Passion Conferences (also referred to as Passion and the 268 Generation, originally named Choice Ministries) is a Christian organization founded by Louie Giglio and Chris Tomlin in 1997.[1] The organization is known for its annual gatherings of young adults between the ages of 18 and 25, more specifically college students.
Founded | 1997 |
---|---|
Founder | Louie Giglio |
Type | 501(c)(3) |
Headquarters | 515 Garson Drive NE, Atlanta, Georgia |
Subsidiaries |
|
Website | passionconferences |
The organization is also responsible for sixstepsrecords, the worship band Passion, and the megachurch Passion City Church,[2] which serves as the organization's headquarters. Until 2009, the headquarters were in Roswell, a suburb of Atlanta, Georgia.[3][4] The first conference was Passion '97, held in Austin, Texas.[5] According to the organization, its purpose is to unite college students for a "spiritual awakening in this generation."[5] The foundation of the organization's purpose can be found in Isaiah 26:8.[6]
Since its start, Passion Conferences has operated national conferences annually. In 2008, Passion Conferences launched its first global tour that visited 17 countries,[7][8] starting in Kyiv, Ukraine and finishing in Sydney, Australia. Since then, Passion Conferences have continued to host gatherings and tours nationally and globally.
History
edit1985–1997: Early years
editIn 1985, Louie and Shelley Giglio founded Choice Ministries at Baylor University in Waco, Texas.[9] Choice Ministries began as a campus-based student ministry and after 10 years of ministry at Baylor, Louie and Shelley moved to Atlanta, Georgia. In 1997, Giglio along with Chris Tomlin founded Passion Conferences in Atlanta under the banner of Choice Ministries to see a spiritual awakening among college students all across the United States and the world.
1997–2007: National success
editThe first conference took place in Austin, Texas where thousands of college aged students came together during January 1–4, 1997.[9] The first event had 2,000 students in attendance. The following year grew to 5,000 attendees in Fort Worth.[10] Passion have hosted five more national gatherings in the next decade (1998, 1999, 2005, 2006, 2007), which involved more than 70,000 college students in total.[9] During this decade, thousands of additional college students connected with Passion through one of several other gatherings, including the OneDay Gatherings in 2000 and 2003[11] and the Passion Experience Tour.[12] Passion also became known for its worship albums over this decade, which featured many prominent contemporary Christian artists like Matt Redman, Chris Tomlin, and David Crowder.[13][14]
2008–present: Passion City Church and world tours
editIn June 2008, while speaking for pastor Andy Stanley, Giglio announced the planting of Passion City Church in Atlanta, Georgia with Chris Tomlin.[15][16] Along with Tomlin, Matt and Beth Redman, and a small core team, Passion City Church officially gathered in fall of 2008. Passion City Church held its first service on February 15, 2009, in Atlanta, Georgia at The Tabernacle.[17] In 2017, Passion City Church announced plans to expand to two new locations - Passion City Church, Cumberland[18] and Passion City Church, D.C.[19]
Also in 2008, Passion Conferences embarked on its first world tour, reaching out to 17 different cities in all six continents.[20] Passion has continued to launch world tours and regular tours throughout the years, including Passion NYC Subway Series,[21] Regionals '07–'08, Passion 2010 University Tour, Passion 2012 University Tour, A Night of Worship with Passion Tour, Passion: Let the Future Begin Tour, and Passion: Take It All Tour.[22]
In 2017, Passion held its annual collegiate event in Atlanta's Georgia Dome, former home of the Atlanta Falcons before renovations.[23] That year, Passion encouraged participants to sponsor more than 7,000 children from Compassion International.[24] The conference also saw the debut of sixsteprecords artist Jimi Cravity[25] and the appearance of country music singer Carrie Underwood, which incited backlash from some right-wing Christian fundamentalists.[26][27][28][29]
Passion 2019 was held in four sold-out arenas and churches throughout the United States, including Atlanta's State Farm Arena, Duluth's (Georgia) Infinite Energy Center, and in the cities of Dallas, Texas and Washington, D.C.[30][31]
Passion 2020 was held at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia, a return to a single stadium. More than 50,000 people were in attendance, the largest of the Passion gatherings.[32][33][34]
In 2024, Passion hosted its third conference at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, with approximately 55,000 students in attendance from the evening of January 3 to the morning of January 5. Musical artists included Crowder, Sean Curran, Kari Jobe Carnes, Cody Carnes, Brooke Ligertwood, KB, Phil Wickham, and Brandon Lake. Speakers included Louie & Shelley Giglio, Sadie Robertson Huff & Christian Huff, Christine Caine, Ben Stuart, Levi Lusko, Jonathan Pokluda, and Earl McLellan. [35]
The 2025 Conference will be held at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia, due to Mercedez-Benz having a busy football schedule.
