J. Delano Ellis

Jesse Delano Ellis, II, commonly known as J. Delano Ellis, (December 11, 1944 – September 19, 2020) was an American Protestant religious leader and progenitor of unity among African American Pentecostals with Trinitarian and nontrinitarian affinities.

The Most Reverend

Jesse Delano Ellis, II
Metropolitan Archbishop of the Joint College of Bishops, Presiding Prelate of the Pentecostal Churches of Christ, and Senior Pastor of the Pentecostal Church of Christ (Cleveland, Ohio)
ChurchPentecostal Churches of Christ
SeePentecostal Church of Christ
Orders
Ordination1963
by Ozro Thurston Jones, Sr.
Consecration1970
by Brumfield Johnson
Personal details
Born
Jesse Delano Ellis

(1944-12-11)December 11, 1944
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died(2020-09-19)September 19, 2020 (aged 75)
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
ResidenceCleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Children6
OccupationPastor, author
Education
Coat of arms

Establishing and initially leading the Joint College of Bishops as their metropolitan archbishop, Ellis also founded and served as presiding prelate for the United Pentecostal Churches of Christ (today the United Covenant Churches of Christ) and Pentecostal Churches of Christ. He served as the senior pastor of the Pentecostal Church of Christ in Cleveland, Ohio, beginning on May 14, 1989.

From the inception of the Joint College of Bishops, Ellis, alongside the organization's co-founders—Wilbert Sterling McKinley, Roy Edward Brown, and Paul S. Morton—have been labeled as "leaders in the shift" among African American Pentecostalism for introducing liturgical order and identity among Pentecostal or Full Gospel churches and denominations. As a promoter of ecumenism, Ellis placed Pentecostalism as manifested among African Americans in conversation with the broader Christian community around the world.

Through Ellis, many classical and Oneness Pentecostal denominations claim to derive "western and eastern streams of apostolic succession" as described in the appendix to his book, The Bishopric – A Handbook on Creating Episcopacy in the African-American Pentecostal Church. According to Ellis, claims of succession stemmed from the Church of England, Methodist Episcopal Church, and Church of God in Christ; he also claimed apostolic succession through the Syro-Chaldean Church. In his book, he cited no lineage for his "western" stream, and his Syro-Chaldean claims contrast with another record.

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