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Carter Conlon

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Carter Conlon (born 1953) is a Canadian-born American pastor and author. He is best known as the former senior pastor of Times Square Church in New York City.[1]

Biography

[edit]

Conlon was born and raised in Noranda, Quebec. He graduated from Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, where he received a bachelor's degree in law and sociology. In 1987, he left his 12-year career as a police officer to enter full-time ministry. He founded a church, a Christian school, and a food bank in Riceville, Canada. He owned and operated a sheep farm as well.[2] During those years, he also traveled throughout the country, speaking at various churches from Prince Edward Island to Alberta, to the Inuit in the Arctic.

In 1994, he joined the pastoral staff of Times Square Church at the invitation of founding pastor David Wilkerson.[3] He was appointed to the office of senior pastor in 2001.[4] Conlon announced in February 2020 that he would be stepping down as senior pastor of Times Square Church in May of the same year, passing the leadership to Tim Dilena, in order to focus on his radio ministry, speaking, and writing books.[5]

Conlon and his wife, Teresa, have three children and eight grandchildren.[6]

Ministry

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Times Square Church

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Located at 237 West 51st in Manhattan, Times Square Church is an interdenominational church with more than 10,000 people in attendance, representing more than 100 different nationalities.[7] Their pastors believe that God has ordained the church to be a testimony of God's love and mercy to New York City and beyond. A major emphasis at Times Square Church is giving aid to the poor, the hungry, the destitute and the addicted.

Prayer in the Square

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In 2006, Conlon called together the churches of New York City to congregate for one hour of prayer in Times Square. As a result, Prayer in the Square was birthed and Christians from all denominations assembled on Broadway. The prayer gathering grew from 50,000 in 2009 to 80,000 live and 17.1 million online in 2021.[8] Conlon and the Times Square Church choir led this event, which was attended by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who declared that Sunday as Prayer in the Square Day.[9]

For Pastors Only

[edit]

In 2010, Conlon created "For Pastors Only" in response to multiple requests he received from ministers seeking spiritual fathering. This online resource airs bi-weekly devotionals recorded by Conlon and an advisory team, currently accessed by more than 5,000 pastors worldwide.[10]

Radio Syndication

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Conlon's 1-minute daily devotionals, It's Time to Pray, are broadcast on over 300 Christian radio stations nationwide 5 days per week, summoning the nation to prayer,[11] and are featured on 1010 WINS, the nation's most listened to all-news station.

ChildCry

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In 2004, Conlon traveled with a team of more than 200 people from Times Square Church to Zambia to hold evangelistic and humanitarian outreaches.[12] After witnessing the plight of children living on the streets there, he began to pray about ways to help. This led to the establishment of ChildCry in 2005, a ministry of Times Square Church which currently provides more than 4,000 meals a day for children in over 22 countries.[13]

Feed New York

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In 2012, Conlon initiated "Feed New York", where Times Square Church began to underwrite a number of churches in New York City with $1,000 worth of food every month. The goal was to provide up to 100 churches with a way to offer food, prayer, and hope to those in need in their neighborhoods. Although it began as a one-year initiative, Feed New York continues to support over 10,000 New Yorkers every month through food assistance programs within the five boroughs.[14]

Worldwide Prayer Meeting

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In 2015, Conlon launched the World Wide Prayer meeting at Times Square Church. Every Tuesday night thousands of Christians gather to pray at Times Square Church, either attending in person or participating through live streaming. This service welcomes interactive involvement. Individuals send requests for prayer via the Internet, which are often immediately prayed over during the meeting. Churches and individuals in 199 countries and territories combine their prayers with that of Times Square Church's congregation every week. Since its inception, the World Wide Prayer meeting has received over 200,000 prayer requests and witnessed innumerable answers to prayer.[15]

Conferences

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Conlon has spoken regularly at World Challenge's Renewing Your Passion for Christ conferences, at Conference Paris For Christ, and for the Summer Fire Conference in County Cork, Ireland. Conlon has also ministered at the Family Research Council's Watchmen on the Wall.[16]

Published works

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Books

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  • The 180 Degree Christian: Serving Jesus in a Culture of Excess, Bethany House Publishers, 2011. ISBN 0830760954
  • Fear Not: Living Courageously in Uncertain Times, Bethany House Publishers, 2012. ISBN 978-0830765614
  • Unshakable: Trusting God When All Else Fails, Bethany House Publishers, 2014. ISBN 978-0764214462
  • It's Time to Pray: God's Power Changes Everything, Charisma House, 2018. ISBN 978-1629995786

Children’s books

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  • Petey Yikes, Petey, Rock & Roo Children's Publications, 2006.
  • Clunky of Maryborough, Petey, Rock & Roo Children's Publications, 2008. ISBN 0-9789642-1-7
  • Katie and the Dogs are Gone, Petey, Rock & Roo Children's Publications, 2009. ISBN 0-9789642-2-5
  • Every Good House Needs a Mouse, Petey, Rock & Roo Children's Publications, 2010. ISBN 0-9789642-3-3
  • Muddy Dogs & New White Chairs, Petey, Rock & Roo Children's Publications, 2014. ISBN 978-0-9881948-2-3

CDs

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  • Quiet Times, 2002
  • Where Christmas Never Ends, 2005
  • Day by Day, 2007

