In 1974 Martin left
New Jersey and relocated to
California, and this also entailed the transfer of CRI. In the early stages Martin was assisted by
Bob and
Gretchen Passantino as staff members in CRI. Martin also became part of the teaching faculty of the newly formed
Melodyland School of Theology in
Anaheim, where
countercult apologetics was integrated into the curriculum and the 13,000 volumes of CRI's library was housed there. Later the ministry opened an office in
El Toro, and then shifted to larger premises in
Irvine. The upsurge of interest in Martin's work and CRI coincided with the
Jesus People revolution, the
counterculture, and the social conflicts over new
cults in the 1970s. During the 1970s and 1980s a number of younger apologists were mentored by Martin through CRI and included
Cal Beisner, Todd Ehrenborg, Craig Hawkins, Carole Hausmann, Kurt Van Gorden, John Weldon, George Mather, Paul Carden, Rich Poll,
Robert M. Bowman Jr., Kenneth Samples, and Elliot Miller. The profile of CRI increased with the widespread sales of Martin's book
The Kingdom of the Cults (now with approximately 750,000 copies sold), his audio-tape albums, his radio ministry, and his appearances on national television. Martin was also involved in the establishment of the
MA program in apologetics at the Simon Greenleaf School of Law (now
Trinity Law School) in 1980. Martin taught there on cults and the
occult throughout the 1980s, and was assisted from time to time by
Bob and
Gretchen Passantino. In 1977, CRI launched a new quarterly periodical called the
Christian Research Institute Newsletter, which in 1978 was retitled
Forward. Through this periodical analyses were published about such movements as
Hare Krishna,
Jonestown,
Rajneesh, the
New Age and
Satanism. In 1983 CRI established the Instituto Cristão de Pesquisas (ICP), an affiliate ministry in
São Paulo, Brazil. Founded by staff researcher Paul Carden, it was eventually led by Martin disciple Paulo Romeiro. In 1987
Forward was revamped as
Christian Research Journal, which was initially devised as a triennial publication. In 1990, the journal was enlarged in size and became a quarterly publication, and has since become a monthly periodical. The
Christian Research Journal has won several awards of excellence from the
Evangelical Press Association. The journal now covers a wider range of issues in addition to cults, such as general apologetics, ethical apologetics,
world religions, and theological controversies. It also includes contributed essays by authors who are not staff members with CRI. ==Ministry post-1989==