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James Challen

James Challen (January 29, 1802 – December 9, 1878) was an American preacher and author whose calling from God within the Disciples of Christ shaped the Restoration Movement through fervent preaching and prolific writing across the 19th century. Born in Hackensack, New Jersey, to English immigrant parents—his father a Methodist and his mother a Baptist—he moved with his family to Lexington, Kentucky, in 1809. Overcoming youthful skepticism, he embraced faith under Baptist minister James Fishback in 1822, uniting with the Baptist Church, and later studied at Transylvania University, where he welcomed Lafayette in 1825, though he left before his senior year to pursue ministry. Challen’s calling from God was affirmed with his ordination around 1825, leading him to pastor Enon Baptist Church in Cincinnati, where his sermons called for a return to New Testament Christianity, aligning with Alexander Campbell’s reforms by 1830. He served various churches, including a significant tenure at Walnut Street Church in Cincinnati, and later shared a pulpit with Isaac Errett at Central Christian Church until his final sermon on October 20, 1878. A key figure in the American and Foreign Christian Missionary Societies, he preached alongside Reformation giants like the Campbells and Walter Scott, claiming thousands of conversions—over 3,000 by one estimate. His writings, including The Gospel and Its Elements (1850), Christian Evidences (1848), and poetry like The Cave of Machpelah (1852), amplified his evangelistic voice. Married with several children, including a son, James Jr., who became a cricketer, he passed away at age 76 in Cincinnati, Ohio.