Dickerson Wells

Dickerson L. S. Wells
Personal details
Born 1960
Nationality United States American
Denomination Pentecostal, COGIC
Residence Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Spouse Valesa S. J. Wells
Children Dickerson Wells II , ZaQuita Wells, Chantelle Wells, Chandler Wells, Tyler Wells

Dickerson LeMoyne Shillicutt Wells is an African American preacher from Memphis, Tennessee in the Church of God in Christ.

The Life of Dickerson Wells

Educated in Chicago and Memphis public schools, Pastor Wells matriculated at LeMoyne-Owen College receiving a Bachelor of Arts and completed a masters at the University of Memphis. Wells was an educator in the Memphis City School System. Pastor Wells received a license to preach at the age of eighteen, the youngest ever to receive an ordination in Tennessee, at the hand of the late Bishop J. O. Patterson, Sr. Bishop F. D. Macklin looked on the work and ministry of Dickerson Wells and made him the Evangelical President of the Jurisdiction of Tennessee. In the year 1988, he organized the Bethesda Church of God in Christ and was given his appointment from elder to superintendent by Bishop J. O. Patterson, Jr. In 1990, Dr. E. L. Battles made Pastor Wells the President of the National Evangelist Department of the Church of God in Christ. He served the Tennessee Central Jurisdiction in 1991 under the leadership of Bishop H. Jenkins Bell as the pastor of the Greater Faith Temple COGIC in Clarksville, Tennessee. Bishop J. O. Patterson, Jr. appointed Pastor Wells as the Administrative Assistant to the Presiding Bishop of the COGIC. Almost immediately after, Pastor Wells claimed that God told him to change the name of his church from "Bethesda" to "Bethel". Now the name of his church is Bethel COGIC. He was consecrated and ordained as an Auxiliary Bishop in the COGIC on November 8, 2015.

Personal life

Pastor Wells is married Valesa S. J. Wells. Together, they have 4 children: ZaQuita Wells, Dickerson Wells II, Chantelle Wells, and Chandler Wells, whom he named after former COGIC Presiding Bishop, Bishop Chandler David Owens.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.