Norman Vincent
Peale (May 31, 1898 – December 24, 1993) was an American minister and
author (most notably of The Power of Positive Thinking) and a progenitor of "positive thinking". His
ideas were not accepted by mental health experts.
Peale was born in Bowersville, Ohio, the oldest of three sons of Charles and Anna
(née Delaney) Peale. He graduated from Bellefontaine High School, Bellefontaine,
Ohio. He earned degrees at Ohio Wesleyan University (where he became a brother of the Fraternity
of Phi Gamma Delta) and Boston University School of Theology.
Raised as a Methodist and ordained as a
Methodist minister in 1922, Peale changed his religious affiliation to the Reformed Church in
America in 1932 and began a
52-year tenure as pastor of Marble Collegiate Church in New York City. During that time the church's membership grew from 600 to over
5,000, and he became one of New York City's most famous preachers.
Peale and Smiley Blanton, a psychoanalyst, established a
religio-psychiatric outpatient clinic next door to the church. The two men
wrote books together, notably Faith Is the Answer: A
Psychiatrist and a Pastor Discuss Your Problems (1940). The book was written in alternating
chapters, with Blanton writing one chapter, then Peale. Blanton espoused no
particular religious point of view in his chapters. In 1951 this clinic of
psychotherapy and religion grew into the American Foundation of Religion and
Psychiatry, with Peale serving as president and Blanton as executive director. Blanton handled difficult psychiatric cases
and Peale, who had no mental health credentials, handled religious issues.
When Peale came under heavy criticism from the mental health
community for his controversial book "The Power of Positive
Thinking," (1952) Blanton distanced himself from Peale and refused to
publicly endorse the book. Blanton did not allow Peale to use his name in
"The Power of Positive Thinking" and declined to defend Peale
publicly when he came under criticism. As scholar Donald Meyer describes it:
"Peale evidently imagined that he marched with Blanton in their joint
labors in the Religio-psychiatric Institute. This was not exactly so." Meyer
notes that Blanton's own book, "Love or Perish, (1956), "contrasted
so distinctly at so many points with the Peale evangel," of "positive
thinking" that these works had virtually nothing in common.
In 1935, Peale started a radio program, "The Art of
Living", which lasted for 54 years. Under sponsorship of the National
Council of Churches he moved into television when the new medium arrived. In
the meantime he had begun to edit the magazine Guideposts and to write books.
His sermons were mailed monthly.[4] During the depression Peale teamed with James Cash Penney, founder of J.C. Penney & Co.; Arthur Godfrey, the radio and TV personality; and Thomas J. Watson, President and Founder of IBM to form the
first board of 40Plus, an organization that
helps unemployed managers and executives.
In 1945, Peale, his wife Ruth Stafford Peale and Raymond Thornburg, a Pawling, New York
businessman, founded Guideposts magazine, a non-denominational forum for celebrities and
ordinary people to relate inspirational stories. For its launch, they raised
US$1,200 from Frank Gannett, founder of the Gannett newspaper chain, J. Howard Pew, a Philadelphia industrialist, and Branch Rickey, General Manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Peale was a prolific writer; The Power of Positive Thinking is by far his most widely read work. First published in 1952, it
stayed on the bestseller
list for 186 consecutive weeks, and according to the
publisher, Simon and Schuster, the book has sold around 5 million copies. The
fact that the book has sold 5 million copies is printed on the cover of the
current edition in both paperback and hard cover, and directly contradicts
exaggerated claims that the book has sold more than 20 million copies in 42 languages. The publisher also contradicts the translation claim, saying the
book has been translated into only 15 languages. Nearly half of the sales of the book (2.1 mil.) occurred before
1958, and by 1963, the book had still only sold 2
million copies according to Peale. Since then, the book has sold less than 3 million copies over
the past 50 years. Some of his other popular works include The Art of Living, A Guide to Confident Living, The Tough-Minded
Optimist, and Inspiring Messages for Daily Living.
In 1947 Peale co-founded (along with educator Kenneth Beebe) the Horatio Alger Association. This organization aims to
recognize and honor Americans who have been successful in spite of difficult
circumstances. Other organizations founded by Peale include the Peale Center,
the Positive Thinking Foundation and Guideposts Publications, all of which aim to promote Peale's theories
about positive thinking.
Peale was politically and personally close to President Richard
Nixon's family. In 1968 he officiated at the wedding of Julie Nixon and David Eisenhower. He continued calling at the White House
throughout the Watergate crisis, saying "Christ didn't shy away from
people in trouble."
He was also the subject of the 1964 film One Man's Way.
Peale was also a 33° Scottish Rite Freemason.
President Ronald Reagan awarded Peale, for his contributions to the field of theology,
the Presidential Medal of
Freedom (the highest civilian
honor in the United States) on March 26, 1984. He died of a stroke on December 24, 1993 at age 95 in Pawling, New York.
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