Category Archives: reformation

What is Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 3)

Click on following link for: Part 1 and Part 2.

By modern preaching standards, William Branham (1909 – 1965) would be considered a backwoods hick. His poor command of the English language and cheap, ill-fitting suits would not endear him to today’s glamor-seeking YouTube audiences.

But yet, this humble son of poverty stricken parents  recorded 35,000 miracles for his ministry in 1947.

And if you are wondering whether Branham’s miracles were real or not, read Gordan Lindsay‘s book, A Man Sent From God. This same Gordan Lindsay eventually went on to found one of the finest Bible schools in America, Christ for the Nations.

Another man who was profoundly changed by Branham’s ministry was T.L Osborn. He and his wife, Daisy, had returned from a missionary trip to India in 1947. They were defeated and ready to quit when the two attended a Branham meeting in Portland, OR.

As Osborn sat in the audience, he saw William Branham turn a severely cross-eyed girl around to face the audience. Next, Branham prayed for the little girl. Her eyes were miraculously straightened out as everyone watched on.

Then, Osborn heard heavenly voices say to him, “You can do that! You can do that!”

T. L. Osborn and his wife returned to the mission fields renewed and refreshed, and then preached to millions of unreached people in over 90 countries. They preached daily to crowds of 20,000 to 300,000 people and had astounding miracles, even more than Branham ever had.

Before continuing, there are those who look at William Branham’s ministry and only see his latter years when his doctrines slipped into deep  error. They label him a false prophet and a heretic and ignore the nine years when his ministry was at the forefront of the Healing Revival.

I do not endorse Branham’s teachings on Oneness (“Jesus Only”), Seed of the Serpent, No Eternal Hell and countless other off-the-wall doctrines. But I think what Frank Viola wrote in his book, From Eternity to Here,  is apropos to Branham’s healing ministry:

I would like to ask you to pause and think of the most horrible day you ever lived. The day when you did something you deeply regret. You can take great comfort in this one fact: Your heavenly Father saw that day when He chose you in His Son before time….And it did not keep Him from choosing us in Christ to be His own. (From Eternity to Here, Frank Viola, pp. 71)

We Christians can all throw rocks at Branham’s teaching errors, but there is one thing no one has been able to do since him. And that is, match his miraculous works of healing. He was the real deal!

Even today, William Branham is still considered the father of the Healing Revival.

So, what was it about William Branham and his ministry that made it so unique as compared to Smith Wigglesworth, John Lake or Kathryn Kuhlman?

(Continued in Part 4)

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I’d Like to Prophesy…But* (Part 9)

A Updated Rerun Series

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7 and Part 8.

What is the price for rising above entry level prophesying?

5. Humility

“The world has yet to see what God can do with a man who doesn’t care who gets the credit.” (Dwight L. Moody)

If I had to pick just one character trait which Jesus is longing to see in us prophetic people, it would be humility. And yet, this seems to be the hardest one for us to attain.

Let’s say, you are on a platform with a microphone in your hand. You look into the audience and see a woman.  There’s nothing remarkable about her, but you instantly know something.

You point at her. “Your prayers are about to be answered,” you say, “that man you have been praying about for years and years is coming back into your life. Buy a wedding dress.”

The woman breaks down and cries. She raises her hands and shouts, “Thank you Jesus!”

Afterward, you find out the woman has been praying for her ex-husband. She believes they will be remarried, but everyone, including her pastor,  has told her she’s nuts. They say that her ex-husband will never, ever change his ways.

Six months later, you are invited to the wedding of the woman and her ex-husband. The man had an experience with the Lord and was instantly changed.

This actually happened to me, and countless other ones like it.

Pretty heady stuff, right?

Today, as I look back at the guy who held that microphone and spoke those words, I cringe and shudder. I hate him. I hate his pride, his arrogance, his thinking that he was the man who prayed, fasted and heard God for other people. I don’t even like to remember the time period because I am so ashamed of that man.

But let’s be honest, okay? I still give prophetic words. So, what’s changed in me?

“I remember the day and the place where I died.” (Katherine Kuhlman)

Maybe, Kuhlman was fortunate enough to completely die to all of her pride on just one day, but I wasn’t.  I can take you to street corners where parts of me died. Or to dumpsters where I crawled into searching for cans so I could collect the nickel deposits on them. Or to jobs I failed at. Or to countless other experiences where my heart was crushed.

