One Man's Way is a 1963 American drama film directed by Denis Sanders and written by John W. Bloch and Eleanore Griffin.
The cast also includes Diana Hyland, William Windom, Virginia Christine, Carol Ohmart and Veronica Cartwright.
He moves to New York City, becoming a minister and writing a best-selling book, The Power of Positive Thinking, that also becomes controversial.
After a considerable amount of soul-searching that leads him to the brink of leaving his vocation, Peale decides to continue with his work.
In the New York Times, film critic Howard Thompson wrote, "As a biographical tribute to one of America's best-known Protestant clergymen, the picture is thoughtful and genteel," adding that it is "a worthy movie" that "sustains an unpretentious tone from start to finish.