religion in the Schools
- The Second Vatican Council and the American Church
- Vietnam and the Clergy
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Religion, 1960–1969
