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156 Works 482 Members

About the Author

Includes the names: Alan Highers, Alan Edward Highers

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Works by Alan E. Highers

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
Highers, Alan Edward
Birthdate
1937-07-05
Date of death
2025-08-27
Gender
male
Education
Freed-Hardeman College
David Lipscomb College
Memphis State University
Occupations
Minister, Church of Christ
judge
Short biography
He attended high school as a boarding student at Harding Academy in Searcy, Arkansas.

Upon graduation from high school, he enrolled at Freed-Hardeman College in Henderson, Tennessee, where he attended for three years. In 1995, Freed-Hardeman awarded him an honorary doctorate. He completed his B.A. degree at David Lipscomb College (now Lipscomb University). For several years, he worked with the Getwell Church of Christ in Memphis and also attended law school at Memphis State University (now University of Memphis School of Law). After receiving his Juris Doctor degree, he practiced law with Gerber and Gerber in Memphis and Neely, Green, and Fargarson in Memphis until he was appointed chief magistrate at the Juvenile Court of Memphis and Shelby County. In 1997, he became a Circuit Court Judge in Memphis and Shelby County, where he served for approximately six years. His portrait is in Division I at the Shelby County Courthouse.

In 1982, Governor Lamar Alexander appointed him to the Tennessee Court of Appeals, Western Section. He was retained in this position in 1984, 1990, 1998, and 2006 and became the senior appellate judge in the State of Tennessee. He was selected Presiding Judge of the Western Section in November 2007. In 1984-1985, he served as president of the Tennessee Judicial Conference. For a number of years, he was a member of the Executive Committee of the conference. He retired in 2014, with 37 years of judicial service.

He had a lifelong devotion to the study of the Bible. He was a frequent speaker at the Annual Bible Lectureship at Freed-Hardeman University. For fifteen years, he was the moderator of the Open Forum, where he answered Bible questions from the audience. He was a principal speaker on “Polishing the Pulpit” in Sevierville, Tennessee, which is attended by 5000. He preached, taught, lectured, and debated in many states over the course of his lifetime. Beginning in October 1989, he became editor of The Spiritual Sword. This quarterly journal became the most widely circulated teaching journal among the churches of Christ.
Birthplace
Muskogee, Muskogee County, Oklahoma, USA
Place of death
Henderson, Chester County, Tennessee, USA
Burial location
Memorial Park Cemetery, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Tennessee, USA

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Works
156
Members
482
Popularity
#51,207
Rating
½ 3.5

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