Am I a perfect example of humility now? No! No! No! No!

But I am no longer the same guy who held the microphone and spoke the words to that lady…and I pray that I never will be like him again.

Humility takes time, lots of it. It is an ongoing work in my life, one which I continually struggle with; and yet, I embrace it.

(This series will be continued in the future.)

*I have used the word prophesy in a general sense to denote prophecy, words of knowledge and words of wisdom (1 Corinthians 12: 8-10).

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What is Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 2)

Click on following link for: Part 1.

Smith Wiggglesworth died in 1947 and did not live to see the healing revival which hit America in the late 1940’s and 50’s. Names like Oral Roberts, Jack Coe, A. A. Allen, Kathryn Kuhlman, Paul Cain, Kennith Hagin and others became synonymous with healing and miracles.

Tents and auditoriums across America were filled with people seeking healing for their bodies and a desire to hear the gospel preached by this new breed of of preachers.

At a meeting in Washington, D.C., during the 1950’s, Jack Coe ran past 20 people sitting in wheelchairs. As he ran by, he grabbed the invalids by their arms and flung them out of their chairs, saying, “Be healed in Jesus’ name.”

Seventeen people were healed before they hit the floor. Sadly, three were not healed. The newspapers, of course, reported only on the three people who were not healed and how shameful it was for them.

Oral Roberts visited the Philippines and prayed for a line of sick people, seven miles long. Miracles happened up and down the line. When he finished, his aides carried him off, cross-eyed, exhausted and not able to lift his arms above his shoulders.

R. W. Schambach described the greatest miracle he ever witnessed which happened in the late 1950’s at an A. A. Allen meeting:

“A mother brought her four year-old son who was born with twenty-six diseases to some meetings A. A. Allen was conducting in Birmingham, Alabama. Blind. Deaf and dumb. His tongue hanging on his chin. Both arms and legs deformed and twisted. Elbows touching the knees in a fetal position. No male organs. No feet.

“As A. A. Allen began his preaching, Allen was carried away in the spirit and saw the birth of a baby boy who had twenty-six major diseases. He then saw the mother and another woman bring the child to his meeting in Birmingham. Allen asked the mother to bring the boy to the stage.

“I along with a crowd of three-thousand people watched Allen pray for that child. The first thing which happened was the tongue snapped back into the child’s mouth. The child’s eyes cleared up. Legs and arms stretched out in a normal position. And then I saw the greatest miracle ever.

“God created feet on the bottom of the boy’s stubs. Allen then placed the child down on the stage. He had never walked. Never talked. Never heard. Never saw with his eyes before. The boy then took off running across the stage and leaped into his mother’s arms and spoke his first words ever, ‘Momma.’

(Hear audio of R. W. Schambach telling this story here and here.)

Most people if asked to name the person considered to be the father of the Healing Revival would answer Oral Roberts. Their reasoning would be his legacy of healing and the university he founded: Oral Roberts University.

But they would be wrong.

(Continued in Part 3)

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I’d Like to Prophesy…But* (Part 8)

A Updated Rerun Series

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6 and Part 7.

What is the price for rising above entry level prophesying?

4. Love

Fourteen or so years ago, I was invited to fellowship with some men at a breakfast meeting.  I sat next to a youth leader and across from another youth leader.

The two talked back and forth about the struggles they had with motivating young people to live for Jesus. Each inquired how the other’s youth meeting was handled. Both replied about having structured meetings, but still, they wondered aloud, what else could they do.

“Why don’t you teach them to love the presence of the Holy Spirit?” I said, barging into the conversation.

“Oh, I’ve tried that, but it’s a lot of work,” said the youth leader, sitting across from me.

“Did the kids enjoy the presence of the Holy Spirit?” I asked.

“Oh, yes,” the man replied. “They loved it.” He paused, then added, “But it’s so iffy, you know? So, I’d rather have a more structured meeting.”

As soon as possible, I offered my apologies and left the breakfast table.

His answer caused me to become so distraught that tears flooded down my face. Passersby stared at me, wondering what my problem was. I didn’t care.  Every part of me ached.