Notes and references

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Carter Conlon (born 1953) is a Canadian-American evangelical pastor, author, and speaker who succeeded David Wilkerson as senior pastor of Times Square Church, a prominent interdenominational congregation in New York City, serving in that role from 2001 to 2020.[1][2] Born in Noranda, Quebec, and raised in a secular home, Conlon worked as a police officer before experiencing a personal conversion to Christianity on May 12, 1978, which prompted his entry into ministry.[2][1] During his tenure at Times Square Church, Conlon expanded its outreach through initiatives like the "It's Time to Pray" movement launched in the early 2000s, which drew over 50,000 participants in prayer gatherings and evolved into a weekly global broadcast reaching more than 200 countries from the Summit International School of Ministry.[2] He emphasized themes of repentance, spiritual revival, and reliance on divine power amid cultural decline, authoring books such as The 180-Degree Christian (2011), Fear Not (2012), Unshakable (2016), and It's Time to Pray (2018), with proceeds supporting the church's compassion fund.[2] In 2020, Conlon stepped down as senior pastor, transitioning to the role of general overseer while Tim Dilena assumed leadership, allowing him to focus on broader teaching and prayer ministries.[2] Conlon's preaching, often delivered to large audiences at Times Square Church—which historically attracted over 8,000 attendees weekly—centered on biblical warnings against complacency and calls for personal transformation, reflecting his conviction that prayer activates supernatural intervention in societal crises.[2] Married to Teresa Conlon, president of Summit International School of Ministry, he has three children and nine grandchildren, maintaining an active presence through sermons, radio programs, and online devotionals as of 2025.[2]

Early Life and Conversion

Upbringing and Pre-Ministry Career

Carter Conlon was born in 1953 in Noranda, Quebec, Canada, and raised in a secular household devoid of religious influence.[1][3] He pursued higher education at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, earning an undergraduate degree in law and sociology.[4][5] After graduation, Conlon embarked on a twelve-year career with the Ottawa police service, beginning in the mid-1970s and concluding in 1987; his roles encompassed uniform patrol, youth squad operations, and crime prevention initiatives, exposing him to urban crime, youth delinquency, and broader social challenges in Canadian communities.[4][6] Throughout this pre-ministry phase, Conlon adhered to a secular worldview, reflecting the non-religious environment of his upbringing and the pragmatic demands of law enforcement.[1]

Spiritual Awakening and Initial Calling

Carter Conlon, then a police officer in Ottawa, Canada, underwent a dramatic spiritual conversion on May 12, 1978, amid a personal crisis marked by inner turmoil and doubt. While driving, he pulled his vehicle to the roadside after being previously witnessed to about spiritual matters, and in a moment of desperation, he prayed and surrendered his life to Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. Conlon later recounted feeling no immediate emotional surge during the prayer itself, but the subsequent day initiated a profound inner transformation, which he attributes to divine intervention rather than mere psychological resolution, describing a supernatural infusion of peace and purpose that reshaped his worldview.[7][8][9] In the immediate aftermath of his conversion, Conlon immersed himself in local church life, committing to intensive Bible study and daily prayer as cornerstones of his newfound faith. He reported developing an insatiable hunger for Scripture, rapidly reading through the Bible multiple times and prioritizing personal devotion over former pursuits. This phase emphasized solitary communion with God and participation in small-group fellowship, fostering a disciplined spiritual routine that Conlon credits with sustaining his early Christian walk amid ongoing professional demands as a law enforcement officer.[7][2] Between approximately 1985 and 1987, Conlon discerned a specific calling to pastoral ministry, interpreting recurring convictions and providential circumstances—such as an inner urging to preach and serve—as direct promptings from God. This culminated in his resignation from a 12-year policing career in 1987, a decision he frames as an act of obedience to divine leading despite financial uncertainty and familial responsibilities. Conlon's testimony highlights this period as one of tested faith, where prayer and scriptural study confirmed the shift from secular vocation to full-time spiritual service, distinct from any institutional endorsement at the time.[1][4][2]

Early Ministry in Canada

Founding of Local Church and Outreach

In 1987, following his resignation from a 12-year career as a police officer, Carter Conlon established a church in Riceville, Ontario, a rural community with a population of about 65 residents. The church building was acquired for $1, underscoring the humble origins amid limited local resources. Initial gatherings stemmed from small Bible studies that Conlon had begun earlier in nearby areas, often drawing only 4 to 6 participants, with some meetings canceled due to severe weather like snowstorms. Despite these early setbacks, Conlon persisted in advertising through flyers and holding services in a country church provided free of charge by its board, gradually building attendance through consistent effort. The ministry expanded to include a Christian school and a food bank, transforming the church into a central community resource. The food bank grew to serve as the eastern Ontario distribution arm for Ottawa's primary food assistance organization, receiving truckloads of supplies to address hunger in the surrounding region. Conlon supplemented family income by operating a sheep farm alongside these initiatives, navigating financial constraints inherent to a small-town setting. These outreaches emphasized practical support for local needs, informed by Conlon's prior observations of social challenges during his law enforcement tenure. Challenges such as sparse initial attendance and isolation in an area lacking nearby Christian fellowships were met with sustained prayer and direct community involvement, fostering incremental growth over the subsequent years without reliance on external funding. This period marked the development of a multifaceted local hub, with the church, school, and food bank continuing to operate as of the early 1990s.

