Campus Crusade for Christ

It’s the convert-at-all-costs mentality members exhibit. It’s the Science-is-the-enemy way of thinking. It’s the inability to think beyond the Bible. It’s the way they seem to alienate so many people on their own campus, including other Christians. Campus Crusade for Christ (now known as Cru) was founded in 1951 by William R. Bright, who claimed he possessed direct communication with God.

Activities
The movement is a Christian ministry at the University of California, Los Angeles known for their "Four Spiritual Laws" tract. They sponsored the Explo '72 festival where the Jesus Freaks movement peaked, and today are involved in evangelism and Christian groups on 1000+ college campuses and elsewhere. No longer limited to college campuses, they have outreach programs in high schools, businesses, and athletic programs. They got in trouble for "insensitivity," and they were thus banned from the University of Singapore.

Despite what the name implies, they do not invade other campuses in an effort to take back the holy land.

Evangelism
Theologically and stylistically they are about where Billy Graham, The Navigators, and Hank Hanegraaff are: evangelical (with all the usual baggage that includes) while keeping careful distance from politics and from fringe fundamentalist and Pentecostal practices. According to media accounts in USA Today and elsewhere, they are the largest evangelical group in the world.

Iraq
Bright was one of the five signatories to the "Land Letter" in 2002 stating that a "just war" case existed in favor of the Iraq War, giving George W. Bush theological sanction to invade Iraq. The other signatories were Richard Land, Chuck Colson, Carl D. Herbster, and James Kennedy.

The Jesus Film Project
Campus Crusade for Christ has created the. It has been used as an evangelical tool around the world. It also inspired the apologetics website Jesus Fact or Fiction.

Name
God himself originally gave the name Campus Crusade for Christ to Bill Bright using a professor as an intermediary (yes, that is what the organization believes). Still the divinely inspired name suggests zealotry, intolerance and fanaticism and does not work so well in the 21st Century. So the organization "saturated their decision with prayer", and chose the new public relations inspired name, Cru.

FamilyLife
In 1976 they also created an organisation called FamilyLife® (or sometimes Family Life if their copy editors are being lazy) to promote Christian marriage and help the struggling married couples whom they saw all around in their campus activities. This includes hosting a lot of events, running a radio network, and providing other publications and resources. FamilyLife is a trade name of FLTI, a subsidary of Cru. They produced the 2018 movie Like Arrows directed by Kevin Peeples, about a married couple who seek help with their marriage and find it through wife-swapping and drugs Christianity.

However, their trademark on Family Life doesn't appear exhaustive, and there are a lot of other churches called Family Life which aren't affiliated with Cru. For instance some are involved with the Tennessee-based Pentecostal group, and others are independent.

Agapé Europe
As part of his worldwide mission, Bill Bright founded a European network known as Agapé, which runs ministries in multiple countries, focusing largely on students but also working people and others. It also operates Crescendo, a network of "Christian music professionals". According to Agapé Europe, in 1967, Bright "sent a team of fifty-five men and women to the UK to help build spiritual movements on university campuses. Soon, working in partnership with others who shared the vision, groups were flourishing at five universities across the country." The European parent company is Agape Europe E.V. c/o Campus für Christus e.V., Geissen, Germany. The British version, Agapé Ministries Ltd, is based at 167 Newhall Street, Birmingham B3 1SW, United Kingdom.

Spam
If you happen to go to a campus where they're active, do not give them your email address. You will be spammed.