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LYNCHBURG, Va. - The Rev. Jerry Falwell, Founder and Chancellor of Liberty University and Founder and Pastor of the historic
Thomas Road Baptist Church, died May 15, 2007. He was 73.
Rev. Falwell was found unconscious in his office around
11:30 a.m. by members of his staff and received immediate resuscitation efforts there, again in the ambulance and at Lynchburg
General Hospital. He was officially pronounced dead at 12:40 p.m.
Rev. Falwell’s family, including his wife
Macel and sons Jerry Falwell, Jr. and Jonathan Falwell, were with him at the hospital at the time of his death. Ministry
officials called a special 2:00 p.m. meeting in the Thomas Road Baptist Church auditorium and on less than an hour's notice
over 6,000 faculty, staff, students and church members attended the announcement of the passing of their Pastor and Chancellor.
Rev. Falwell established the Thomas Road Baptist Church in 1956 where he pastored for over 50 years. He founded Liberty
University in 1971 and oversaw its rise to prominence as the largest evangelical University in America.

At the age of 22, having just graduated from college in June of 1956, Jerry Falwell returned to his hometown of Lynchburg,
Virginia and started Thomas Road Baptist Church with 35 members. The offering that first Sunday totaled $135. Falwell often
says about the first collection, “we thought we had conquered the world”. Today Thomas Road Church has 24,000
members and the total annual revenues of all the Jerry Falwell ministries total over $200 million.
Within weeks of founding his new church in 1956, Falwell began the Old-Time Gospel Hour, a daily local radio ministry and
a weekly local television ministry. Nearly five decades later, this Old-Time Gospel Hour is now seen and heard in every American
home and on every continent except Antarctica. Through the years, over three million persons have communicated to the Falwell
ministries that they received Christ as Lord and Savior as a result of this radio and television ministry.
In 1967, Falwell implemented his vision to build a Christian educational system for evangelical youth. He began with the
creation of Lynchburg Christian Academy, a Christ-centered, academically excellent, fully accredited Christian day school
providing kindergarten, elementary and high school. In 1971, Liberty University was founded. Today, over 21,500 students from
50 states and 80 nations attend this accredited, liberal arts Christian university. Falwell’s dream has become a reality.
A pre-school child can now enter the school system at age 3, and 20 or more years later, leave the same campus with a Ph.D.,
without ever sitting in a classroom where the teacher was not a committed follower of Jesus Christ.
Falwell is also publisher of the National Liberty Journal, a monthly newspaper which is read by over 200,000 pastors and
Christian workers, and the Falwell Confidential, a weekly e-mail newsletter to over 500,000 pastors and Christian activists.
In June 1979, Falwell organized the Moral Majority, a conservative political lobbying movement which the press soon
dubbed the "Religious Right." During the first two years of its existence, the Moral Majority attracted over 100,000
pastors, priests, and rabbis and nearly seven million religious conservatives who mobilized as a pro-life, pro-family, pro-Israel,
and pro-strong national defense lobbying organization. The Moral Majority chose California Governor Ronald Reagan as
"their candidate" for President in 1980, registered millions of new voters, and set about to inform and activate a sleeping
giant - 80 million Americans committed to faith, family, and Judeo-Christian values.
With the impetus of the newly organized Moral Majority, millions of people of faith voted for the first time in 1980 and
helped elect Ronald Reagan and many conservative congressmen and senators. Since 1979, about 30% of the American electorate
has been identified by media polls as the "Religious Right". Most recent major media surveys have acknowledged that these
"faith and values" voters re-elected George W. Bush in November 2004.
Though perhaps better known outside Lynchburg for political activism, Jerry Falwell's personal schedule confirms his passion
for being a pastor and a Christian educator. He often states that his heartbeat is for training young people for every
walk of life. Falwell and his wife of 49 years, Macel, have three grown children and eight
grandchildren.
Jerry Laymon Falwell, Sr. Founder and Chancellor, Liberty University Founder and Senior Pastor, Thomas Road Baptist
Church Date of Birth: August 11, 1933 Place of Birth: Lynchburg, Va. Education: Attended Lynchburg College, Lynchburg,
Va. Graduate of Baptist Bible College, Springfield, Mo., Theology (1956)
HONORARY DEGREES Tennessee Temple Theological Seminary, Doctor of Divinity California
Graduate School of Theology, Doctor of Letters Central University, Seoul, Korea, Doctor of Laws
VOCATIONS AND POSTS Thomas Road Baptist Church: Pastor since 1956 Old Time Gospel Hour,
Inc.: President since 1956 Elim Home for Alcoholics: since 1959 Lynchburg Christian Academy , K-12: since
1967 Liberty University: Chancellor since 1971 Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary: Chancellor since 1973 Liberty
Bible Institute: Chancellor since 1972 Moral Majority, Inc.: 1979-1989 Liberty Godparent Home for Unwed Mothers:
since 1982 Liberty Broadcasting Network: President since 1985 Clergyman of the Year in America, Religious Heritage of
America, 1979 Jabotinsky Centennial Medal, for friendship to Israel; presented by Prime Minister Menachem Begin, 1980 Christian
Humanitarian of the Year, Food for the Hungry International, 1981 Most Admired Man Not in Congress, Conservative Digest,
1983 Voted several times among the 10 Most Admired Men in America, Good Housekeeping Poll Named one of the 25 Most Influential
People in America, U.S. News & World Report, 1983 Debated New Zealand Prime Minister David Lange, defending the "Western
Nuclear Alliance," at Oxford Debating Society, 1985
Named the Most Influential Central Virginian of the 20th Century in a survey conducted by the News and Advance in Lynchburg,
Virginia, Dec. 1999 Named Virginia 's most influential clergyman of the 20th Century by the Virginia Historical Society
Featured on the covers of Newsweek and Time, and on countless print and broadcast outlets Speaker at dozens of colleges
and universities including Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Dartmouth, UCLA, and Notre Dame
Met privately numerous times with Presidents George Bush, Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, and Richard Nixon. Met with world
leaders such as Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, South African President F.W. DeKlerk, Jordan's King Hussein, and Israeli Prime
Ministers Begin, Shamir, Rabin, Peres, Netanyahu and Sharon. Led missionary and humanitarian efforts in nations around
the world, including the former Soviet Union
BOOKS Church Aflame - Impact, 1971 Falwell: Capturing a Town for Christ - Revell, 1973 Listen,
America! - Doubleday, 1980 The Fundamentalist Phenomenon - Doubleday, 1981 Finding Inner Peace and Strength - Doubleday,
1982 When it Hurts Too Much to Cry - Tyndale, 1984 Wisdom for Living - Victor Books, 1984 Stepping Out on Faith -
Tyndale, 1984 Champions for God - Victor Books, 1985 If I Should Die Before I Wake - Thomas Nelson, Strength for
the Journey - Simon & Schuster, 1987 The New American Family - Word, 1992 Falwell: An Autobiography - Liberty House,
1997 Fasting Can Change Your Life - Regal, 1998
FAMILY Wife Macel Pate Falwell, married 4/12/58 Two sons, Jerry Falwell, Jr., Attorney,
Vice-Chancellor of Liberty University, Lynchburg, Va. and Jonathan Falwell, Attorney and Executive Pastor of Thomas Road Baptist
Church, Lynchburg Va. One daughter, Jeannie Falwell Savas, Surgeon, Richmond, Va
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