Development of Initial Programs

In 1987, following his departure from law enforcement, Conlon established initial ministry programs in Riceville, Ontario, a rural community with a population of approximately 65 residents.[10] He initiated small-scale Bible studies in a local church building acquired for $1, initially drawing attendances of four to six participants, which gradually expanded over the subsequent two years through persistent outreach efforts.[11] These studies emphasized scriptural teaching and personal spiritual development, serving as the foundational program for congregational growth in the area.[12] Parallel to the Bible studies, Conlon launched a food bank to address immediate community needs, providing essential aid to local families amid economic challenges in the isolated region.[13] This initiative remained confined to Riceville's modest scale, distributing groceries and staples without broader regional expansion during this period, and reflected an early emphasis on practical compassion intertwined with evangelistic invitations.[14] Complementing these efforts, he founded a Christian school aimed at youth education, incorporating biblical principles into curriculum to foster moral and spiritual formation among children in the sparse population.[15] Evangelistic meetings emerged organically from the Bible studies, featuring open-air and indoor gatherings that reported modest increases in local participation but lacked documented large-scale conversions or attendance surges beyond the initial core group.[11] Conlon's preaching style during this phase evolved through self-taught reliance on prayer and scriptural immersion, influenced by his prior conversion experience rather than formal mentorship, prioritizing direct, heartfelt appeals over polished oratory.[2] These programs, sustained alongside Conlon's operation of a sheep farm for financial support, demonstrated resourcefulness in a resource-poor context and prefigured subsequent emphases on integrated spiritual and material aid, though they remained hyper-local without measurable quantitative impacts like widespread attendance data or conversion tallies prior to the early 1990s.[12]

Leadership at Times Square Church

Succession from David Wilkerson

In 1994, David Wilkerson, founder of Times Square Church (TSC) in New York City, invited Carter Conlon to join the pastoral staff as an associate pastor.[2] Conlon, previously leading a church in Canada, accepted the role amid TSC's intense urban ministry context, which involved preaching to diverse congregations and providing counseling to individuals facing addiction, poverty, and spiritual brokenness in Manhattan's Times Square area.[16] Over the next several years, Conlon served under Wilkerson, contributing to sermons and pastoral care while observing the church's commitment to unadorned, Spirit-led worship and evangelism.[17] Wilkerson retired from the senior pastorate in 2001, explicitly designating Conlon as his successor during a moment of worship, stating, "It’s time now, you are ready."[17] This endorsement stemmed from Wilkerson's direct observation of Conlon's preparation, faithfulness in ministry, and alignment with TSC's core direction over seven years of close collaboration.[17] Conlon assumed leadership that year, transitioning TSC while Wilkerson remained involved until his relocation and eventual passing in 2011.[2] Following the succession, Conlon prioritized preserving TSC's foundational ethos of repentance-centered preaching and reliance on the Holy Spirit, resisting contemporaneous evangelical trends toward prosperity teachings and entertainment-oriented services.[17] He emphasized continuity in the church's New Covenant focus, as instilled by Wilkerson, ensuring initial leadership adjustments reinforced doctrinal integrity over structural innovation.[17] This approach sustained TSC's reputation for raw, conviction-driven gatherings amid New York's challenges.[18]

Expansion of Church Activities

Upon assuming the role of senior pastor in 2001 following David Wilkerson's departure, Carter Conlon focused on stabilizing Times Square Church amid New York City's evolving urban landscape, leading to numerical growth in weekly services that reached over 10,000 attendees representing more than 100 nationalities by the 2010s.[19][20] This expansion reflected the church's adaptation to the city's multicultural demographics through services emphasizing evangelism tailored to urban seekers, including preaching that addressed contemporary moral and spiritual challenges without diluting core Pentecostal doctrines.[21] Conlon implemented internal reforms to reinforce a commitment to personal holiness and separation from cultural compromise, countering the increasing secular influences in Manhattan during his tenure. Sermons recurrently urged congregants to prioritize godliness over worldliness, as evidenced by messages critiquing "compromised religion in a corrupted time" and calling for renewed doctrinal purity.[22] These efforts aimed to foster spiritual depth within the assembly, maintaining the church's interdenominational ethos while resisting accommodations to progressive societal shifts. In response to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, which occurred shortly after Conlon's installation, the church intensified internal prayer meetings as a direct reaction to prophetic warnings received in preceding months about impending suffering.[23] This period of focused intercession, preached in post-attack sermons like "Run for Your Life," sought to anchor the congregation amid national trauma and economic uncertainty, though specific attendance figures for these gatherings remain undocumented beyond the overall service growth.[24] Similar emphases persisted through later crises, such as the 2008 financial downturn, with sustained calls for corporate repentance and reliance on divine provision to sustain internal vitality.[25]

Key Prayer and Evangelism Initiatives

Under Carter Conlon's leadership at Times Square Church (TSC), Prayer in the Square was initiated as a series of public prayer rallies held in New York City's Times Square, beginning in the mid-2000s and formally organized from 2007 to 2009.[26] These events featured collective repentance, intercession for the city, and gospel proclamations led by Conlon and the TSC choir, drawing participants from multiple congregations to counter urban moral decline through overt spiritual appeals.[27] In 2008, over 18,000 attendees from more than 200 churches participated, with numbers swelling to tens of thousands the following year.[28] New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg attended one such rally and officially designated the day as Prayer in the Square Day, highlighting its civic scale.[29] Reports from organizers indicated up to 50,000 believers gathering overall across events, focusing on direct addresses to sin and pleas for divine intervention amid secular surroundings.[26] Complementing these outdoor initiatives, Conlon launched the Worldwide Prayer Meeting in 2015 as a recurring TSC-hosted gathering, held Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. ET, emphasizing global intercession via shared prayer requests displayed on screens.[30] This weekly event expanded TSC's prayer focus to an international audience, receiving hundreds of thousands of submissions from participants in over 200 countries and reporting numerous testimonies of answered prayers.[30] Unlike one-off rallies, it fostered sustained communal prayer against personal and societal strongholds, with Conlon often preaching on themes of spiritual urgency and repentance to mobilize attendees.[31] The initiative's digital accessibility enabled broad empirical participation, though outcomes remain anecdotal per church documentation, underscoring Conlon's prioritization of fervent, unapologetic evangelism over accommodated cultural norms.[32]

