Promise Keepers
- Genre: Gospel
- Active: '90s, 2000s
- Major Members: Dave Wardell, Bill McCartney
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Promise Keepers is an international Christian organization for men, based in Denver, Colorado, United States, self-described as "a Christ-centered organization dedicated to introducing men to Jesus Christ as their Savior and Lord, helping them to grow as Christians".[1] Promise Keepers promote the view that husbands have a responsibility to be the head of their household in a gentle and loving way, following the example of Jesus Christ and giving his life to his wife, so she in turn can willingly submit to his leadership. They are also associated with teenage abstinence policy of education. Promise Keepers is a non-profit organization in the United States. It is not affiliated with any Christian church or denomination. Their most widely publicized events have been mass rallies held at football stadiums and similar venues. They also sell a variety of promotional products to "help men keep their promises," including clothing, books, and music. Dr. Bruce Wilkinson developed the widely used video curriculum, Personal Holiness in Times of Temptation, as a part of “The Biblical Manhood” series for Promise Keepers.
The core beliefs of the Promise Keepers, outlined in the Seven Promises, consist of the following:
Promise Keepers was founded in 1990 by Bill McCartney, formerly the head football coach at the University of Colorado at Boulder. According to the group's website, McCartney got the inspiration for Promise Keepers on March 20, 1990, while he was attending a Fellowship of Christian Athletes banquet in Pueblo, Colorado, during a conversation with Dave Wardell, who was also in attendance at the event. He envisioned his home stadium, Boulder's Folsom Field, would be used as a gathering "for training and teaching on what it means to be godly men". In July 1990, 72 men came together at Boulder Valley Christian Church in Boulder to organize what would be Promise Keepers' first event at University of Colorado's Event Center. From that point, the Promise Keepers' membership gradually grew through word of mouth. By the time of the first official PK conference in July 1991, approximately 4200 men were in attendance. The organization was incorporated as a nonprofit in the state of Colorado in December 1990.
What Makes a Man?, Promise Keepers' first hardbound book written for the organization, was first published by The Navigators' Navpress publishing arm in 1992 for its first Folsom Field gathering in June of that year. Dr. James Dobson had McCartney on his Focus on the Family nationwide radio program that same month. McCartney resigned his coaching position in 1994 in order to focus his attention on the organization.
Promise Keepers' most notable event was its Stand in the Gap: A Sacred Assembly of Men open-air gathering at the National Mall in Washington, D.C. on October 4, 1997. C-SPAN carried the event live in its entirety, and over one million men participated in it. It was reported at the time to be the largest gathering of men in American history, surpassing even the Million Man March.[citation needed] In 1998, the Promise Keepers began to experience financial difficulties. There is speculation that the cause of this was related to the 1997 Washington rally. Attendance at regional rallies, admission to which cost $60 USD, dropped by 50%, as many men opted to attend the free Washington rally instead. The organization laid off its entire U.S. staff and became strictly a volunteer organization. [1]. From 1998 onwards, attendance figures at PK events were significantly smaller than they had been previously. Plans to have fifty simultaneous rallies on the grounds of every U.S. State Capitol at the turn of the millennium were canceled, over concerns about the Y2K bug. Further layoffs were announced in 2000.
McCartney resigned as president on October 1, 2003 after a personal leave of absence to care for his wife's health which had begun to decline in the previous March. Thomas S. Fortson, Ph. D., previously the group's executive vice president for administration and operations since 1996, became the group's president and CEO the same day.
The Promise Keepers is non-denominational, and is a male only organization which says it focuses on the responsibilities of men that transcends race, wealth, and country. The group states "We believe that we have a God-given mission to unite men who are separated by race, geography, culture, denomination, and economics" [2]. 40% of its present staff is a racial minority.[citation needed]
The National Organization for Women, an American feminist organisation, have expressed the view that the Promise Keepers are a threat to women's rights. NOW alleges that group encourages inequality within marriages and teaches a doctrine of male superiority. [3].
According to Amy Schindler, "the discourse of masculinity found within conservative religious movements, such as the Promise Keepers and the Victorian era movement 'muscular Christianity,' is inherently political. Any masculinity project aimed at restoring or reclaiming a 'traditional' male role for privileged white, heterosexual males has a political impact within the tapestry of class, race, and gender power.[2]
The group has also been criticized by conservative Evangelicals for doctrinal compromises and inconsistent doctrines. Indeed some conservative Christians call Promise Keeper's presentation of the Gospel "touchy-feely".[4]
Donna Minkowitz, a journalist from Ms magazine, smuggled herself into a Promise Keeper's rally in St. Petersburg FL in 1995. She disguised herself as a teen-aged boy. She recognizes that the group is anti-gay and anti-abortion. But she says that this is not their main thrust. She says: "In some ways, I think they are changing men in a really good way that feminists would like. While some of their message is antifeminist and right-wing, I think ignoring the good side doesn't do us a service at all."
http://www.promisekeepers.org/about/pkhistory http://www.pk7db.com/2006/2006DownloadForm_20060201.pdf
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