Search by Name

Search by Name

Blair C. Adams

1944 - 2021

Blair C. Adams obituary, 1944-2021, Waco, TX

Blair Adams Obituary

Blair C. Adams

January 5, 1944 - July 27, 2021

Blair C. Adams, founder of Homestead Heritage, passed peacefully from this life at home after a lengthy battle with cancer on July 27, 2021. He departed in the arms of his devoted wife of 50 years, surrounded by family, friends and a caring church community.

Blair was born on January 5, 1944, in El Paso, Texas. Some of his fondest early memories were visits to the ranch of his older cousins near Las Cruces, New Mexico, where he first sat a horse at age three. He spent his early school years in Lubbock and Amarillo, Texas, filling his off-school time working on ranches as (in his words) a "never fully accomplished cowboy."

Nurtured in this Texas soil, Blair loved the countryside, horses, great big skies and the people and traditions of rural America. He guided the Homestead Heritage community in the path of agrarian living, teaching former urbanites to discover life's fullness in working the soil, interacting with the land, growing food and building relationships through a rural lifestyle.

Since childhood, Blair passionately gave himself to art, instructed by his professional artist grandmother. In 1962, he enrolled in Texas Tech's architectural and applied arts school, later transferring to the University of Texas at Austin.

In 1964, his father violently took his own life, dramatically disrupting and redirecting Blair's future. He changed majors and finally ended up in the UT philosophy department, bereft of all nominal or conceptual faith about God.

In August of 1966, after 3 ½ years of college, Blair was drafted into the army during the heat of the Vietnam War. He was offered a position in Army Intelligence, obtaining a "top secret crypto" security clearance. He was stationed in Bavaria, West Germany, for three years, working in electronic intelligence, monitoring Soviet and Warsaw Pact activities.

Upon honorable discharge from military service, Blair reentered the philosophy department at the University of Texas for the summer and fall of 1970. But in January and February of 1971, Blair had several unexpected life-changing encounters with God. These surprising events convinced him that there was only one God, and Jesus was that God incarnate, holding out the promise of a powerful spiritual experience to all believers. He also saw the hope for lasting relationships in Christ's Body, the church.

Blair soon became a minister. He married Regina Mae McDanel on May 7, 1971. They began preaching almost nightly in churches around the country for the next two years, eventually answering a call to launch an inner-city mission church in Manhattan's Lower East Side slums.

Through his experiences in hundreds of churches and then beginning a church in a place of spiritual desolation, Blair came to see the need for the church to fulfill its promise of becoming an alternative to the world's smoldering cultures, an alternative culture called the "kingdom of God." This was, in Jesus' words, a "kingdom not of this world."

Blair perceived this kingdom as God's noncoercive rule of love, not only in individual lives but also in an entire community of people from across the earth—people united by their commitment to God's love and vision alone.

Blair eventually recognized through his studies that many of these values were common within the Anabaptist heritage of Christianity. Thus he nurtured the church in the Biblical convictions of nonviolence and simplicity of lifestyle consistent with the Anabaptist lineage.

Blair believed that the kingdom of God should unfold "on Earth as it is in heaven," finding its embodiment in the sacralized life of Christian community. Such a community, like any living thing, must be whole. Thus, Blair saw that Christian community must become an entire environment, a vital way of living and focusing a people's vision, labor, conduct and relationships. In short, a viable culture in Christ must include everything essential to sustain life.

Blair's abiding motive has been to participate in creating communities of exemplary Christian existence. He saw these communities as the crucial means of teaching how to live authentically in the presence of God and other people. Blair hoped such communities would make wise choices possible in religion, culture, relationships, vocations, lifestyle, and on a scale large enough to make a difference in an increasingly troubled world. In these communities, children, women and men would share the ineffable delight of experientially knowing God. And word and deed would be fused in the authentic unity of a lived life.

Indeed, Blair, Regina and their friends never saw the church institutionally, but as God's people bound together in deep and abiding relationships of mutual love service. From their early days as Christians, they talked of the church and kingdom in terms of community.

Who could have envisioned how their efforts would unfold when, in the summer of 1973, Blair and Regina first moved into the Lower East Side slums of Manhattan? There they started the small mission church, Voice in the Wilderness, on the same block that the New York Daily News then described as the "worst" in the city, a virtual "pornorama of vice." Yet from those inauspicious beginnings grew Heritage Ministries and the Homestead Heritage community of Waco, Texas, as well as daughter communities in Montana, Idaho, Virginia, New Zealand, Mexico, South Africa, Israel and beyond. Homestead Heritage is now visited by over 200,000 people a year. All of its ministries and offshoot communities, traditional crafts, educational and other services now extend worldwide.