Transition to New Leadership

In February 2020, Times Square Church announced that Carter Conlon would transition from his role as senior pastor after 26 years of service, nominating Tim Dilena as his successor to maintain continuity in the church's evangelistic and prayer-focused mission established by founder David Wilkerson.[33] Dilena, who had served as a pastor under Wilkerson's mentorship for over 30 years and collaborated with Conlon, was unanimously approved by the board for the position.[34] Effective May 5, 2020, Dilena assumed the senior pastor role, with Conlon shifting to general overseer and chairman of the board to provide strategic guidance while emphasizing prayer initiatives.[5] The transition was framed as a deliberate step for long-term stability, allowing Conlon to reduce weekly pulpit duties in favor of oversight responsibilities amid evolving church needs.[2] Post-succession, Times Square Church sustained its core activities, including live services and global broadcasts, under Dilena's leadership without reported disruptions in attendance or programming.[16] Conlon maintained an active advisory presence, occasionally preaching, until resuming more frequent pulpit engagements by October 2025 following a period of limited involvement.[35] This arrangement preserved institutional continuity while adapting to leadership demands.[36]

Media and Global Outreach

Radio and Syndicated Broadcasting

Conlon's radio ministry, launched as an extension of Times Square Church's evangelistic efforts following his appointment as associate pastor in 1994, centers on audio broadcasts promoting urgent prayer in response to societal moral erosion and spiritual apathy.[37] The flagship program, "It's Time to Pray," consists of daily one-minute devotionals urging listeners to engage in bold intercession for personal and national revival, with content drawn from Conlon's experiences in ministry and emphasizing God's transformative power through prayer.[38] These spots air on stations such as New York's 1010 WINS, reaching urban audiences amid cultural challenges.[39] Complementing this is the weekly half-hour broadcast "A Call to the Nation," which features Conlon delivering extended teachings on repentance, hope, and collective pleading for divine mercy, aimed at equipping a generation to confront ethical decay through sustained prayer.[30] By the early 2000s, as Conlon assumed senior leadership at the church, these programs expanded via syndication to approximately 320 stations across the United States, amplifying messages of spiritual awakening to a national audience.[1] Post-2010 adaptations included digital syndication, with episodes transitioning to podcast platforms like Spotify and Apple Podcasts, preserving the core focus on prayer's role in countering moral decline while broadening accessibility beyond traditional radio.[40] Listener responses, including accounts of physical healings, resolved crises, and renewed faith following program-inspired prayers, underscore reported impacts, though such testimonials remain anecdotal and church-affiliated.[41]

International Conferences and Events

Carter Conlon has participated in international pastors' conferences organized by World Challenge, delivering sessions focused on spiritual renewal and ministry encouragement. For instance, on May 19, 2017, he spoke at a conference in Jordan, addressing themes of faith and increase in ministry work.[42] These events, often held in regions like the Middle East, emphasize practical guidance for church leaders amid cultural challenges, drawing from Conlon's experiences in urban evangelism.[43] In addition to conference speaking, Conlon has led large-scale revival meetings abroad, notably in India, where gatherings reportedly reached an estimated 500,000 attendees.[26] These events centered on calls to repentance and personal revival, aligning with broader evangelical efforts to foster spiritual awakening in populous, diverse contexts. Attendance figures from such meetings suggest significant engagement, though independent verification of exact numbers remains limited to organizational reports. Outcomes have included reported inspirations for local ministry expansions, though direct causal links to specific church plantings are not systematically documented in available sources. Conlon continues to engage in pastors' and leaders' conferences globally, partnering with ministries like World Challenge to promote doctrinal commitments to prayer and evangelism.[44] These engagements prioritize equipping ministers for revival-oriented work, countering narratives of evangelical decline by highlighting sustained interest and participation in non-Western settings. While primarily physical gatherings, they complement his online "For Pastors Only" initiative, which extends mentoring to thousands worldwide but originated from demands for in-person-style guidance.[14]

