Frank Buchman, originally a
Lutheran, was deeply influenced by the
Higher Life movement whose strongest contribution to
evangelism in Britain was the
Keswick Convention. Buchman had studied at
Muhlenberg College in
Allentown, Pennsylvania and at the
Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia and was ordained a Lutheran
minister in June 1902. Having hoped to be called to an important city church, he accepted a call to
Overbrook, a growing
Philadelphia suburb, which did not yet have a Lutheran church building. He arranged the rental of an old storefront for worship space, and lived upstairs. After a visit to Europe, he decided to establish a hostel for mentally disabled in Overbrook, along the lines of
Friedrich von Bodelschwingh’s colony for the mentally ill in
Bielefeld, Germany, and inspired by
Toynbee Hall charitable institution in
East London. Conflict developed with the hospice's board. In Buchman's recollection the dispute was due to the board's "unwillingness" to fund the hospice adequately. However, the Finance Committee of the
Lutheran church body of Pennsylvania, aka Pennsylvania Ministerium, which oversaw the budget, had no funds with which to make up an ongoing deficit and wanted the hospice to be self-supporting. Buchman resigned. Exhausted and depressed, Buchman took his doctor's advice of a long holiday abroad, and this is how, still in turmoil over his resignation, Buchman attended the
Keswick Convention in 1908, hoping to meet pastor
F. B. Meyer, one of the leading lights of the
Keswick Convention and one of the main advocates of
Quiet Time as a means to be "inspired by God". F. B. Meyer was not present, and Frank Buchman chose to attend the sermon by
Jessie Penn-Lewis instead, which became "a life-changing experience" for him Buchman wrote letters of apology to the six board members asking their forgiveness for harboring ill will. Buchman regarded this as a foundation experience and in later years frequently referred to it with his followers. F. B. Meyer and the Keswick Convention's influence on Buchman was a major one. Meyer had published
The Secret of Guidance in 1896. One of his mottos was: "Let no day pass without its season of silent waiting before God." Meyer personally coached Buchman into "daily guidance". Another assertion was "Absolute moral standards belong by Holiness", even though this formula used by Buchman had been formulated by the American Presbyterian missionary
Robert Elliott Speer. From 1909 to 1915, Buchman was
YMCA secretary at
Pennsylvania State University. Despite quickly more than doubling the YMCA membership to 75% of the student body, he was dissatisfied, questioning how deep the changes went. Alcohol consumption in the college, for example, was unaffected. During this time he began the practice of a daily "
quiet time". Buchman finally got to meet
Frederick Brotherton Meyer, who when visiting the college, asked Buchman, "Do you let the
Holy Spirit guide you in all you are doing?" Buchman replied that he did indeed pray and read the Bible in the morning. "But," persisted Meyer, "do you give God enough uninterrupted time really to tell you what to do?" Another decisive influence appears to have been
Yale University theology professor
Henry Burt Wright (1877–1923) and his 1909 book ''The Will of God and a Man's Lifework'', which was itself influenced by Frederick Brotherton Meyer and
Henry Drummond, among others. Frank Buchman was also very influenced by Presbyterian
Yale theology professor
Henry Burt Wright (see
The Four Absolutes infra). Buchman's devotion to "personal evangelism", and his skill at re-framing the Christian message in contemporary terms, were admired by campus ministry leaders. Maxwell Chaplin, YMCA secretary at
Princeton University, wrote, after attending one of the Buchman's annual "YMCA Week" campaigns: "In five years the permanent YMCA secretary at Penn State has entirely changed the tone of that one-time tough college."
Lloyd Douglas, author of
The Robe took part in the same campaign. "It was," he wrote afterwards, "the most remarkable event of its kind I ever witnessed.... One after another, prominent fraternity men ... stood up before their fellows and confessed that they had been living poor, low-grade lives and from henceforth meant to be good." In 1915, Buchman's YMCA work took him to
India with
evangelist Sherwood Eddy. There he met, briefly,
Mahatma Gandhi (the first of many meetings), and became friends with
Rabindranath Tagore and
Amy Carmichael, founder of the
Dohnavur Fellowship. Despite speaking to audiences of up to 60,000, Buchman was critical of the large-scale approach, describing it as "like hunting rabbits with a brass band". From February to August 1916 Buchman worked with the YMCA mission in
China and eventually returned to Pennsylvania due to the increasing illness of his father. Buchman next took a part-time post at
Hartford Theological Seminary as a personal evangelism lecturer. There he began to gather a group of men to assist in the conversion of China to Christianity. He was asked to lead missionary conferences at
Guling and
Beidaihe, which he saw as an opportunity to train native Chinese leaders at a time when many missionaries held attitudes of white superiority. Through his friendship with
Xu Qian (Vice-Minister of Justice and later acting Prime Minister,) he got to know
Sun Yat-sen. However, his criticism of other missionaries in China, with an implication that sin, including homosexuality, was keeping some of them from being effective, led to conflict.
Bishop Logan Roots, deluged with complaints, asked Buchman to leave China in 1918. While still based at Hartford, Buchman spent much of his time traveling and forming groups of Christian students at
Princeton University and
Yale University, as well as
Oxford.
Sam Shoemaker, a Princeton graduate and one-time secretary of the Philadelphian Society, who had met Buchman in China, became one of his leading American disciples. In 1922, after a prolonged spell with students in
Cambridge, Buchman resigned his position at Hartford to
live by faith and launch the
First Century Christian Fellowship. ==First Century Christian Fellowship to Oxford Groups==