Paul S. Morton Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Reverend
Paul S. Morton
Birth Name:Paul Sylvester Morton
Birth Date:30 July 1950
Occupation:Pastor, author, Gospel singer, musician, speaker
Residence:Metro Atlanta, U.S.
Children:3, including PJ Morton
Founder and Presiding Bishop-Emeritus of the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship
Church:Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship
Type:Presiding Bishop
Consecration:1990s
Consecrated By:George Augustus Stallings

Paul Sylvester Morton (born July 30, 1950) is an American Baptist pastor, Gospel singer and author. He is also a founder of the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship.[1]

Biography

Born into a Christian family, his father pastored two congregations, one in Windsor, Ontario and the other in Detroit, Michigan.[2]

In 1972, Morton moved to New Orleans, Louisiana and to the Greater St. Stephen Missionary Baptist Church (now known as Greater St. Stephen Full Gospel Baptist Church) under the pastorate of Reverend Percy Simpson, where he became an associate pastor. Upon his ascension to the senior pastorate, Morton introduced Pentecostal and Charismatic elements to the church.[3]

Shortly after his appointment as senior pastor of Greater St. Stephen, Morton married the former Debra Brown. Together they have three children: Jasmine, Paul Jr., and Christian. His son Paul Jr. later became a Grammy Award-winning musician under the name PJ Morton.[4] [5]

During his pastorate at Greater St. Stephen Full Gospel Baptist Church, Morton established the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship which initially began as a Charismatic Baptist movement within the National Baptist Convention, USA.[6] The movement became its own separate denomination in 1994 after Morton and those affiliated with the fellowship "were lovingly advised to resign their posts with the NBCUSA before they were kicked out."[7] National Baptist leadership feared the movement would develop into a separate denomination, urging members to either remain within the convention or leave.[8]

Morton was consecrated into the episcopacy by George Augustus Stallings in New Orleans, and by 1997, Greater St. Stephen grew to 18,000 members in 3 locations under his pastorate.[9] In November 1993, he—along with J. Delano Ellis, Wilbert Sterling McKinley and Roy E. Brown—established the Joint College of African-American Pentecostal Bishops.[10]

In 2005, Morton founded Changing A Generation Full Gospel Baptist Church in Metro Atlanta.[11]

In 2013, he announced his intent to retire as Presiding Bishop of the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship.[12] Two years later, in 2015, he retired from his office as leader of Full Gospel.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Leadership . 2023-10-16 . Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship . en-US.
  2. Web site: Bishop Paul S. Morton . 2023-10-16 . CBN . en.
  3. Web site: 2017-12-28 . 300 unique New Orleans moments: Greater St. Stephen Missionary Baptist Church organized in 1937 . 2023-10-16 . NOLA.com . en.
  4. Web site: Bishop Paul S. Morton, Sr. Biography, Songs, & Albums . 2023-10-16 . AllMusic . en.
  5. Web site: PJ Morton Artist . 2023-10-16 . Grammy.
  6. Book: DuPree, Sherry S. . African-American Holiness Pentecostal Movement: An Annotated Bibliography . 2013-09-13 . Routledge . 978-1-135-73717-7 . 347 . en.
  7. Web site: The Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship: Giving Baptists A Choice . 2023-10-16 . Black and Christian.
  8. Web site: 2002-07-10 . Pentecostal Baptist fellowship conference at Convention Center . 2023-10-16 . Baltimore Sun.
  9. Web site: Soaring Souls, Soaring Sights -- Baptist Church Thinks Big, And Far Beyond Walls Of Worship The Seattle Times . 2023-10-16 . archive.seattletimes.com.
  10. Web site: About the Joint College of Bishops . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20211121034343/https://www.collegeofbishops.org/who-we-are . November 21, 2021 . 2021-11-21 . Joint College of Bishops . en.
  11. Joe Maxwell, The Calm After the Storm, mycharisma.com, USA, July 31, 2008
  12. Web site: Full Gospel chooses Bishop Paul Morton's successor . 2023-10-16 . Louisiana Weekly.