Digital and Multimedia Presence

Times Square Church maintains an extensive digital archive of sermons delivered by Carter Conlon, accessible via its official website at sermons.tsc.nyc, where recordings from his tenure as senior pastor are available for free download and distribution.[45] This platform, operational since the early 2000s, facilitates global access to teachings on prayer, repentance, and spiritual revival, separate from traditional broadcasting formats.[46] The church's YouTube channel, launched to disseminate video content, features a dedicated playlist of 427 Conlon sermons accumulating over 547,000 views as of 2025, with individual videos often exceeding 100,000 views, such as "It's Time For The Weak To Rise" at 137,000.[47] The channel itself boasts approximately 380,000 subscribers, enabling on-demand viewing that has extended TSC's reach to international audiences seeking unedited preaching on moral and eschatological themes.[48] Complementing this, Conlon's personal YouTube channel hosts nearly 1,000 videos with 30,200 subscribers, focusing on recent messages and prayer exhortations recorded post his 2020 transition from senior pastor.[49] To enhance mobile engagement, TSC developed a dedicated app in the mid-2010s, available on iOS and Android platforms, which streams live Sunday services, archives past sermons, and provides Conlon's devotional content, rated 4.9 stars on the App Store based on user feedback emphasizing accessibility.[50] Live broadcasts via live.tsc.nyc further adapt to digital consumption patterns, allowing real-time participation in worship and preaching without altering core doctrinal emphases on personal holiness and evangelism.[51] A key digital initiative under Conlon's oversight is the Worldwide Prayer Meeting, initiated in 2015 and conducted online, which has processed hundreds of thousands of prayer requests from participants in over 200 countries, fostering interactive global outreach through submitted testimonies and live sessions.[30] This platform responds to contemporary crises via virtual intercession, maintaining fidelity to TSC's evangelistic focus amid technological shifts.[52]

Social and Charitable Endeavors

Food Distribution and Community Aid

Under Carter Conlon's leadership at Times Square Church, the Feed New York program was established to supply healthy food provisions to partner churches throughout New York City, enabling them to assist families and individuals facing food insecurity.[53] This initiative draws from Conlon's prior experience founding a food bank in Riceville, Canada, during his early ministry there in the late 1980s and 1990s, which he scaled as part of community outreach efforts east of Ottawa.[54] By partnering with approximately 100 local churches, Feed New York facilitates distribution without charge to participating congregations, focusing on logistical support for weekly and monthly food assistance operations.[55] Times Square Church further bolsters these efforts through direct contributions to established food pantries, such as monthly truck deliveries of dry goods to the Love Kitchen in Upper Manhattan's Inwood neighborhood.[56] Operating for over 30 years, Love Kitchen provides emergency pantry staples and hot meals to elderly residents, working poor, and homeless individuals in the Washington Heights and Inwood areas, with TSC supplying financial resources, volunteers, and inventory to sustain its reach.[56] These partnerships emphasize coordinated logistics between the church and community-based providers, ensuring food reaches targeted populations efficiently.[56] In practical terms, such programs have enabled large-scale distributions; for example, on November 24, 2024, Times Square Church volunteers, numbering around 200, helped serve meals to 1,200 people in a single local event tied to broader community aid logistics.[57] This reflects the expansion from Conlon's Canadian food bank origins—where operations fed local families amid rural needs—to urban New York systems handling higher volumes through networked church collaborations.[54][55]

Support for Vulnerable Populations

Under Carter Conlon's leadership at Times Square Church, the ChildCry initiative was launched in 2004 as a response to global child vulnerability, incorporating prayer campaigns and direct outreaches to combat exploitation and provide spiritual support. This effort included annual events and sermons urging intervention against child abuse, with Conlon preaching on themes of divine protection for endangered youth, as in his December 7, 2014, message "Cry Out for the Children," which highlighted societal failures in safeguarding minors.[58] A key manifestation of ChildCry's focus occurred that same year through a large-scale mission to Zambia, where Conlon led a delegation of more than 200 church volunteers in evangelistic crusades and humanitarian interventions aimed at street children—"streetism" being a prevalent issue of youth abandonment and survival on urban streets. The outreaches emphasized gospel proclamation alongside practical aid to rescue at-risk minors from cycles of poverty and predation, fully funded by Times Square Church without reliance on local resources.[59] Conlon's work also extended the legacy of David Wilkerson's Teen Challenge, a rescue operation for drug-addicted and troubled youth, by actively endorsing its programs during his pastorate. On September 15, 2024, Conlon participated in the reopening ceremony of the original Brooklyn Teen Challenge center, the first such facility established by Wilkerson in the 1960s, reaffirming church commitment to residential recovery for vulnerable adolescents facing addiction and crime. Empirical data on Teen Challenge outcomes, upheld under Conlon's supportive oversight, indicate robust success: a study of one affiliate program reported an 86% cure rate among completers, attributed to faith-integrated rehabilitation contrasting with secular programs' typical 10-30% long-term sobriety rates. These results stem from structured 12-month residencies emphasizing moral transformation over short-term therapy, with over 245 U.S. centers serving thousands annually.[60]

Advocacy Against Societal Decay

In November 2018, during an episode of his broadcast "It's Time to Pray," Carter Conlon warned that the United States was experiencing an "absolute baptism of godlessness" that was "tearing apart the very fabric of our society." He attributed this phenomenon to the progressive exclusion of Christian principles from public life, pointing to observable manifestations such as surging opioid addiction, widespread violence, pervasive hopelessness, erosion of law and order, political incivility, deepening racial and sociological divisions, and recurrent school shootings.[61] Conlon framed these trends as causally linked to a broader rejection of absolute moral standards in favor of relativism, which he argued undermines the social cohesion historically associated with traditional values like personal responsibility and communal restraint. In this view, policies and cultural shifts prioritizing individual autonomy over collective ethical anchors exacerbate instability, as evidenced by the documented rise in the societal indicators he cited. He advocated for a reversal through collective repentance and recommitment to foundational principles, asserting that America's recovery depends on rediscovering its identity as a "nation under God."[61] Through sermons delivered at Times Square Church in New York City, Conlon has extended these critiques to urban contexts of decay, such as in "Children of Light In A Fading Society" on November 10, 2013, where he called believers to counter moral erosion by embodying unwavering truth amid cultural decline. Similarly, in "The Compromised Religion In A Corrupted Time" on November 6, 2016, he decried accommodations to societal corruption that dilute moral clarity, linking them to observable breakdowns in personal and communal integrity. These messages have resonated in responses including heightened church engagement and conversions, particularly among diverse urban populations facing the very pressures Conlon described.[62][22][61]

