This article is about the Christian author. For the Singaporean bishop in Malaysia, see Francis Chan (bishop). For the Hong Kong gastroenterologist, see Francis Ka Leung Chan.
Chan has been a board member of several Christian and social justice organizations, including Children's Hunger Fund and Gospel for Asia.[6] He has authored and co-authored numerous books including Crazy Love, a New York Times bestseller.[7] Chan has also served as an ambassador for Care for Children.[8]
Biography
Early life and education
Chan was born in San Francisco[9][2] to immigrants Pak-sum Chan [陳柏森], a former minister at the Leighton Road Baptist Church in Hong Kong, and Wan-bing Mui [梅韻冰], a “Bible woman of the Hong Kong Baptist Church, Caine Road.” He was their third child; his mother died during his childbirth,[9] of “excessive bleeding”, leaving his father with sister Grace, brother Paul, and newborn Francis, who was named for the city of his birth and of the tragedy.[3][10]
Chan was sent to Hong Kong to be raised by a grandmother, a Buddhist for several years. During this time, his father married Amy Law (羅笑容) and gave Francis a half-sister, Gloria. In 1976, when Chan was eight years old, his stepmother Amy Chan died in an automobile accident.[3][10]
His father then remarried again, to Josephine Leung [梁克閲], who raised the four children.[3] In raising the four, his father and new stepmother had family support from his father's younger sister and her husband, Marion and William Wong, along with a large extended family and church family.[1] He did not get along well with his father growing up but says that his fear of his father has helped him understand a level of fear of God.[11] He also stated he didn't understand the love of God well until he became a father himself.[1] In 1979, when Francis was twelve years old, he lost his father to cancer.[3][10] As a high-school and then junior-college student,[12] Chan was active in Christian youth groups, which helped develop his faith in Christ and his interest in ministry.[3]
After earning his seminary degree, Chan "landed a youth pastor position" in Chatsworth, California, at the Church at Rocky Peak.[14]Christianity Today, reporting in 2009, has Chan characterizing this as a period where his personal life was not lived consistently with his religious ideals, stating "Those were the worst years of my life... a sinful, hypocritical time."[14] For reasons not explained further, Chan left that pastoral position for a job at a restaurant, waiting tables.[14]
Cornerstone Community Church
Chan, his wife Lisa, and 30 others founded Cornerstone Community Church in 1994;[3][15] within two months, the church had grown to have 100 attending. The church continued to see increases in attendance, and by the year 2000, it had received approval from local officials for building expansion to double its capacity, in support of a 1,600-member congregation.[16] As of January 2008, Cornerstone was one of the largest churches in Ventura County, California.[17]
After a three-month leave from Cornerstone, circa 2008, Chan said he felt convicted to sacrifice more for God. Chan had been giving away about 50% of his income, didn't take a salary from his church, and donated most of his book royalties, which totaled about $2,000,000, to various charities. All of it goes to organizations which rescue sex slaves in foreign countries.[14] Furthermore, in 2008 it was reported that Cornerstone would give away 55% of its income to charitable causes.[18]
Chan started Eternity Bible College in 2004 as a ministry of Cornerstone Community Church, with 100 students.[19] In 2008, Eternity launched an abroad program in Ecuador.[19] As of 2009, the college had 47 graduates serving in various parts of the world.[19]
On Sunday, April 18, 2010, Chan announced to his congregation that he felt called to resign.[20]
In September 2014, Chan joined the board of elders of Abundant Life Christian Fellowship; as of August 2016, he was no longer an elder at that congregation.[23]
He served as a top-level leader in the We Are Church network until 2020.
Return to Hong Kong
In 2020, Chan moved back to Hong Kong,[24] living and working in Sham Shui Po, the poorest area in Hong Kong and the neighborhood where his mother used to do ministry in the 1950s.[25]
Return to the US
In January 2021, Chan announced he and his family had returned to the US after his HK visa was denied. He has stated his intent to return to Hong Kong when possible.[26]
Theology
Chan frequently talks about "What the Bible is really saying" "and really living our lives that way." According to one author,[who?] he is not afraid of confronting "lukewarmness" in the Christian life.[27][needs update]
Chan is married to Lisa, a singer.[32] They wed in 1994,[33] and as of December 2014 they have seven children.[34] Their eldest is singer Rachel Chan.[35]
^ ab"Video". www.youtube.com. June 12, 2020. Archived from the original on December 15, 2021. Retrieved November 8, 2020.
^ abcD'Avolio, Lauren (September 19, 2013). "Francis Chan Urges the Church to Turn Her Eyes on God, Away From the Standards of Men". The Gospel Herald. Retrieved December 20, 2019. He was born in San Francisco's Chinatown, but his mother died as she was giving birth to him. His dad remarried, but when he Chan was 8 his step mother died in a car accident. Then, his dad died of cancer when he was 12. 'By the time I was in junior high I was thinking, "Man, life is short,"' Chan said.
^e did not get along well with his father growing up but says that his fear of his father has helped him understand a level of fear of God.
^han was active in Christian youth groups, which helped develop his faith in Christ and his interest in ministry.
^ abcdeBrandon, John (October 16, 2009). "Crazy Passion: Francis Chan Keeps Pushing and Pushing to Make More and More Disciples"(online). Christianity Today. Retrieved December 27, 2019. After attending the Master's College north of Los Angeles, where he earned a seminary degree, Chan landed a youth pastor position at the Church at Rocky Peak in Chatsworth, California, a short drive from Simi Valley.
^Chilton, Brian G. (July 11, 2019). "Are you worshiping God or yourself?". Christian Post. Retrieved April 25, 2020. Francis Chan is a popular preacher and teacher and is the former teaching pastor of Cornerstone Community Church in Simi Valley, California, which he and his wife started in 1994.
^Giordono, Joseph (March 28, 2000). "Membership explosion leads to expansion Simi church to double in size". Daily News of Los Angeles. Retrieved December 23, 2019. SIMI VALLEY—To accommodate an overflow of worshippers at its existing facility, a 6-year-old Simi Valley church is going ahead with expansion plans that would more than double its current size. Receiving unanimous approval from the Simi Valley Planning Commission last week, leaders of the nondenominational Cornerstone Community Church said the expansion is necessary to serve a membership that has grown from 30 people to 1,600.
^Kisken, Tom (January 22, 2008). "1973 ruling on Roe v. Wade still polarizes". Ventura County Star. Camarillo, CA: Gannett. Archived from the original on July 25, 2009. Retrieved December 23, 2019. The Rev. Francis Chan leads one of the largest churches in Ventura County, Cornerstone Community Church in Simi Valley. He, too, argues that abortion is a hugely important issue but said many evangelicals are no longer pushing just one hot button. 'There are a mounting number of believers who are looking at other issues,' he said, listing social justice issues like caring for the poor.
^ abcEBC Staff (2013). "The Story of Eternity". Eternity Bible College (EBC). Archived from the original on December 26, 2014. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
^"Francis Chan's Letters to the Church". Challies.com. October 3, 2018. Retrieved April 28, 2020. He returned to California to begin a church planting movement in San Francisco. He is currently a pastor of the We Are Church house church network that is spreading through Northern California.
Wellman, James K. (2012). Rob Bell and a New American Christianity. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press. pp. 63f, 114–119. ISBN978-1426748448. This author discusses the responses of Chan to the controversial Mars Hill pastor, Rob Bell.