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Oral Roberts (1918–2009) – First television broadcast in 1954 [1] Richard Roberts (born 1948) Gordon P. Robertson (born 1958) Pat Robertson (1930–2023) – Purchased his first television station in 1960 and established the Christian Broadcasting Network, best known for The 700 Club [1] James Robison (born 1943) Samuel Rodriguez (born 1969)
William M. Branham (1909–1965) Healing Evangelists of the mid 20th century; Gaston B. Cashwell, (1860–1916) John Alexander Dowie (1848–1907) Rex Humbard (1919–2007) The first successful TV evangelist of the mid-1950s, 1960s, and the 1970s and at one time had the largest television audience of any televangelist in the U.S.
Edward Cooney (1867–1960), evangelist and early leader of the Cooneyites and Go-Preachers sects; Harry Ironside (1876–1951), evangelist and pastor of the Moody Church in Chicago (1930–48). Karl Barth (1886–1968), leader of dialectical theology and author of Church Dogmatics; Toyohiko Kagawa (1888-1960), Japanese evangelist and social ...
Fulton John Sheen (born Peter John Sheen, May 8, 1895 – December 9, 1979) was an American bishop of the Catholic Church known for his preaching and especially his work on television and radio. Ordained a priest of the Diocese of Peoria in Illinois, in 1919, [ 1 ] Sheen quickly became a renowned theologian, earning the Cardinal Mercier Prize ...
Charles Bradley Templeton [1] [2] (October 7, 1915 – June 7, 2001) was a Canadian media figure and a former Christian evangelist. Known in the 1940s and 1950s as a leading evangelist, he became an agnostic and later embraced atheism after struggling with doubt. Afterwards, he worked at various times in journalism, radio and writing.
Charles Stanley, a prominent televangelist who once led the Southern Baptist Convention, died Tuesday at his home in Atlanta at age 90, In Touch Ministries announced. Born in rural Dry Fork ...
Humbard was also the first evangelist to have a weekly nationwide television program in the United States, running from 1952 to 1983, although his first television broadcast was in 1949. [3] Humbard's $4 million Cathedral of Tomorrow church in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio , a suburb of Akron , was built in 1958 specifically to accommodate television ...
Morris Cerullo (1931–2020) Pentecostalism, evangelist; Jimmy Swaggart (1935–present) Assemblies of God; David Yonggi Cho (1936–present) Yoido Full Gospel Church, Assemblies of God Discipleship, church Growth; Jim Bakker (1940–present) Tammy Bakker (1942–2007) Assemblies of God televangelists; Reinhard Bonnke (1940–2019) evangelist