Published and Authored Works

Books and Written Publications

Carter Conlon has authored several books since the early 2000s that emphasize biblical principles of prayer, repentance, and steadfast faith, challenging superficial expressions of Christianity in favor of transformative spiritual practices rooted in scriptural obedience and reliance on divine power. In It's Time to Pray: God's Power Changes Everything (Charisma House, 2018), Conlon draws from Mark 9 and his personal experiences to illustrate how persistent, faith-filled prayer overcomes spiritual slumber and activates God's intervention, urging readers to intercede for personal revival and societal salvation rather than passive religiosity.[63][64] The 180 Degree Christian: Serving Jesus in a Culture of Excess (Bethany House Publishers, 2011) critiques consumer-driven lifestyles, advocating a complete reversal toward sacrificial service and humility as modeled in Scripture, positioning true discipleship as antithetical to self-indulgent "feel-good" faith.[65] Fear Not: Living Courageously in Uncertain Times (Regal Books, 2012) provides scriptural strategies for confronting fear with bold trust in God, emphasizing repentance and moral clarity as foundations for resilience amid cultural instability.[66] Unshakable: Trusting God When All Else Fails (Gospel Light, 2013) explores emerging stronger from crises through unwavering dependence on God's promises, rejecting human-centered solutions in favor of repentance-led surrender that fosters profound spiritual maturity.[67]

Audio Teachings and Sermons

Carter Conlon's audio teachings consist primarily of recorded sermons from Times Square Church services, available as free digital downloads in MP3 and WMA formats via the church's official sermons platform. These recordings capture unaltered, live-delivered messages emphasizing direct biblical exposition without post-production edits, preserving the immediacy of pulpit preaching. Distribution is encouraged through personal copying for non-commercial sharing with friends, explicitly supporting informal settings like home Bible studies, though unauthorized mass duplication or web posting requires church approval.[45] Key audio series and standalone teachings address themes of spiritual warfare, such as the 2015 sermon "The Battle that Rages for Your Mind," which details mental and spiritual resistance against adversarial influences through Christ-centered discernment. Other relevant recordings include "The Secret War of Every Saint," focusing on internal struggles faced by believers, and "Satan, Be Quiet" from February 11, 2025, urging authoritative rebuke of demonic interference. These resources, totaling over 419 sermons across platforms like SermonAudio affiliates, have amassed approximately 189,000 downloads, indicating sustained listener engagement beyond live attendance.[68][69][70][71] The emphasis on free accessibility aligns with Times Square Church's model of unmonetized dissemination, distinguishing these audio products from commercial media while promoting self-directed study groups. No evidence exists of physical CD production or sales metrics, with distribution relying on digital means to reach global audiences for repeated, personal application.[45]

Theological Positions

Core Doctrinal Commitments

Carter Conlon adheres to the evangelical and Pentecostal traditions established by David Wilkerson at Times Square Church, emphasizing the Bible as the inspired and infallible Word of God.[21] Central to his doctrine is salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ alone, requiring personal repentance from sin as a prerequisite for genuine conversion.[72] This aligns with a Trinitarian view of God, affirming one true God eternally existent in three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.[21] Conlon stresses total reliance on the Holy Spirit for spiritual empowerment, regeneration, and guidance in the Christian life, viewing the Spirit's indwelling as essential for overcoming sin and fulfilling God's purposes.[73] He teaches that believers must yield to the Spirit's promptings, including through prayer and obedience, to experience true transformation rather than self-reliant efforts.[74] In opposition to the prosperity gospel, Conlon rejects teachings that equate faith with material wealth or earthly success, insisting instead on spiritual fruit—such as holiness, perseverance in trials, and sacrificial service—as the true measure of God's blessing.[75] He warns against doctrines promising health and prosperity without the cross, prioritizing scriptural calls to self-denial and eternal perspective over temporal gains.[76] Conlon's eschatology underscores an urgent end-times framework derived from biblical prophecy, particularly emphasizing preparation through repentance and vigilance amid increasing moral and spiritual decline as foretold in Scripture.[77] This view motivates a call to deepen faith and reliance on Christ, anticipating Christ's return and the fulfillment of apocalyptic events outlined in texts like Revelation and Daniel.[78]

