Bishop George Edward Battle Jr., Long-Serving AME Zion Church Leader, Dies at 77

George Edward Battle
Bishop George Edward Battle Jr. (Photo by Owens Daniels)

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(RNS) — Bishop George Edward Battle Jr., an advocate for education and health and the former senior bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, died on Sunday (March 9) in Charlotte, North Carolina, after an undisclosed illness. He was 77.

“Having served as an active bishop for 29 years, Bishop George Edward Battle Jr. will take his place in history as one of our longest-serving active bishops,” the AME Zion Church’s board of bishops said in a statement. “He was not only an evangelist, pastor, bishop and Christian servant, he was a great philanthropist, a community leader, a champion for education and a social justice advocate.”

Battle retired in 2021. In one of his last acts as AME Zion Church’s senior bishop, he oversaw a mortgage-burning ceremony to celebrate the historically Black denomination paying off its debts. The denomination dates back to 1796 and is headquartered in Charlotte.

The church had refinanced a $3.9 million loan to be paid off in quarterly payments from 2015 through 2022, but its chief financial officer announced at a 2021 hybrid meeting in Atlanta it completed the payments early.

Battle said during that quadrennial denominational meeting: “We loved our church and we wanted to make sure that when we came to General Conference, we would have enough money saved by making these transactions, so when we came here the bills would be paid.”

Battle, a native of Edgecombe County, North Carolina, served churches in North and South Carolina starting in the 1960s. After he was elected bishop in 1992, he oversaw churches in the Carolinas, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Northeast.

He was especially remembered for his work as a mentor to students and clergy.

The Rev. Monte Witherspoon-Brown, an at-large member of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, cited Battle’s 17 years on the school board, including four as board chair, at its meeting on Tuesday.

“His years of service were both critical and transformative for our district,” Witherspoon-Brown said in his tribute. “As a faith leader and advocate for education, Bishop Battle founded the Greater Enrichment Program in 1975, which has provided quality after-school enrichment for thousands of students and continues to operate in multiple locations.”

Witherspoon-Brown said Battle was his longtime mentor and helped prevent him from dropping out of school as a ninth grader, ensured he received financial support to attend Livingstone College, an AME-Zion affiliated school in Salisbury, North Carolina, and appointed him to three of the four churches where he served as pastor. Battle also counseled Witherspoon when he decided to run for the school board position.

“‘You have to make sure that all children get a good education,’” Witherspoon-Brown recalled Battle telling him. “And he paused for a moment and then emphasized ‘all children.’”

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AdelleMBanks@churchleaders.com'
Adelle M Bankshttp://religionnews.com
Adelle M. Banks, production editor and a national reporter, joined RNS in 1995. An award-winning journalist, she previously was the religion reporter at the Orlando Sentinel and a reporter at The Providence Journal and newspapers in the upstate New York communities of Syracuse and Binghamton.

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