Where Faith Planted a Signal: A New Sound Began

In a world filled with constant noise, what we choose to listen to matters.
Music shapes our thoughts, emotions, and even our faith. A song can bring comfort in grief,
remind someone they’re not alone, or point the heart back to hope.

For thousands across South Central Kentucky, songs about Jesus have become part of
everyday life. Many listeners have shared stories of hearing the exact song they needed at just
the right moment—during seasons of loss and uncertainty or in joyful moments celebrating life’s
milestones.

For nearly four decades, that encouragement has been carried through the airwaves by a small
but faithful ministry rooted in Bowling Green.

But the story of Christian Family Radio may surprise you. It didn’t begin in a studio or with a big
business plan. It didn’t even begin inside a radio station.

It began with a spiritual hunger for something deeper—something beyond religion, beyond
denominations, and beyond what many had come to accept as the “normal” Christian
experience.

In the early 1970s, James and Ann Chapman were faithful churchgoers. From the outside, their
lives looked exactly how many believed a Christian life should look. Yet something still felt
incomplete. At the time, much of Christian culture felt divided by denominations and theological
arguments.

The Chapmans longed for something focused less on differences and more on a growing
relationship with Christ. What they were searching for wasn’t more religion—it was a real,
personal relationship with Jesus.

During a vacation out west, something unexpected happened.

While driving between Cheyenne and Denver, Ann discovered a Christian station in Greeley,
Colorado where two men shared their walk with the Lord and discussed Scripture, with
contemporary Christian music between conversations. The Chapmans were immediately
struck—the music was joyful, the conversations real, and for the first time they had found
something that fed their spiritual hunger.

When they returned home to Kentucky, that experience stayed with them.
James grew concerned about the influence of secular music on families and young people.
Lyrics were becoming more suggestive, and the messages often led hearts away from faith
rather than toward it.

When he asked the Lord what he could do about it, the answer seemed simple:
“Give them something else to listen to.”

The Chapmans began traveling to Franklin, Tennessee, where contemporary Christian music
was gaining momentum. They spent hours listening to records and soon began bringing stacks
home to share with the youth group they led at Woodburn Baptist Church, eventually creating a
small record library for students.

The music resonated.

Not long afterward, the Chapmans joined First Assembly Church in Bowling Green. One
Sunday, Pastor Joe Timberlake mentioned the possibility of starting a Christian radio station.
After the service, a small group stayed behind to discuss the idea, and the station’s first board
began to form as others across the community joined the vision.

Churches throughout the area were invited to take part, bringing together believers from many
congregations who shared a common desire—to encourage people through Christ-centered
music.

People stepped forward with the gifts needed. Some understood broadcasting, while others
helped with organization, planning, and fundraising. Different backgrounds. Different churches.
Different denominational views.

But one shared mission.

James and Ann Chapman knew the mission and understood the heart behind the vision. From
the beginning, they believed the station should never belong to just one church or denomination,
but serve the entire body of Christ and the community as a whole.

Launching a station would require nearly $250,000—a daunting number for a small community
effort in the 1980s. But James Chapman never questioned whether the goal would be reached.
If the vision truly came from the Lord, he believed the Lord would provide the way.
After two years of prayer and fundraising, supporters raised the full amount needed to bring the
station to life.

In 1986, Christian Family Radio signed on the air.

Since that first broadcast, the station has remained committed to something simple but
powerful: encouraging people through Christ-centered music and ministry.

Over the years, listeners have shared how these songs have walked with them through life’s
seasons—bringing comfort in the valleys and joy on the mountaintops, reminding them God is
with them through it all.

While the media world has changed dramatically over the past 40 years, the mission at CFR has
not.

Today, Christian Family Radio reaches listeners through its broadcast signal in Bowling Green,
Glasgow, and Owensboro. Through online streaming and the CFR mobile app, the station now
reaches far beyond the region where it began.

Listeners across the country—and even around the world—can tune in anytime.

What began with vinyl records and a vision from God has grown into a ministry that continues to
encourage thousands of hearts each day.

Because when the message resonates at the right moment, it doesn’t just fill the silence.
It reminds them God is still near.

And after 40 years on the air, that mission remains the same: strengthening faith, family, and
community by giving people something else to listen to.

Something that encourages instead of discourages.
Something that strengthens instead of tears down.
Something that points hearts back to Christ.

To the listeners who have welcomed us into their homes, cars, and daily routines over the
years—thank you.

If you’ve never listened before, spend the next 30 days with Christian Family Radio and see
what happens when what you listen to begins feeding your soul.

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Miranda Power