Preaching on Moral and Cultural Issues

Conlon has consistently addressed the erosion of traditional moral frameworks in modern society through his sermons, emphasizing the causal links between departing from biblical standards and tangible societal harms such as increased division and vulnerability to judgment. In "Children of Light in a Fading Society," delivered on November 10, 2013, he described the United States as undergoing a decline marked by unchecked pride, self-direction, and the normalization of practices like abortion—citing approximately 50 million procedures framed as mere "choice"—alongside a pervasive lack of marital commitment and public denials of Christ, such as prominent billboards in Times Square.[62] He drew parallels to ancient Israel's fall in Isaiah 3, arguing that these trends predict desolation, reputational loss, and escalating violence, including among youth, as direct consequences of moral unrestraint.[62] Central to Conlon's preaching is a critique of cultural relativism, particularly in the realm of family and sexuality, where he opposes the redefinition of marriage and the resulting family breakdown as harbingers of broader immorality. In "The Call of the Shipmaster," he explicitly stated that "society is now redefining marriage; the family is breaking down; immorality is abounding; and we are standing on the edge of a social and moral abyss," positioning these shifts as symptoms of a self-focused secular drift that invites unprecedented storms of consequence.[79] He counters normalized relativism by advocating adherence to biblical authority on marriage as one man and one woman, urging believers to reject compromise and instead embody divine truth amid cultural pressures. This stance aligns with his broader calls for moral purity, as in "A Plea for Moral Purity," where he implores the church to confront impurity and uphold scriptural absolutes against encroaching ethical fluidity.[80] Conlon correlates moral decline with the church's diminished relevance, asserting that institutional compromise—such as prophets blurring holy and profane in Ezekiel 22—exacerbates national self-consumption through sin, oppression, and inverted values where evil is deemed good.[81] In "The Compromised Religion in a Corrupted Time," preached on November 6, 2016, he warned of corrupted eras where diluted faith fails to restrain societal decay, rendering the church ineffective and unable to "stand in the gap" for mercy.[22] He advocates a proactive response: Christians must prioritize identity in Christ over political or cultural labels, pray fervently, fast, and serve as lights offering hope, thereby mitigating harms like family fragmentation and restoring communal authority under God.[82] This application of doctrine posits that renewed biblical fidelity can avert irrelevance and foster revival, even as empirical indicators of decline—rising divorce, violence, and ethical inversion—persist.[62]

Controversies and Criticisms

Accusations of Doctrinal Compromise

Critics from discernment ministries, such as Evangelical Outreach, have accused Carter Conlon of doctrinal compromise by allegedly promoting a form of eternal security that provides false assurance to backsliders and discourages repeated repentance, thereby licensing sin.[83] In his June 27, 2010, sermon "Beware of Smiting the Rock," Conlon stated that initial salvation through a sincere response to God's offer is sufficient, likening it to the first smiting of the rock in Exodus 17, after which "you never have to return to an altar for salvation," and asserted that God "will never let you go if you are a genuine believer" despite subsequent sinful living.[83] These critics argue this teaching contradicts scriptures emphasizing ongoing repentance, such as James 5:19-20 on reclaiming wanderers from death and Luke 15:24 on the prodigal's restoration, potentially leading to antinomianism by offending the necessity of continual altar calls for assurance.[83] In Reformed and cessationist circles, discussions have raised concerns about the doctrinal safety of Conlon's teachings due to Times Square Church's charismatic elements, including continuationist views on spiritual gifts like prophecy and tongues, which critics contend compromise sola scriptura by prioritizing subjective experiences over ceased apostolic-era miracles.[84] Such critiques stem from broader cessationist convictions that modern charismatic practices introduce error, though specific analyses of Conlon's sermons often note alignment with David Wilkerson's emphasis on repentance and holiness rather than prosperity or experiential excess.[84] Conlon has defended his positions through sermons upholding scriptural orthodoxy, as in his October 1, 2017, message "The Theological Error of 'What/How/When,'" where he critiqued mechanistic approaches to divine guidance—focusing on "what, how, and when" to act rather than seeking God's presence first—as a compromise that reduces faith to formulaic religion devoid of relational dependence on Scripture.[85] Empirical examination of Conlon's sermon corpus reveals consistent warnings against false gospels and unrepentant sin, maintaining continuity with Wilkerson's doctrinal commitments to evangelical essentials like substitutionary atonement and moral transformation, with causal disagreements arising primarily from interpretive differences on perseverance and gifts rather than core heresy.[86][76]

Disputes Over Associations and Practices

In 2019, discernment ministry Servus Christi, led by Vincent Beasley, publicly criticized Carter Conlon for allegedly welcoming "heretic-embracing apostates" to Times Square Church events and services, contrasting this with founder David Wilkerson's reputation for opposing doctrinal error.[87][88] Beasley argued in his "Apostasy Report #6" that such associations marked a departure from Wilkerson's uncompromising stance, potentially exposing attendees to compromised teachings amid TSC's outreach efforts.[88] These claims arose in the context of TSC's long-standing open-door evangelism policy, which invites diverse individuals from New York City's Times Square district—including those from varied or questionable backgrounds—to services for potential conversion, prioritizing redemptive opportunities over pre-screening affiliations.[16] Earlier, in 2013, the online video series "God's Controversy with Carter Conlon" produced by the TSCExposed channel accused Conlon's leadership of unwise associations analogous to biblical King Jehoshaphat's alliances with ungodly rulers, which purportedly invited spiritual contamination to the church.[89] The series highlighted practices such as permitting women, including Conlon's wife Teresa Conlon, to preach from the pulpit, citing New Testament prohibitions on female teaching authority as evidence of drift from scriptural norms.[89] Critics in the series further contended that TSC under Conlon fostered an environment of superficial peace and inadequate emphasis on visible repentance among congregants, urging believers to depart to avoid shared judgment.[89] Conlon and TSC have not issued direct rebuttals to these specific videos but maintain that church practices align with verifiable biblical evangelism, focusing on observable outreach impacts like street ministry and altar calls rather than speculative alliances.[16] Post-Wilkerson's death in 2011, some observers from discernment circles have alleged an internal shift at TSC toward practices perceived as more accommodating or man-focused, such as prioritizing personal testimonies and broad invitations over Wilkerson-era confrontational warnings against cultural compromise.[87] These critiques portray a softening of boundaries to appeal to urban seekers, potentially diluting the church's original emphasis on radical holiness, though TSC continues Wilkerson-founded initiatives like drug recovery programs without formal acknowledgment of such changes.[16]