From early in his ministry, Blair recognized that writing would be an integral part of his labors. He read and studied his entire adult life about the impact of ideas on individuals, cultures and whole peoples. He sought to understand how unconscious cultural assumptions often controlled people's thinking, desires and actions in ways that worked against their own deepest needs. He labored and wrote to expose these largely hidden cultural ideas so that people might make real, informed choices about life's most crucial matters. Blair has authored over 250 titles, extensively and intensively grappling with these and other related topics. Colloquium Press publishes his books in Elm Mott, Texas.

Until his passing, Blair resided with his loving wife, Regina, in Waco, Texas, surrounded by their children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and many lifelong friends.

Homestead Heritage mourns the passing of a loving shepherd of nearly 50 years. They bid farewell to a man who lived as he preached, walked humbly and loved liberally. They say goodbye to an ambassador of hope and inspiration, knowing his life's sacrifice and message will live on in a community committed to making real the dream of God's "city on a hill"—a refuge of peace for turbulent times.

Goodbye, Brother Blair. We miss you already; we'll love you forever and will strive to honor your life and memory in following your faithful pursuit of Christ's kingdom—come on earth as in heaven.

Homestead welcomes friends to memorial services at 11 a.m., Sunday, August 1, at Santa Fe Hall • 496 Halbert Lane, Waco, TX.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Waco Tribune-Herald from Jul. 29 to Aug. 1, 2021.

Memories and Condolences
for Blair Adams

Not sure what to say?





5 Entries

Lamont (Monty) Herrington

August 27, 2021

Blair had a profound and lasting impact on my life even before finding his place in Christ. Affectionately known as "Big Teacher" in our military days he spent much time teaching me how to think an rethink things. He was there on the day that I found my place in Christ and for this I am eternally grateful. God bless his wife, children, grandchildren and those he´s led to embrace Bible truths.

Monty Herrington

Carlos & Dianna Cacerws

August 10, 2021

Passing from this life into the presence of Ysuah...well done, Blair!

Rich Hajdu

August 8, 2021

You didn´t have to know Blair long to understand that he was a man of purpose and calling. The fact that he found his calling and his purpose, and founded a community that will live on in self sufficiency is a testament to Blair, his faith in Jesus, and his relentless pursuit of truth and knowledge. May God be with Regina, the family, and the church.

Cluster of 50 Memorial Trees

Alliance Bank Central Texas

Planted Trees

Roma and Larry Wright (Regina Tittley's mother)

July 31, 2021

Sending our love and deep appreciation for all Blair did and gave his life for. Our whole family sends their sympathies for this time of loss of a great and wonderful man.

Showing 1 - 5 of 5 results

Make a Donation
in Blair Adams's name

Memorial Events
for Blair Adams

Aug

1

Memorial service

11:00 a.m.

Santa Fe Hall

496 Halbert Lane, Waco, TX

How to support Blair's loved ones
Honor a beloved veteran with a special tribute of ‘Taps’ at the National WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C.

The nightly ceremony in Washington, D.C. will be dedicated in honor of your loved one on the day of your choosing.

Read more
Attending a Funeral: What to Know

You have funeral questions, we have answers.

Read more
Should I Send Sympathy Flowers?

What kind of arrangement is appropriate, where should you send it, and when should you send an alternative?

Read more
What Should I Write in a Sympathy Card?

We'll help you find the right words to comfort your family member or loved one during this difficult time.

Read more
Resources to help you cope with loss
Estate Settlement Guide

If you’re in charge of handling the affairs for a recently deceased loved one, this guide offers a helpful checklist.

Read more
How to Write an Obituary

Need help writing an obituary? Here's a step-by-step guide...

Read more
Obituaries, grief & privacy: Legacy’s news editor on NPR podcast

Legacy's Linnea Crowther discusses how families talk about causes of death in the obituaries they write.

Read more
The Five Stages of Grief

They're not a map to follow, but simply a description of what people commonly feel.

Read more
Ways to honor Blair Adams's life and legacy
Obituary Examples

You may find these well-written obituary examples helpful as you write about your own family.

Read more
How to Write an Obituary

Need help writing an obituary? Here's a step-by-step guide...

Read more
Obituary Templates – Customizable Examples and Samples

These free blank templates make writing an obituary faster and easier.

Read more
How Do I Write a Eulogy?

Some basic help and starters when you have to write a tribute to someone you love.

Read more