Conferences
editPassion's annual conferences attract around 65,000 participants. The conference invites prominent Christian speakers and musical artists annually.[36]
Speakers
editPastor Louie Giglio, founder of Passion, often speaks during the conferences. John Piper is also a frequent speaker at Passion Conferences. Other speakers that have spoken at Passion Gatherings include: Francis Chan, Andy Stanley, Beth Moore, Judah Smith, Christine Caine, Carl Lentz,[37] Lecrae, Gary Haugen,[38] Ben Stuart,[39] David Platt, Matt Chandler,[40] Levi Lusko,[41] and Jay and Katherine Wolf, authors of the book "Hope Heals".[42]
Music
editPassion (worship band) has released 28 albums over two decades. Most of the Passion albums are live albums, recorded during performances in conferences or tours. Passion Conferences also owns the record label Sixstepsrecords, whose artist roster includes Crowder and Passion.[43]
Sixstepsrecords artists form the core group of artists performing at the Passion Gatherings, including Chris Tomlin, David Crowder, Charlie Hall, Matt Redman, Christy Nockels, Kristian Stanfill, Melodie Malone, Brett Younker, and Jimi Cravity.
Other artists that have performed at Passion Gatherings include Lecrae, Hillsong United, Jesus Culture, Kari Jobe, Tenth Avenue North, Shane and Shane, SonicFlood, Gungor, Rend Collective, and Sean Curran of Bellarive.
Door holders
editThe men and women who volunteer at the conferences are called door holders.[36][44] They serve on different teams such as community groups, logistics and registration and are considered to be at the core of the gatherings. They travel from all over the nation to serve at these gatherings. At various times throughout the year Passion City Church has special events for Door Holders.[45][46]
Charitable contributions
editIn 2011, Passion started the Do Something Now fundraising campaign,[47] later renamed 72DaysForFreedom. The fundraising campaign encourages participants in Passion's annual conferences to donate to different charitable organizations. In the Passion 2011 conference, more than 22,000 students raised over $1.1 million towards multiple causes.[48] At the 2012 conference, students raised $3.3 million to fund seven different organizations that battle sex trafficking.[49][50] Passion 2013 saw the launch of the End It Movement, an anti-human trafficking fundraising campaign. Attendees gave more than $3.6 million towards various causes at this conference.[51]
At the 2015 Atlanta conference, attendees collected items to donate to Atlanta's City of Refuge homeless ministry.[52][53] In 2016, participants raised more than $800,000 towards Project Haraka حركة, a partnership with World Vision USA to fund the building of a health facility in Syria.[54] The building is intended to serve as the first newborn ICU in opposition-controlled Syria.[55] Passion 2017 saw the start of the Make History Together fundraising campaign, in which the organization partnered with Compassion International to sponsor children in poverty around the world. The students sponsored more than 7,000 children in total, including all of the Compassion International children from El Salvador, Rwanda, Indonesia, and Tanzania, and another 900 children from Bolivia,[56] creating the largest surge of sponsorships in Compassion International's 65-year history.[57]
Music
editPassion | |
---|---|
Also known as | Passion Music |
Origin | Atlanta, Georgia, US |
Genres | Contemporary worship music, contemporary Christian music |
Years active | 1997 | –present
Labels | |
Members |
Passion Conferences have released 28 albums over the span of 2 decades under the name Passion. Most of the Passion albums are live albums, recorded during performances in conferences or tours. Passion Conferences also owns sixstepsrecords, a record label that includes Crowder and Passion.[58]
Passion's first record, Our Soul's Desire, was released in 1997 under Star Song Records. After Star Song artists transferred to Sparrow Records,[59] Passion released two more live albums, including 1999's Better Is One Day, which saw Passion charting on the Billboard Christian Albums chart for the first time.[5] In 2000, Passion Conferences founded sixstepsrecords as a division of Passion Conferences.[60] As partners of Sparrow Records, a division of Capitol CMG, sixstepsrecords has many prominent contemporary Christian musicians under their label.[61][62] Their first album on the newly created label, The Road to One Day, became the first Passion album to chart on the Billboard 200.[63]
