"If God had not, in His sovereign
will, raised up the ministry of Oral
Roberts, the entire charismatic
movement might not have occurred,"
said Jack Hayford, president of the
International Church of the
Foursquare Gospel, in a statement.
Roberts overcame tuberculosis at age
17, when his brother carried him to
a revival meeting where a healing
evangelist was praying for the sick.
Roberts said he was healed of the
illness and of his youthful
stuttering. He said that it was then
that he heard God tell him he should
build a university based on the
Lord's authority and the Holy
Spirit.
Roberts rose from humble tent
revivals to become one of America's
most famous preachers.
'Feeling
like a lion'
He gave up a local
pastorate in Enid in 1947 to enter
an evangelistic ministry in Tulsa to
pray for the healing of the whole
person — the body, mind and spirit.
The philosophy led many to call him
a "faith healer," a label he
rejected with the comment: "God
heals — I don't."
By the 1960s and '70s, he was
reaching millions around the world
through radio, television,
publications and personal
appearances. He remained on TV into
the new century, co-hosting the
program, "Miracles Now," with son
Richard. He published dozens of
books and conducted hundreds of
crusades. A famous photograph showed
him working at a desk with a sign on
it reading, "Make no little plans
here."
He credited his oratorical skills to
his faith, saying, "I become
anointed with God's word, and the
spirit of the Lord builds up in me
like a coiled spring. By the time
I'm ready to go on, my mind is
razor-sharp. I know exactly what I'm
going to say and I'm feeling like a
lion."
Unity of body, mind and spirit
became the theme of Oral Roberts
University. The campus is a Tulsa
landmark, with its space-age
buildings laden with gold paint,
including a 200-foot (61-meter)
prayer tower and a 60-foot
(18.3-meter) bronze statue of
praying hands.
His ministry hit upon rocky times in
the 1980s. There was controversy
over his City of Faith medical
center, a $250 million investment
that eventually folded, and Roberts'
widely ridiculed proclamation that
God would "call me home" if he
failed to meet a fundraising goal of
$8 million. A law school he founded
also was shuttered.
Scandal-plagued figure
Semiretired in recent
years and living in California, he
returned to Tulsa, Oklahoma, in
October 2007 as scandal roiled Oral
Roberts University. His son, Richard
Roberts, who succeeded him as ORU
president, faced allegations of
spending university money on
shopping sprees and other luxuries
at a time the institution was more
than $50 million in debt.