Kay Warren (author)


Kay Warren is an American author, international speaker, Bible teacher and mental health advocate. She is the co-founder of the sixth-largest evangelical megachurch in the United States, Saddleback Church. Her ministry is headquartered in Lake Forest, California.

Early life and education

Warren was born in San Diego, California, to Reverend B. LaVern and Bobbie Lewis. She attended California Baptist College in Riverside, California and earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree from California State University, Los Angeles in 1976.
Kay married Rick Warren on June 21, 1975 and has three children: daughter Amy Warren Hilliker, son Joshua Warren, and son Matthew Warren.

Ministry

launched with seven people as a Bible study group in 1980. During that same year, the first service took place in a high school gymnasium on Easter Sunday. In 2017 the church attendance was 22,000 people.
In 2004, Kay founded both the HIV/AIDS and orphan care initiatives at Saddleback Church. Through global summits about HIV/AIDS and civil forums held at the church, Warren and her husband gathered the private and public sectors with the faith community to promote HIV prevention, treatment and care, as well as advocating for orphaned children. Guest speakers at these events included President Barack Obama, President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush, President Paul Kagame of Rwanda, First Daughter Jenna Bush, Senator Hillary Clinton, Senator John McCain, Bono, Ambassador Mark Dybul, United States Global AIDS coordinator, and Dr. Peter Piot, Director of UNAIDS.
Warren became an advocate for people living with mental illness and suicide prevention when her son, Matthew, took his life in 2013. Kay founded the Hope for Mental Health Initiative at Saddleback Church in 2014 and serves as an Executive Committee Board Member for the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention.
Warren was named on the Orange County Register’s 100 Most Influential People List in 2016.

Selected bibliography

Son’s illness and death

Matthew Warren lived with mental illness and suicidal ideation from a young age. His diagnoses included depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder and near the end of his life, borderline personality disorder. Matthew, took his life on April 5, 2013.