In 1971, he became youth director and assistant pastor of Northwest Baptist Church, Denver, Colorado until 1976. In 1979, he became pastor of Rowandale Baptist Church, Winnipeg, Manitoba until 1981, and interim pastor on several occasions.[3] He served on many Baptist boards and agencies and also as a consulting editor of Christianity Today.[4]
Grenz' primary contributions were made discussing how evangelical Christianity ought to relate to the world.[6] He wrote on a wide range of subjects, from sexuality to history to basic apologetics, and was one of North America's leading evangelical voices in the late 20th century and early 21st century.
Grenz held to the main principles of Arminian theology.[7][8] He held to a specific concept eternal security in which "the presence of the Spirit guarantees that the one who is truly converted will remain in faith to the end"[9] reflecting his view of corporate election.[10][8]
Personal
Married to Edna Grenz, a church musician, Grenz was the father of two children, Joel Grenz and Corina Kuban, and was grandfather to one grandchild, Anika Grace Kuban.[4] Included in two editions of Who's Who in Religion, as well as in the 2002 edition of Who's Who in U.S. Writers, Editors and Poets, Grenz died in his sleep 12 March 2005 from a brain aneurysm in St. Paul's Hospital, Vancouver.[6][11]
Selected works
Prayer: The Cry for the Kingdom, 1988 (2005 Revised Edition) (ISBN0-913573-92-2)
^Olson 2014, p. 14. My late friend Stanley Grenz admitted to me that he was Arminian but asked me not to tell anyone. (At the time he was a colleague of J. I. Packer who strongly opposes Arminianism.)