Personal Life and Recent Events

Family and Private Background

Carter Conlon has been married to Teresa Conlon, with whom he shares three children and nine grandchildren.[2] The couple maintains a relatively private family life, with public disclosures limited primarily to basic family structure and occasional social media mentions of their daughter Kate, who has assisted in communications and participated in family-shared content.[90][91] No further details on the names or activities of the other children are publicly available from verified sources. The family resides in New York City, where Conlon has prioritized familial responsibilities alongside personal commitments.[16]

Health Challenges and Recovery

In August 2025, Carter Conlon underwent open-heart surgery on August 26, following an announcement on August 25 that the procedure would last 6-8 hours.[92] Prior to the surgery, Conlon recorded a message expressing trust in divine power during personal trials, urging listeners to pursue spiritual boldness rather than mediocrity.[93] An initial post-operative update from his daughter Kate on August 27 confirmed he had emerged from surgery successfully, with medical staff reporting encouraging progress in his recovery.[94] Conlon's absence from the Times Square Church pulpit extended through September and into October 2025, during which the congregation experienced continuity in services led by Senior Pastor Tim Dilena, who had previously informed the church of Conlon's health developments.[95] From his hospital room and subsequent recovery, Conlon continued ministering via pre-recorded messages, including devotions on August 27 addressing foundational faith amid adversity and October releases such as "Fear is Not an Option" on October 2 and "Lord, Help Me Endure This Trial" on October 6, where he testified to relying on scriptural promises for strength in suffering.[96][97][98] On October 20, 2025, Conlon returned to preach in person at Times Square Church, marking the end of his pulpit hiatus and signaling his recovery from the cardiac procedure.[99][35] This resumption followed approximately two months of rehabilitation, during which official updates emphasized gratitude for prayer support and steady improvement.[100]

Impact and Legacy

Influence on Evangelical Circles

Carter Conlon's tenure as senior pastor of Times Square Church (TSC) from 2001 to 2020 exemplified an approach to urban ministry in New York City, drawing diverse congregations amid the challenges of a high-density, multicultural environment. Under his leadership, TSC grew to regular attendance exceeding 10,000 individuals representing over 100 nationalities, emphasizing outreach to marginalized urban populations through interdenominational services and community engagement.[61][101] In 2010, Conlon initiated "For Pastors Only," an online devotional resource offering bi-weekly video messages in response to requests from ministers seeking guidance on spiritual leadership. This platform has reached over 3,000 pastors globally, providing content centered on themes of personal repentance and renewed commitment to scriptural priorities in pastoral roles.[102][39] Conlon launched the Worldwide Prayer Meeting in 2015, which expanded to participants in over 160 countries through weekly online and in-person gatherings originating from TSC. The initiative has processed hundreds of thousands of prayer requests, with events drawing tens of thousands of online viewers and facilitating participation from affiliated churches worldwide.[30][103]

Evaluations of Ministerial Effectiveness

Under Carter Conlon's leadership as senior pastor of Times Square Church from 2001 to 2020, the congregation sustained weekly attendance exceeding 8,000 worshippers, with reports indicating growth to over 10,000 members representing more than 100 nationalities.[104][1] This stability persisted amid New York City's intensifying cultural secularism, preserving David Wilkerson's emphasis on repentance and outreach to marginalized groups, as evidenced by ongoing interdenominational services and evangelism efforts in a high-drug-trafficking district.[18] Conlon's preaching prioritized calls for authentic conversions over superficial responses, critiquing shallow altar calls common in other churches and urging hearers to confront personal sin for true transformation.[1] Verifiable outcomes include the church's continued operation without closure or major schisms, contrasting with urban ministries that faltered under similar pressures, and expansion of prayer initiatives that reportedly fostered individual testimonies of deliverance from addiction and moral failure, though aggregate salvation statistics remain anecdotal rather than systematically tracked.[1] Critics from discernment-oriented evangelical circles, such as those documenting perceived apostasy trends, argue Conlon deviated from Wilkerson's unyielding confrontation of error by accommodating speakers and practices viewed as doctrinally lax, potentially softening the church's prophetic edge and contributing to stagnant growth beyond attendance maintenance.[87] These detractors, often aligned with Reformed or fundamentalist perspectives, cite specific invitations of controversial figures as evidence of compromise, questioning whether adaptive contextualization diluted causal emphasis on unaltered biblical rebuke.[84] Defenders counter that such adaptations reflect pragmatic realism in a post-Christian metropolis, enabling broader reach without empirical evidence of diluted salvific impact, as attendance metrics and sustained diversity suggest resilience rather than retreat.[1] Overall, Conlon's tenure yielded verifiable institutional endurance against godlessness—marked by no reported membership hemorrhage and persistent urban witness—but lacked quantifiable surges in conversions or expansions, prompting debates on whether preservation equates to prophetic vigor or mere custodial stewardship.[104][18]

References

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