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Popular evangelist
dies at 56
Largely
unknown in the U.S., Terry Winter
was loved in Canada.
By
Debra Fieguth
ChristianWeek staff

CW FILE
Evangelist
Terry Winter, shown here in a 1995
photo, died suddenly of a brain hemorrhage
December 10. |
VANCOUVERTerry
Winter was remembered as loyal, generous,
encouraging and characteristically Canadian by
those who paid tribute to the evangelist at a
memorial service December 18. "His heart and focus was
Canada," said long-time friend Brian
Stiller, president of Tyndale College and
Seminary. "He had no interest in
kingdom-building. His life was
Kingdom-seeking."
Winter died suddenly December
10 after suffering a brain hemorrhage at his
Vancouver office. He was 56.
"His death is a major
lossto his friends and family, and to
Canadian Christianity," said British
evangelist Michael Green, a frequent guest on
Winters television program, who preached at
the memorial service held at Broadway Church and
attended by about 2,000 people.
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Winter was best known across Canada for
his weekly television broadcast, The Terry Winter Show,
which featured interviews with guests who articulated the
Christian faith. The program was broadcast on 28
major stations to one million people. Winter was
also a popular speaker at outreach banquets, and had
recently decided to return to city-wide crusade
evangelism (CW, Dec1/98).
Discovered a gift
Born in New Westminster and raised in
Nanaimo, B.C., Winter became a Christian after attending
an evangelistic crusade when he was 17. A zoology major
in university, he hoped to be a doctor. But when he began
speaking on a gospel team when he was just 19, he
discovered he had a gift for explaining the Christian
faith. He changed his career plans, and was among the
first class to receive a doctorate in systematic theology
and communication from Fuller Theological Seminary.
In 1969 he launched into fulltime
evangelism, and a few years later was conducting crusades
in cities across Canada, which he kept doing until 1986.
In 1972 evangelist Luis Palau gave him the idea to
produce a 30-minute television film. The film brought in
a flood of mail, and two years later Winter launched his
own program.
His style tended to be low-key rather
than preachy. He believed the gospel should be
"announced joyfully and clearly and lovingly,"
he once said in an interview. He also had respect for his
viewers. "They may not be informed but theyre
intelligent," he said.
Expressions of sorrow
Christian leaders from throughout North
America expressed sadness at Winters death.
"Genuine sorrow has swept across the evangelical
movement at the news of Terry Winters
passing," says Gary Walsh, president of the
Evangelical Fellowship of Canada. "Christians
everywhere identified with his authentic witness and
ministry."
Charles Colson, chair of Prison
Fellowship International and a guest on Winters
program, called Winter "one of the great leaders of
our faith in North America." Colson says Winter
"had a tremendous mind. Of all the people who
interviewed me," he adds, "I enjoyed Terry
most."
"He was able to present the
message in a winsome, warm, non-threatening manner,"
says theologian Ward Gasque, who had known Winter since
student days at Fuller.
Though Winter remained unknown in the
U.S., "Canada was his parish, and there can be few
Protestant Christians who did not know Terry
Winter," comments Gasque. "And there has
probably not been any other Canadian in the past three
decades who has introduced more people to the Lord
Jesus."
Theologian J.I. Packer, also a former
guest on Winters program, described Winter as
"endlessly interested in the spreading of the gospel
of our Lord and the building up of the Church."
"One mark of an evangelist,"
Packer said at the memorial service, "is that the
excitement of the grace of God
never leaves."
Winter "was wonderful in the way that he showed and
shared that excitement in his own heart."
Winter is survived by his wife, Joan,
and four adult children.
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