John Stott

April 27, 1921 - July 27, 2011
Pastor, Theologian, and Author

Pastor, Theologian, and Author

From London, England

Served in London, England

Affiliation: Anglican

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"We should not ask, 'What is wrong with the world?' for that diagnosis has already been given. Rather, we should ask, 'What has happened to the salt and light?'"

Educated at Cambridge University, Stott was one of the most influential clergymen in the Church of England in the twentieth century. In 1950 he became rector of All Souls Church in London (the parish where he was born), and in 1975 rector emeritus. From 1952 to 1977 he led missions to university students on five continents. In 1982 he founded the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity (now part of Christian Impact), serving as director up to 1986 and president from 1986. Chaplian to the queen from 1959 to 1991, he was appointed extra chaplain from 1991 onward and was awarded a Lambeth D.D. in 1983.

Stott contributed to the development of missiology through his international speaking and preaching (often to students); his books on mission theology, particularly Christian Mission in the Modern World (1975); and his deft, concise drafting of key mission statements in the Lausanne Covenant (1974), Willowbank Report on Gospel and Evangelical Commitment (1982), Evangelical-Roman Catholic Dialogue on Mission (1987), and the Lausanne II Manila Manifesto (1989). His strategic initiatives included the Evangelical Fellowship in the Anglican Communion, the Langham Trust scholarship program (which supports Third World graduate students), and the Evangelical Literature Trust. He was the New Testament editor and contributor to the expository commentary series The Bible Speaks Today.

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"God's time is now. The question is not, ‘What have I been?’ or ‘What do I expect to be?’ but, ‘Am I now trusting in Jesus to save to the uttermost?’ If so, I am now saved from all sin.
"When someone is hopeless, it takes another person to bring hope. If you live a life that is selfish, it is not really worth living, but helping other people brings a lot of joy."
"What if God is even greater than we think? We can have God neatly wrapped up in our heads, and then all of a sudden there’s a little shaft of light and we see things as we’ve never seen them before. Those are wonderful refreshing God moments."