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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 ...
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Radio evangelists Name Lifespan Branch Organization or church A. A. Allen: 1911–1970: Pentecostal: Garner Ted Armstrong: 1930–2003: Evangelical: Worldwide Church of God
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirect page. Redirect to: List of television evangelists; Retrieved from "https: ...
The word televangelism is a portmanteau of television and evangelism and it was coined in 1958 as the title of a television miniseries by the Southern Baptist Convention. [1] Jeffrey K. Hadden and Charles E. Swann have been credited with popularising the word in their 1981 survey Prime Time Preachers: The Rising Power of Televangelism. [2]
This category comprises articles about television evangelism or televangelism, in which a Christian evangelist, often a priest or minister, produces or appears on television broadcasts aimed at a regular viewing audience.