Oral Roberts, called home

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Far be it from me to disagree with my old friend Grant Wacker, our leading historian of Pentecostalism, who told WaPo's Michelle Boorstein:

I'd say if we set aside Billy Graham and Martin Luther King and Falwell in the sense that their influence was religious but also political and social, outside them Roberts was the most important religious figure in the second half of the 20th Century. Just as a religious figure. And in lots of ways.

The most obvious way was he brought Pentecostalism out of the backwoods and made it respectable. One cannot imagine the modern day Pentecostalism without him. He transformed its image, but also its practice.

It's the respectability thing I wonder about. Roberts' signal contribution to Pentecostal teaching was the Prosperity Gospel--the idea that turning your life over to Jesus and doing good would make you rich in the things of this world. Adherents of this teaching around the world are legion. But, it seems to me, among the cultured despisers of Pentecostalism--religious and secular alike--it's as unrespectable as any Holy Roller ever was.

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Somehow along the way from tent preaching in North Carolina to "Fifty Flags over Tulsa," Oral Roberts joined the United Methodist Church. Can you work that in Mark, with explanation?

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  • george frink: Somehow along the way from tent preaching in North Carolina to "Fifty Flags over Tulsa," Oral Roberts joined the United Methodist Church. Can you work that in Mark, with explanation? read more

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