![]() ![]() Grant Anderson, and other in the necktie controversy there were the ministers who believed that wearing a necktie did not violate the standards of holiness. Teasley was one of the movement's more advanced thinkers during the decades of his ministry. In 1910 the Teasleys moved to Anderson, where he took the assignment of general manager of the Gospel Trumpet Company, a post he held until his resignation in 1917. In 1904 Teasley and his wife, Ora, also a minister, moved to New York, where he took up responsibility for the missionary home there, moving it to several different locations before securing the site on Grand Avenue that it occupied for several decades. Brown described Teasley as "a man of extraordinary natural abilities." (1) He quickly rose to prominent positions of responsibility. Writing about him years later, Charles E. Teasley was born in 1875 and entered the ministry in 1896. Several young people of that district later came under the influence of Stanberry’s preaching and followed him into the ministry. Stanberry was converted at Carthage and called into evangelistic work. Under the influence of the Coles and Warner, Algernon B. They opened a second series of meetings in Carthage, where another good work was begun. James, laying the foundations of a strong work. They arrived in Missouri at the invitation of saints whose interest in the Church of God movement had been awakened through the preaching of Jeremiah and Mary Cole. Warner and his evangelistic company traveled throughout the Midwest calling on the saved to submit to sanctification, come out of denominational confusion and enter the "mighty reformation" rolling across the land.
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