William Ragsdale Cannon was a United Methodist bishop, educator, and scholar. During U.S. president Jimmy Carter’s administration, Cannon served as an unofficial envoy of the president. From 1953 to 1968 he was dean of Emory University’s Candler School of Theology in Atlanta. His sixteen published books focus on church history, theology, and ecumenicalism.

William Ragsdale Cannon
William Ragsdale Cannon

Courtesy of Moore Methodist Museum

Cannon, the son of Emma McAfee and William Ragsdale Cannon, was born on April 5, 1916, in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Raised in Dalton, Georgia, he graduated from the University of Georgia in Athens in 1937 and from Yale Divinity School in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1940. He received a Ph.D. from Yale University in 1942. He never married.

Cannon served churches in Oxford before joining Candler’s faculty in 1943. Beginning in 1948 he was regularly elected to jurisdictional and general conferences until he was chosen bishop in 1968. During his tenure as bishop, Cannon served as the episcopal (meaning of or related to bishops) leader of the Raleigh Area (1968-72 and 1980-84) in North Carolina, the Richmond Area (1970-72) in Virginia, and the Atlanta Area (1972-80).

As dean of Candler in the mid-1960s, Cannon defended Emory’s retention of religion professor Thomas J. J. Altizer, a proponent of the death-of-God position. This position later came to be known as the God is dead controversy. Cannon also guided Candler through racial integration.

Highly influential in the Council of Bishops, Cannon delivered the 1984 Episcopal Address—the highest honor conferred on a council member. As a bishop he stressed Christian education and evangelism, and was known for his classically orthodox, Wesleyan positions.

William Ragsdale Cannon
William Ragsdale Cannon

Courtesy of Emory University Photography

During his career Cannon participated in Methodist conversations with Lutheran, Reformed, and Roman Catholic leaders and scholars. A Protestant observer at Vatican Council II in 1965 and the Extraordinary Synod of the Roman Catholic Church in 1985, he became friends with Pope John Paul II, who sent a statement to be read at Cannon’s funeral.

Cannon retired to Georgia in 1984, becoming bishop-in-residence at Northside United Methodist Church in Atlanta. In 1994 he was a principal founder of the Confessing Movement, which focused on the United Methodist Church’s mission to”retrieve its classical doctrinal identity, and to live it out as disciples of Christ.” Cannon died in Crawford Long Hospital in Atlanta in 1997 and is buried in West Hill Cemetery in Dalton. Cannon Chapel at Emory is named in his honor.

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William Ragsdale Cannon

William Ragsdale Cannon

William Ragsdale Cannon, a United Methodist bishop from 1968 until 1984, stands outside of Emory University's Cannon Chapel. The chapel was consecrated in 1981 and named in honor of the bishop, who had previously served as dean of the university's Candler School of Theology.

Courtesy of Emory University Photography

William Ragsdale Cannon

William Ragsdale Cannon

William Ragsdale Cannon, a United Methodist minister and educator, was dean of the Candler School of Theology at Emory University from 1953 to 1968. He was named a bishop in 1968 and served areas in Georgia, North Carolina, and Virginia during his sixteen-year tenure.

Courtesy of Moore Methodist Museum