Since the creation of sixstepsrecords, Passion has released more than twenty more live albums and two studio albums, nine of which have consecutively charted at No. 1 on the Billboard Christian Albums chart.[5][64] The lead single off of 2012's live album White Flag, "One Thing Remains", became Passion's first No. 1 song on the Billboard Christian Songs chart.[65] Passion's Let The Future Begin (2013) and Take It All (2014) both peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard 200, making them Passion's highest charting albums.[5]
Discography
editLive albums
editYear | Title | Peak chart positions | |
---|---|---|---|
US Christ [66] |
US [67] | ||
1997 | Our Soul's Desire
|
— | — |
1998 | Live Worship from the 268 Generation
|
— | — |
1999 | Better Is One Day
|
4 | — |
2000 | One Day Live
|
12 | 158 |
2002 | Our Love is Loud
|
4 | 77 |
2003 | Sacred Revolution: Songs From OneDay 03
|
5 | 107 |
2004 | Hymns Ancient and Modern
|
8 | 163 |
2005 | How Great Is Our God
|
2 | 74 |
2006 | Everything Glorious
|
2 | 69 |
2008 | God of This City
|
3 | 74 |
2010 | Passion: Awakening
|
1 | 15 |
2011 | Passion: Here for You
|
1 | 11 |
2012 | Passion: White Flag
|
1 | 5 |
2013 | Passion: Let the Future Begin
|
1 | 4 |
2014 | Passion: Take It All
|
1 | 4 |
2015 | Passion: Even So Come[68]
|
1 | 18 |
2017 | Worthy of Your Name[69]
|
1 | 32 |
2018 | Whole Heart
|
1 | 37 |
2019 | Follow You Anywhere
|
3 | —[A] |
2020 | Roar (Live from Passion 2020)
|
5 | —[B] |
Studio albums
editYear | Title | Peak chart positions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
US Christ [66] |
US [67] |
US Latin Pop [71] | ||
2000 | The Road to One Day
|
3 | 139 | — |
2016 | Passion: Salvation's Tide Is Rising
|
1 | 19 | — |
2017 | Glorioso Día
|
— | — | 12 |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.
Compilations and other releases
editYear | Title | Peak chart positions | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
US Christ [66] |
US [67] | |||
2005 | Passion 05
|
— | — | [importance?] |
2006 | Passion: The Early Session
|
— | — | [72] |
2006 | The Best of Passion (So Far)
|
9 | 168 | [73][74] |
2007 | Live From Passion07
|
— | — | [importance?] |
2008 | A Generation United for His Renown
|
— | — | [75][76] |
2014 | Passion: The Essential Collection
|
9 | 133 | [77] |
Singles
editSingle | Year | Peak chart positions | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Christ. [78] |
US Christ. Airplay [79] |
US Christ. Digital [80] |
Album | ||||
"White Flag" (featuring Chris Tomlin) |
2012 | 8 | 3 | Passion: White Flag | |||
"One Thing Remains" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
1 | 6 | |||||
"The Lord Our God" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
2013 | 18 | — | Passion: Let the Future Begin | |||
"In Christ Alone" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
2014 | 32 | 25 | — | |||
"My Heart Is Yours" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
13 | 12 | 32 | Passion: Take It All | |||
"Even So Come" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
2015 | 7 | 3 | —[C] | Even So Come" (radio version / live) [digital single] | ||
"Remember" (featuring Brett Younker & Melodie Malone) |
2016 | 16 | 16 | 27 | Passion: Salvation's Tide Is Rising | ||
"Simple Pursuit" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
41 | 27 | — | ||||
"Glorious Day" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
2017 | 25 | 19 | 14 | Worthy of Your Name | ||
"God, You're So Good" (featuring Kristian Stanfill & Melodie Malone) |
2018 | — | 42 | — | Whole Heart | ||
"God, You're So Good" (featuring Travis Greene) |
— | — | — | non-album single | |||
"Follow You Anywhere" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
2019 | 45 | 38 | — | Follow You Anywhere | ||
"Step Into the Light" (featuring Sean Curran) |
— | — | — | Bigger Than I Thought[D] | |||
"Behold the Lamb" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
— | — | — | Follow You Anywhere | |||
"There's Nothing That Our God Can't Do" (live) (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
32 | 31 | — | Roar (Live from Passion 2020) | |||
