David A. Noebel

http://dbpedia.org/resource/David_A._Noebel an entity of type: Thing

David A. Noebel (* 27. August 1936) ist ein amerikanischer religiöser Führer und Kritiker des säkularen Humanismus. Noebel ist Präsident von . Bis mindestens 1987 war Noebel ein Mitglied der John Birch Society. rdf:langString
David A. Noebel (born August 27, 1936) is an American religious leader and writer. He is the former director of Summit Ministries, in Manitou Springs, Colorado in the United States. Since the 1960s, he has written widely on the relationship between religion and popular culture, and is an outspoken critic of secular humanism, which he describes as unscientific and a religion. rdf:langString
rdf:langString David A. Noebel
rdf:langString David A. Noebel
xsd:integer 3860989
xsd:integer 1089783187
rdf:langString David A. Noebel (born August 27, 1936) is an American religious leader and writer. He is the former director of Summit Ministries, in Manitou Springs, Colorado in the United States. Since the 1960s, he has written widely on the relationship between religion and popular culture, and is an outspoken critic of secular humanism, which he describes as unscientific and a religion. Noebel was a former Associate Evangelist of Billy James Hargis's Christian Crusade. Noebel served as vice-president and president of American Christian College, which Hargis had founded in 1971 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It closed in 1977, three years after Hargis resigned following allegations of sexual misconduct against Hargis. He was a member of the Council for National Policy beginning in 1984, and a candidate for Congress against Rep. Robert Kastenmeier.
rdf:langString David A. Noebel (* 27. August 1936) ist ein amerikanischer religiöser Führer und Kritiker des säkularen Humanismus. Noebel ist Präsident von . Bis mindestens 1987 war Noebel ein Mitglied der John Birch Society.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 10799

data from the linked data cloud