Vandeman, George E., 1916-2000
Person
Dates
- Existence: October 21, 1916 to November 3, 2000
Biographical
George E. Vandeman was born in October 21, 1916. At the age of 21, he enrolled at Emmanuel Missionary College. He found a job working at a weekly 15-minute radio broadcast in Elkhart, Indiana. While there, he met Nellie Johnson and they were married the following year on October 2, 1938 in South Bend, Indiana. After completing his second year of college Vandeman began working as a full-time evangelist. He eventually earned a Master of Arts degree in speech and communication from the University of Michigan. His thesis was entitled, Spurgeon's Theory of Preaching (1946). He was then ordained as a minister and worked as a field instructor in evangelism at Emmanuel Missionary College for four years.
He joined the General Conference Ministerial Association in 1947 taking the position of associate secretary. At age 33 he was one of the youngest to work in Adventist church leadership. In the years following World War II, Vandeman and other Adventist speakers spearheaded a drive for the public evangelism of major cities. He conducted campaigns in Pittsburgh in 1948, Washington, D.C. in 1951, and London in 1952, amongst other places. In 1948 General Conference president J. L. McElhany convinced Vandeman to try television as a means of reaching others with the Gospel. Vandeman created a six-month experimental evangelistic effort for television. At the time, he wasn’t able to get the financial support he needed, and temporarily put theeffort on hold. Around 1954 he was asked by the new General Conference President,R. R. Figuhr, to continue exploring the Christian television program idea.
In the mid 1950s Vandeman started work on a series of television programs called It Is Written (based on Matthew 4:4), which he planned to air for several weeks in an area as a warmup to an evangelistic program. In spring 1956, It Is Written launched its first telecast in black and white—a full-message, Bible study telecast in Washington,D.C. The program later became one of the first religious television programs to air in color. Vandeman ran the first It Is Written evangelistic campaign in Fresno, California, in 1958, and later in Washington, D.C., Detroit, Philadelphia and other cities. The telecast was launched to all of California in 1962, and this effort was followed by a month-long series at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena. By the mid 1960s the program was being broadcast internationally on a weekly basis. In 1971, the It Is Written production studios moved to the Adventist Media Center in Thousand Oaks, California. In 1975, Vandeman began conducting Revelation Seminars. The seminars consisted of a one-day, eight-hour Bible study followed by a luncheon. Over a courseof 10 years, tens of thousands of It Is Written viewers traveled hundreds of miles to attend one of 300 seminars.
In 1979, the ministry’s success was noted by Excellence In Media, a non-profitorganization dedicated to promoting excellent family-oriented programs by honoring media with Angel Awards. Vandeman and the It Is Written team were given their first Angel award. They would ultimately received a total of 10 Angel Awards from Religion in Media. Vandeman was later presented with an International Distinguished Achievement Gold Angel award—Excellence in Media’s highest honor. In 1980 he received the Religious Heritage of America Faith and Freedom Award for Television Religious Personality of the Year. He was a member of Religious Heritage of America, the Strategy for the Elevation of People Foundation, and the Year of the Bible Committee. Vandeman was invited to presidential briefings during both the Reagan and Bush I administrations.
It Is Written was a "pioneering force" in Adventist evangelism. By the 1980s, It Is Written had more than 600,000 regular viewers. That number surpassed 1.5 millionin the 1990s. In 1990, the It Is Written production team and Vandeman traveled to the Soviet Union to tape Empires in Collision, an eight-part series. It Is Written was one ofthe first religious telecasts to be aired on Soviet television. In 2000, it was broadcast in 8 languages to over 150 countries.
George Vandeman served as the primary speaker of It Is Written until his retirement in 1991, when Mark Finley succeeded him. Vandeman died on November 3,2000 at the age of 84, at his home in Newbury Park, California, of heart failure while asleep.
He joined the General Conference Ministerial Association in 1947 taking the position of associate secretary. At age 33 he was one of the youngest to work in Adventist church leadership. In the years following World War II, Vandeman and other Adventist speakers spearheaded a drive for the public evangelism of major cities. He conducted campaigns in Pittsburgh in 1948, Washington, D.C. in 1951, and London in 1952, amongst other places. In 1948 General Conference president J. L. McElhany convinced Vandeman to try television as a means of reaching others with the Gospel. Vandeman created a six-month experimental evangelistic effort for television. At the time, he wasn’t able to get the financial support he needed, and temporarily put theeffort on hold. Around 1954 he was asked by the new General Conference President,R. R. Figuhr, to continue exploring the Christian television program idea.
In the mid 1950s Vandeman started work on a series of television programs called It Is Written (based on Matthew 4:4), which he planned to air for several weeks in an area as a warmup to an evangelistic program. In spring 1956, It Is Written launched its first telecast in black and white—a full-message, Bible study telecast in Washington,D.C. The program later became one of the first religious television programs to air in color. Vandeman ran the first It Is Written evangelistic campaign in Fresno, California, in 1958, and later in Washington, D.C., Detroit, Philadelphia and other cities. The telecast was launched to all of California in 1962, and this effort was followed by a month-long series at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena. By the mid 1960s the program was being broadcast internationally on a weekly basis. In 1971, the It Is Written production studios moved to the Adventist Media Center in Thousand Oaks, California. In 1975, Vandeman began conducting Revelation Seminars. The seminars consisted of a one-day, eight-hour Bible study followed by a luncheon. Over a courseof 10 years, tens of thousands of It Is Written viewers traveled hundreds of miles to attend one of 300 seminars.
In 1979, the ministry’s success was noted by Excellence In Media, a non-profitorganization dedicated to promoting excellent family-oriented programs by honoring media with Angel Awards. Vandeman and the It Is Written team were given their first Angel award. They would ultimately received a total of 10 Angel Awards from Religion in Media. Vandeman was later presented with an International Distinguished Achievement Gold Angel award—Excellence in Media’s highest honor. In 1980 he received the Religious Heritage of America Faith and Freedom Award for Television Religious Personality of the Year. He was a member of Religious Heritage of America, the Strategy for the Elevation of People Foundation, and the Year of the Bible Committee. Vandeman was invited to presidential briefings during both the Reagan and Bush I administrations.
It Is Written was a "pioneering force" in Adventist evangelism. By the 1980s, It Is Written had more than 600,000 regular viewers. That number surpassed 1.5 millionin the 1990s. In 1990, the It Is Written production team and Vandeman traveled to the Soviet Union to tape Empires in Collision, an eight-part series. It Is Written was one ofthe first religious telecasts to be aired on Soviet television. In 2000, it was broadcast in 8 languages to over 150 countries.
George Vandeman served as the primary speaker of It Is Written until his retirement in 1991, when Mark Finley succeeded him. Vandeman died on November 3,2000 at the age of 84, at his home in Newbury Park, California, of heart failure while asleep.
Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:
George E. Vandeman Collection
Collection
Identifier: Collection 288
Content Description
The scope of the collection is very narrow in that it consists only of diplomas for his educational accomplishments and commemorative plaques presented to Vandeman in recognition of his work of evangelism and television.
The researcher is directed to the It Is Written telecast archives collection also housed at the Andrews University Center for Adventist Research. It contains program scripts from 1972 to 1981 and a few minutes and reports from the ministry.
The researcher is directed to the It Is Written telecast archives collection also housed at the Andrews University Center for Adventist Research. It contains program scripts from 1972 to 1981 and a few minutes and reports from the ministry.
Dates:
Majority of material found within 1942 - 2000
George E. Vandeman Collection
Accession
Identifier: Collection 288