"King of Glory" (live) (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
44 | — | — | ||||
"Way Maker" (live) (featuring Kristian Stanfill, Kari Jobe, and Cody Carnes) |
2020 | 39 | — | 9 |
Other charted songs
editSingle | Year | Peak chart positions | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Christ [78] |
US Christ Digital [81] |
Album | ||||
"Burning In My Soul" (featuring Brett Younker) |
2013 | — | 41 | Passion: Let The Future Begin | ||
"Come As You Are" (featuring Crowder) |
2014 | 43 | 24 | Passion: Take It All | ||
"Salvation's Tide" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
2016 | — | 46 | Salvation's Tide Is Rising | ||
"Worthy of Your Name" (featuring Sean Curran) |
2017 | 27 | 8 | Worthy of Your Name | ||
"This We Know" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
35 | 22 | ||||
"How Great Is Your Love" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
50 | — | ||||
"Whole Heart" (featuring Kristian Stanfill) |
2018 | 48 | — | Whole Heart | ||
"Reckless Love" (featuring Melodie Malone) |
31 | — | ||||
"Welcome The Healer" (featuring Sean Curran) |
2019 | 42 | — | Follow You Anywhere | ||
"Bigger Than I Thought" (featuring Sean Curran) |
44 | — |
Notes
edit- ^ Follow You Anywhere did not enter the Billboard 200, but peaked at No. 47 on the Top Album Sales chart.[70]
- ^ Roar did not enter the Billboard 200, but peaked at No. 68 on the Top Album Sales chart.[70]
- ^ "Even So Come (featuring Kristian Stanfill)" did not chart on the Billboard Christian Digital Song Sales chart. However, "Even So Come (featuring Chris Tomlin)" peaked at number 7.
- ^ Bigger Than I Thought is a release by Sean Curran.
External links
editReferences
edit- ^ "Chris Tomlin - Biography | Billboard". Billboard. February 2, 2017. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017. Retrieved September 5, 2024.
- ^ Interview Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra (February 24, 2009). "Q&A: Louie Giglio". ChristianityToday.com. Retrieved January 1, 2015.
- ^ "Baptist Press – Passion '07 kicks off with 21,000 adults in Atlanta – News with a Christian Perspective". sbcbaptistpress.org. Archived from the original on May 10, 2007. Retrieved November 11, 2017.
- ^ Georgia Secretary of State office, control number 10018357
- ^ a b c d e "Passion 2019 Conferences". PLSN Magazine. Retrieved April 17, 2023. Cite error: The named reference ":0" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ "Passion Conferences". Retrieved January 1, 2015.
- ^ Tweet Email (January 9, 2007). "Passion Conferences to Go International in 2008 | Christian News on Christian Today". Christiantoday.co.uk. Retrieved January 9, 2014.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ "Passion Conferences 'OneDay 03'". The Christian Post. January 24, 2003. Retrieved January 1, 2015.
- ^ "The 2003 Passion Experience Tour Dates". The Christian Post. October 26, 2003. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
- ^ "One Day Live - Passion | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
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- ^ "Shine 'the Light of Jesus' in 2020: 65,000 at Passion Conference, Others Rally Global Prayer Relay". CBN. December 31, 2019. Retrieved April 24, 2023.
- ^ V, JM (December 30, 2019). "Passion 2020: 65,000 to Ring in New Year at Mercedes-Benz Stadium". Missions Box. Retrieved April 24, 2023.
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- ^ "Gary Haugen at Passion 2013: You Can Be the Generation That Ends Slavery in the World". The Christian Post. January 3, 2013. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
- ^ "More than 20,000 Gather in Worship at First Passion 2015 Conference". Christianity Daily. January 5, 2015. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
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- ^ "College kids vow to end slavery". Archived from the original on January 10, 2012.
- ^ "Passion conference raises more than $3M for its campaign to end human trafficking". Cardinal & Cream. February 22, 2012. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
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- ^ Longs, Herb (January 6, 2016). "Passion 2016 Raises Over $800,000 To Build Hospital in Syria". TheChristianBeat.org. Retrieved February 25, 2016.
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