Ed Beck


# 34
Hometown: Fort Valley, GA (High)
Position: C Playing Height: 6-7 Playing Weight: 188
Date of Birth: June 28, 1936
Date of Death: October 16, 2019
Legal Name: Edward Paul Beck
Additional Photos: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)
Action Photos: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25) (26) (27) (28) (29) (30) (31) (32) (33) (34)
Game by Game Statistics
Season Notes:
1956-57: All-SEC [Second Team (AP)]

SeasonGames
Played
FGFGA%FTFTA%Total
Rebs
FTotal
Points
1955-5622164436.3651435.71662037
1956-572710531433.44497466.2238086259
1957-58296221928.31395472.2233783163
Total7818357731.729314265.49783189459


Obituary - UK Men's Basketball National Champion Ed Beck Dead at 83, UK Official Wildcat Website (October 17, 2019) by Deb Moore


Epilogue to Book - A Love to Live ByIn 1958, the year that UK won the NCAA championship, Ed Beck was voted the Southeastern Conference's "Defensive Player of the Year" He was offered a contract by the New York Knickerbockers to play professional basketball, but he turned it down. The Venture For Victory tour to six countries of the Orient in the summer of 1958 ended just before his entrance into theological seminary. Though he planned to return to Georgia to attend Candler School of Theology at Emory University in Atlanta, he was unable to do so financially. Instead, he attended Asbury Theological Seminary at Wilmore, just fourteen miles from the University of Kentucky. He spent one year there in an academic setting, preaching every weekend at local churches and community centers. These engagements earned him enough money to enter Candler Methodist Seminary at Emory the following year.

He was scheduled to graduate from Candler in the summer of 1961. His graduation was delayed six months, however, so that he could accept speaking engagements throughout the nation. He was also invited by World Vision, Inc., to be their college-high school speaker in their Tokyo, Japan, Crusade during the spring of 1960.

In the summer of 1962, he joined the National Headquarters of the Methodist Church in Nashville, becoming a staff evangelist of its General Board of Evangelism. He was one of four men who helped organize the Department of Evangelists, and eighteen months later was selected to direct two separate programs; The Department of Evangelists (later renamed the Department of New Life Ministries) and the S.T.E.M. project (Short Term Evangelistic Mission). The New Life Ministries helped local churches develop and carry out intensive evangelistic renewal and outreach programs. The S.T.E.M. project was geared to inner city and ghetto areas. For six years he and a team of fourteen people conducted these missions and trained pastors across the country in similar programs.

A Love to Live By
A small but very interesting facet of this program - interesting to Ed Beck, at least - was called "Frontier" or "Unconventional Evangelism." These were programs designed to reach people in recreational areas such as national parks, ski resorts, and beaches. One of the programs, the "Ichthus Caravan" or "The Christ on the Beach" was conducted each spring at Daytona Beach, Florida, under Ed Beck's leadership with the blessings of Daytona's city fathers who financially underwrote the entire program.

Highly successful, it was produced on a large scale featuring afternoon beach entertainment with Christian overtones, and bandshell concerts with strategically located counseling booths staffed by youth-oriented advisors. These advisors included Christian entertainers and athletes from the Fellowship of Christian Athletes organization.

This program which continued from 1963 until 1967, inspired similar programs by other ministries in different areas. Out of its pioneering efforts stemmed such things as the familiar symbol "ICHTHUS," now used on everything from T-shirts to bumper stickers; preaching in night clubs; and well-known entertainers sharing their faith.

In 1967, Ed Beck was selected by the Pentagon to tour European and North African military bases to conduct "Christian Leadership Training Labs" for military personnel.

By this time, he had remarried and in 1968, because he found himself away from home and family too much conducting evangelism programs, he happily accepted the pastorate of Warren United Methodist Church in Denver, Colorado.

It was an inner-city congregation and he felt particularly led to it because of his earlier experiences in the Short-Term Evangelistic Mission which involved ghetto ministries.When Ed Beck stepped into the pulpit at Warren United Methodist, he found only 250 weather-beaten, but willing, souls ready to join him in ministering to those around them engulfed in poverty.

But it was a Gideon's Army. Together, the small group went to work and in six years they had completed a $3 million apartment complex called Warren Village, designed for single-parent families endeavoring to become self-sustaining. Today, it ranks as an unique ministry in helping single parents in transition to be re-educated and restored.

Looked upon as a model for similar units in other cities, it consists of ninety-six apartment units with a self-contained Day-Care Center able to care for over 125 children.

To qualify for residency, applicants must show a sincere desire for self-improvement and sign a covenant that they will live at Warren Village only until they are able to re-enter the world better equipped to maintain themselves and their children and remain off the welfare rolls.

The success of Warren Village is currently an impressive ninety-two percent.

With Warren Village well launched in 1973, Ed Beck was assigned by Bishop Melvin E. Wheatley, Jr., to a post in the United Methodist Church called "Minister to and for Society" an unusual new kind of ministry. In 1974, he became the first Methodist clergyman from Colorado to enter the corporate world as a business executive, still maintaining full clergy credentials. In this new work he became Vice-president of Operations for the Windmill Dinner Theater Corporation of Dallas, Texas, dedicated to offering the public uplifting family entertainment in a wholesome atmosphere.

In this new work, Ed Beck was the construction overseer of all five theaters located in various parts of the nation. He also supervised their personnel. During this time he served as a consultant to other theater corporations, advising and counseling with playwrights, plus working with many actors and actresses concerning the communication of faith in the secular theater.

In April of 1980, Ed Beck was assigned by Bishop Wheatley to the post of senior pastor of the First Methodist Church in Pueblo, Colorado, a steel manufacturing city of 100,000 population, located 100 miles south of Denver. After he assumed that pastorate, the church grew from 691 to 937 members.

Colorado's governor, Richard Lamm, proclaimed June 12, 1983, as Ed Beck Sunday in honor of Rev. Beck's dedicated work and service in the United Methodist Church, in his community and for his country - and especially for his work in the organization of Warren Village in Denver.

Also in June, 1983, Ed Beck accepted the pastorate of a new church in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Less than three years old, the Sunrise United Methodist congregation numbers 400. Ed plans to lead this church in growth and development, and in the design and building of worship and nurturing structures.

Ed is married to the former Faye Stokley of Newport, Kentucky. They have four sons, Jon Ed, Stephen, Bradley and Daniel.



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