How You Can Walk in the Spirit

Bill Bright
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Bill Bright

William Rohl "Bill" Bright (1921–2003). Born on October 19, 1921, in Coweta, Oklahoma, to Forrest Dale and Mary Lee Rohl Bright, Bill Bright was an American evangelist and founder of Campus Crusade for Christ (now Cru). Raised in a nominally Christian family on a cattle ranch, he converted to Christianity in 1944 at age 23 after moving to Los Angeles for business, influenced by Henrietta Mears at Hollywood Presbyterian Church. He briefly attended Princeton Theological Seminary and earned a Bachelor of Divinity from Fuller Theological Seminary (1947–1948), but left to focus on evangelism. In 1951, he and his wife, Vonette Zachary, founded Campus Crusade at UCLA, targeting college students with the Gospel, growing it into a global ministry with 26,000 staff in 191 countries by 2003. Bright’s preaching, often at university crusades and conferences, emphasized the “Four Spiritual Laws,” a booklet he authored in 1956, translated into 200 languages with over 2.5 billion copies distributed. He produced the Jesus film (1979), seen by over 6 billion people, and authored over 100 books and booklets, including Come Help Change the World (1970) and The Journey Home (2003). A key figure in evangelicalism, he received the Templeton Prize in 1996. Married to Vonette from 1948 until his death, they had two sons, Zachary and Bradley. Bright died on July 19, 2003, in Orlando, Florida, from pulmonary fibrosis, saying, “The Great Commission is not an option; it’s our mandate.”