“Jesus, the church doesn’t care about Your presence or You. They only care about their programs,” I cried. “And to be honest, Lord, I don’t like Your church much and would rather have nothing ever to do with it.”

Now, to be honest, my agony came out of wounds and hurts from bad experiences and rejections by other Christians and churches. It certainly wasn’t the fault of that particular youth leader; he was innocent. It’s just that his words lit the fuse of my inner powder keg.

From that day onward, the Lord worked on me. He used hammers and chisels welded by people and the Holy Spirit to break up the hardness in my heart. To Him, it was personal because my lack of loving His church was an affront to Him. And the process was lengthy and not pretty.

You see, Jesus absolutely loves His church. His church is His all-consuming passion. He loves the least and the greatest members in it. He sees the church as His Bride, and guess what? He is head over heels in love with her.

Today, I love the church, the Bride of Jesus. His work was painful, but effective in me.

Here’s some advice to you: if you have any problems with other Christians, such as Pentecostals or Charismatics or Fundamentalists or Evangelicals or Snake-handling sects or whatever, I suggest you ask the Lord to give you a deep, dying on the cross type of love for all of them.

This suggestion will save you time and pain.

By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another. (John 13:35)

(Continued in Part 9.)

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What is Your Option “A” for Healing? (Part 1)

I heard Dr.Lester Sumrall tell the following story about a  miracle he witnessed while attending a Smith Wigglesworth meeting:

The evangelist, Smith Wigglesworth (1859 – 1947) preached his message to a large crowd gathered in the auditorium. Afterward, he prayed for a long line of sick people.

Wigglesworth’s style was to walk up to a sick person and ask in a thick cockney accent, “What’s up?” Next, the person would explain his illness. Then, Wigglesworth would pray for the person.

On this particular night, as Wigglesworth moved along the line of people, he came to a man lying on a hospital bed with a doctor attending him. Wigglesworth stopped and looked at the strange scene. “What’s up?” he asked.

The doctor looked up. “My patient has stomach cancer and is near death. His last request was to come to your meeting,” said the doctor. “At best, he has only a couple of hours left before he dies.”

“Look out, man,” said Wigglesworth, indicating with his hands that the doctor needed to back away from the patient for a moment. The doctor obeyed.

Then, Wigglesworth forcefully hit the sick man in the stomach with his fist while proclaiming, “Be healed in Jesus’ name.”

The sick man curled up on the bed. The doctor stood up. “You’ve killed him!” the doctor screamed. “You’ll be sued by the man’s family.”

Wigglesworth looked at the doctor. “Shut up!” he said in a gruff voice. “He’s healed.”

Then, Wigglesworth turned his back on the doctor and the patient and continued on down the line to pray for the next person.

Sumrall stated that he and the whole audience had their eyes glued on the doctor and his patient, rather than watching Wigglesworth. The doctor frantically held his stethoscope to the patient’s chest, but the patient showed no life at all.

After a few minutes, the patient sat up in bed and swung his legs over the side of it. Then, he raised his hands in the air, worshipping God, and walked toward Wigglesworth who was busy praying for people, farther down the line.

The man’s hospital robe was open in back and his bare butt could be seen by everyone. No one laughed or said anything as they watched the man walk up to Wigglesworth and tap the evangelist on the shoulder.

Wigglesworth turned around  and looked at the man. “Well, man,” proclaimed Wigglesworth, “you’re healed. Give the Lord all the glory.”

Then, Wigglesworth continued to pray for sick people in the line. He paid no more attention to the man while the man danced around with his arms in the air, praising the Lord for his healing. All the while, the man’s bare rump was exposed to the audience.

Smith Wigglesworth and his ministry are exciting examples of the gifts of healing, the gift of faith and the gift of effecting of miracles at work in a person’s life. He himself believed and taught that any believer could perform the miracles he did.

Just before Smith Wigglesworth died in 1947, he said, “In the future, it will be harder to heal people by the power of God because the people of today have so many other options to choose from.”

(Continued in Part 2)

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I’d Like to Prophesy…But* (Part 7)

A Updated Rerun Series

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5 and Part 6.

What is the price for rising above entry level prophesying?

3. Faith

One of our Father’s frustrations with Israel in the Old Testament was the nation’s lack of faith in Him.

