
CBMC
began in the United States in 1930, when a group of Christian businessmen
coordinated a series of pre-Easter rallies. With the Great Depression
in its second year, these men saw a need for a spiritual revival in
the Chicago area, and a six week evangelistic crusade was held at the
Garrick Theatre, located in downtown Chicago. Public response from the
first meeting on January 6, 1931, was overwhelming. Crowds regularly
packed out the over 800-seat theater. Apparently, God had greater plans
for CBMC than its founders (C.B. Hedstrom, A.H. Leaman, John L. Lincoln,
John M. Oury, Frank W. Sheriff, Dr. Ernest Wadsworth, and Edwin G. Zorn)
had envisioned.
The noon, weekday meetings soon were extended beyond the scheduled six
weeks into six months, then one year. Eventually, the six weeks grew
into 26 years as the meetings continued uninterrupted until 1956.
Another indication that God was blessing CBMC from its inception was
that similar groups were being started in San Francisco, Seattle, and
several other large cities throughout the country. These separate groups
linked together and established CBMC in 1937.
Five men, Charles E. Gremmels, Arnold Grunigen, CB Hedstrom, Dr. N.A.
Jepson, and R.G. LeTourneau, comprised the steering committee selected
to direct the CBMC ministry.
In 1938, the first CBMC international conference was held in Chicago,
seeking to bring men from committees around the world into closer fellowship
and mutual commitment. Our headquarters was located in Chicago, but
not until 1953 did we purchase our first building. During the next 25
years, the administrative center of the ministry was in Chicago. In
1978, the center relocated to Chattanooga, Tennessee.
As the years passed, our work spread throughout the world, into Canada,
Australia, New Zealand, England, Scotland, India, and more, over 60
nations in all. Truly, men of all cultures have an equal need for a
personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
We wrote Operation
Timothy, a unique program of Bible study designed primarily for
one-on-one discipleship, in 1970. It has become a vital tool for helping
men along the path to spiritual maturity and equipping them to share
their faith and to disciple others.
We underwent a significant reorganization in 1973, with autonomous CBMC
organizations being established in individual countries to better deal
with linguistic and cultural differences. Although these CBMC bodies
have independent governing powers, an International Board of Directors
oversees the work around the world, seeking to pool effective strategies
and to show how they can be adapted in differing national environments
to successfully present the Gospel to non-Christians.
In the 1970s and 80s, we began to recruit full time staff throughout
a number of U.S. cities. The grassroots of the ministry continued to
flourish with this increased attention and help.
In the early 90s, we developed Living
Proof Evangelism, which teaches evangelism as a lifestyle. This
has been extremely effective within our ministry and to the church body
at large. Because of this response CBMC further developed Living
Proof Discipleship, which focuses on discipleship as a lifestyle.
Operation Timothy
was updated and greatly expanded in 1995 to help us be more effective
in taking Christ to the world.
Today, CBMC has grown from a small group of men in Chicago to over 18,000
members in 700 teams across the United States. Worldwide, CBMC is active
in over 70 countries with over 50,000 members total. Our methods continue
to evolve to reflect the circumstances of modern men, but our purpose
remains the same: to evangelize and disciple business and professional
men for Christ.