“Yes,” they would proclaim, “God showed up at the Red Sea. And yes, He fed us with manna in the wilderness. But this time is different, how can we trust Him to help us now?”

Over and over again, Israel turned its back on God and sought comfort and help from idols they could see and touch. Finally, God allowed Israel to be removed from His sight and its people were scattered to the winds.

Why?

For indeed the gospel was preached to us as well as to them; but the word which they heard did not profit them, not being mixed with faith in those who heard it. (Hebrews 4:2)

Sadly, faith has taken an unfair hit in the last few years. So much so, that any person who mentions that Christians might need to increase their faith risks being labeled a “faith nut”. Someone to be ignored and castigated by other believers.

Part of this may be due to the Word of Faith Movement’s overemphasis on prosperity and healing. And part may be due to the overemphasis of love in our modern worship songs.

But mostly, I believe that, like Israel, we believers are not really sure God will show up and help us in our times of need. After all, we prayed, and yet, our car was repossessed or our home was foreclosed on or our marriage ended in divorce or a loved one died.

So how can we trust God now?

I have been there, done that, bought the t-shirt and sang the song. But yet, when the divorce happened, when the vehicles were repossessed, when the loved ones died, when the apartment’s management tossed us out, when the dumpsters became a source of food and when all the friends left, who could I trust?  Who?

A man in the midst of a horrendous trial said it best:

Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him… (Job 13:15)

Yes, when you stand up to prophesy, the Holy Spirit may not show up. You may look and feel foolish. Others may point and snicker at you. Maybe, even the whole city will ridicule you aloud.

Scripture terms this as presumption on your part. It is not a sin and God will not hold it against you. He will correct and work with you on your mistakes.

Yet, having a prophetic word in your mouth and being prompted by the Holy Spirit to speak it, but then not doing it because of fear (lack of faith) is a sin. One which will hinder your walk with the Lord.

…let us prophesy in proportion to our faith. (Romans 12:6)

(Continued in Part 8)

*I have used the word prophesy in a general sense to denote prophecy, words of knowledge and words of wisdom (1 Corinthians 12: 8-10).

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I’d Like to Prophesy…But* (Part 6)

A Updated Rerun Series

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5.

What is the price for rising above entry level prophesying?

2. Grace

Jeffrey Dahmer, the convicted serial killer of seventeen men and boys, was bludgeoned to death on November 28, 1994. Afterward, a local pastor stated that Dahmer was a born-again Christian.

An enraged newspaper columnist wrote the following about Dahmer’s born-again status. “If God saves wretched monsters like Jeffrey Dahmer, then I want nothing to do with God. Nothing at all…ever.”

Of all of God’s attributes, grace has to be the “ugliest duckling” of the bunch. After all, how could a just and holy God save a guilty, wretched monster like Dahmer? Or for that matter, how could God save a guilty man like me?

For the first eight years of my Christian journey, I did not link grace to the prophetic gifts. I just figured God chose me because He knew I would be His workhorse willing to pray, study and fast so that I could be the best prophetic voice possible.

Though I knew grace was defined as unmerited favor, I assigned grace to the Baptists. They were the “grace guys”, not me. I was a prophetic machine-gun with a hair trigger and the safety off.

But sadly, my prophetic words often had some legalism attached to them. Are you wondering how that was possible?

A pupil is not above his teacher, but everyone, after he has been fully trained, will be like his teacher. (Luke 6:40)

The teachings I studied and the church I attended, all put grace on the back burner. It was there, but not in a significant life-changing way. Thus, my beliefs contained a legalistic tilt to them rather than a grace-filled one. More than a few, “Thou shalts” and “Thou shalt not’s” flowed out of my mouth.

Then, I started hanging out with an older couple, Marion and Morris. They were solid grace-filled believers; and soon I wanted their revelation of grace for myself.

Yet, it was not easy for me to change. I had a mountain, seven years high, filled with legalistic teachings which needed to be overturned within me. So, what did I do?

I sought the Lord. I memorized and meditated on scriptures over and over again. Until one day, a divine revelation flooded my inner being, erasing my past teachings on grace. I knew that I knew that I knew that my life, my calling, my prophetic words depended on the Lord’s grace, and not my own works.

Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, let us use them… (Romans 12:6)

Many of  you probably know accurate prophetic voices who do not agree with me on my grace teachings. And yes, I would agree this has been true up to the present.

But there is a New Wind Blowing in America, and it is my belief that now a believer has to have a positive revelation of grace to rise above their present prophetic level.

(Continued in Part 7)

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The Death of Christian Influence on Politics in America (Part 9)

Click on following links for earlier articles: Part 1Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7 and Part 8.

To save time later, let’s get all of our excuses for Christianity’s lack of political influence out in the open here at the start.  And then, let’s have a coordinated crying session, okay?

1.  The mainstream media (newspapers, magazines and network television) is liberal and anti-Christian.

2. Hollywood is liberal and anti-Christian.

3.  The Judicial System and most of the other federal departments are liberal and anti-Christian.

3.  University professors are mostly liberal and anti-Christian.

4.  America’s elementary, middle and high school systems are mostly liberal and anti-Christian.

If you have other excuses, tack them on; then let’s begin boohooing and lamenting the hopeless situation we Christians are in.

“Oh no! Waa! Waa! How can we Christians win? It’s too hard! The cards are stacked against us! Woe is us!”

Do you feel better? I hope so.

Now, let’s check out how successful political activism has been for us Evangelical Christians, using Moral Majority’s 1979 platform as a guide:

Abortion. 50,000,000 dead babies with more being murdered everyday.

Traditional Family Values. Still under attack and losing ground in state by state, lawsuit by lawsuit and legislature by legislature battles.

National Defense. Approximately 3,000 people died on September 11, 2001, and future 911’s are looming on the near horizon with little real security provided by our state and federal governments.

Israel. Support for Israel is at its lowest level since 1949.

Except for the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980, Evangelical Christianity’s political activism efforts have been a dismal failure. Of course, there have been a few scattered minor victories here and there, but not enough to stem the tide of our nation’s plunge into a godless abyss.

There will be those who will shout that we Christians just need to “keep on keeping on.” Spend more money backing Christian political activist organizations. Spend more money backing supposed Christian-leaning candidates. Spend more money providing media advertisements and voter information guides for our Christian political ideals. Organize more Christians for political activism. Preach more political activism messages in our churches.

More! More! More! More! More! Always more and more of the same-o, same-o.

But isn’t the definition of lunacy – “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results?”

And after thirty years of political activism by us Evangelical Christians, shouldn’t we admit we’re doing something wrong? We have lost our way.

So, what must we do?

(Continued in Part 10)

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I’d Like To Prophesy…But* (Part 5)

A Updated Rerun Series

Click on following links for: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4.

What is the price for rising above  entry level prophesying?

1. Faithfulness.

If you read my testimony, you will discover that a book, Power in Praise by Merlin Carouthers, played an important part in my salvation. Its simple instructions told me how to give my life to Jesus.

But also, the book suggested I ask the Lord for something called the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. I had no clue what this phrase meant, but I figured, “In for a penny, in for a pound.”

So, I went back into the bathroom, closed the door, knelt in front of the sink and said, “Lord, whatever the Baptism of the Holy Spirit is, I’d like to have it, too.”

I got back up, went into the living room and continued reading. Honest, that’s all I did.

Fifty days later, to the day and almost the same exact hour,  I spoke in tongues while driving my car. My tongues, or prayer language, consisted of just four syllables, sort of had a do-re-me-fa-ring to it.

What good can come out of this silly stuff, I thought.

As soon as possible, I asked a friend, “What am I supposed to do with my prayer language?”

“Well, the Bible states that we are to pray without ceasing,” he said. He continued on, but the “without ceasing” attached itself to the walls of my brain.

Thus, I prayed all the time. If I was alone, I prayed aloud. If not, my tongue clickedy-clacked behind my teeth, “do, re, me, fa, do, re, me, fa, do, re, me, fa, etc.”

Now, do you have any idea how boring it is just praying four syllables for hours and hours on end? A whole bunch! But what did I know, right? After all,  I had only been saved two months, and before that, I was an agnostic.

I continued on and on until finally two months later, something broke within me. Out of my mouth gushed a prayer language without end. It was new. It was exciting. I was edified beyond belief.

And with the breakthrough in my prayer language came the unlocking of the other spiritual gifts in my life. Word of knowledge. Word of wisdom. Prophecy. Interpretations. Varieties of tongues. Healing. Working of miracles. Faith. Discerning of spirits. (1 Corinthians 12: 8-10)

Now, the only spiritual gift which I have any real control over is my prayer language. It is up to me to use it or not. All the other gifts are operated “as the Spirit wills.” (1 Corinthians 12:11)

Okay, so what does all of this have to do with prophesying?

In Matthew 25: 14 – 30, Jesus told the parable about a man giving talents to his three servants. One received five, another two and the other just one.

The first two servants labored with their talents and doubled their values. The third servant did nothing with his talent because he was afraid of his master.

Jesus ended the parable by saying:

“Therefore take the talent from him, and give it to him who has ten talents. For to everyone who has, more will be given, and he will have abundance; but from him who does not have, even what he has will be taken away. And cast the unprofitable servant into outer darkness… (Matthew 25: 28-30)

This Kingdom of Heaven parable reminds us that we need to be faithful with the gifts (talents) He has given us. If like me, you are given just a small gift, labor with it. Work. Study. Use it. Don’t give up. Be faithful.

The Lord will eventually reward your faithfulness and raise you up to a new level.

(Continued in Part 6)

*I have used the word prophesy in a general sense to denote prophecy, words of knowledge and words of wisdom (1 Corinthians 12: 8-10).

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The Death of Christianity’s Influence on Politics in America (Part 8)

Click on following links for earlier articles: Part 1Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6 and Part 7.

The Roe vs. Wade decision by the Supreme Court (January 22, 1973) woke up the American Church’s leadership. But what to do, they wondered. How can we bring change to our nation?

As for the abortion supporters, they used the same tactics as the 1960’s Vietnam War activists. They knew the Constitution and the people’s will were against abortion on demand so they implemented a strategy of political maneuvering, marketing and a sympathetic media to push their agenda on Americans.

The radical activist woman’s organization, National Organization for Women (NOW), headed at first by Betty Friedan, and later, other zealous leaders, stood at the forefront of activist women to ratify ERA and abortion rights. The well-organized group had the ear of liberal politicians and a media savvy to push forward their agendas.

Then, into the political fray came Francis Schaeffer, author, Evangelical theologian and supporter of political activism. He held joint meetings with Rev. Jerry Falwell in 1973 where Schaeffer encouraged Falwell to confront American culture with the Gospel, especially abortion.

And Schaeffer’s book, A Christian Manifesto, inspired Tim Lahaye and Randall Terry, the founder of Operation Rescue, to become politically active.

Rev. Falwell eventually held some “I Love America” rallies across America in 1976. The rallies established Falwell as a national leader and stirred the fires for Christian support of a formal Christian organization.

In 1979, Rev. Jerry Falwell teamed with Drs. Tim and Berverly LaHaye, Dr. Charles Stanley and Dr. D. James Kennedy to form the Moral Majority. The organization’s platform was pro-life, pro-traditional family, pro-national defense and pro-Israel.

Within a year, 100,000 Evangelical pastors, conservative Catholic priests and orthodox Jewish rabbis came on board along with 7 million families. This base enrolled 8.5 new voters through church-based voter drives and raised $70 million to continue Moral Majority’s efforts in the future.

Moral Majority’s backing of Republican candidate, Ronald Reagan, in the 1980 presidential election helped sweep Reagan into office. Thus, the launching of political activism in the Evangelical community had a successful beginning.

In this same time period, Dr. James Dobson founded the Family Research Council, a lobbying force for conservative Christian legislation in our nation’s capitol. Dobson’s radio program reached over 220 million listeners daily on a world wide network.

Today, many politicians consider Dobson as the most influential Evangelical in America.

Rev. Pat Robertson took the next step in 1988 when he campaigned for the Republican presidential nomination. His campaign was unsuccessful, but out of his efforts, Robertson started up the Christian Coalition which today has 2.5 million supporters and distributes conservative voter guides to concerned Christians.

It is fair to say that the three organizations – Moral Majority, Family Research Council and Christian Coalition – have had an impact on America.

But what has Christian political activism really accomplished in America?

(Continued in Part 9)

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