President Uhuru Kenyatta with the US evangelist Morris Cerullo at State House, Nairobi.
Televangelist Morris Cerullo dies at 88
By Jeckonia Otieno |
July 12th 2020 at 12:00:00 GMT +0300
One of the most celebrated televangelists Morris Cerullo has died. The
evangelist has been battling pneumonia over the past few days.
On July 9, a message posted on his Facebook page revealed that not all was well and the end was nigh for the preacher.
Thank you for all your thoughts and prayers for
Morris and Theresa!” read the post which attracted over 32,000
reactions, 14,000 comments and 3,500 shares.
Born 88 years ago in Passaic, New Jersey, US, Cerullo grew to become one
of the most listened to and watched preachers of all time, perhaps in
the league of renowned televangelists like Billy Graham.
Young Cerullo grew up in orphanages after his parents died in a road
crash. Having been born into a Jewish-Italian family, he converted to
Christianity at the age of 14, a move which is said to have not gone
well with the owners of the Orthodox Jewish orphanage. He ran away and
started preaching at the age of 16.
He would later conduct several open-air crusades and ministry meetings
across the world. His ministry was premised on healing and miracles. At
the age of 59, he bought the assets of the bankrupt ministry of Jim
Bakker.
An astute businessman, Cerullo invested in media and bought a cable news
network called PTL which he later renamed INSP-The Inspiration Network
of which one of his sons would become CEO and later chairman.
The evangelist got married to Theresa in 1951 and were blessed with three children, David, Susan and Mark.
His ministry went beyond the US and to various continents in the world
including Africa. He came to Kenya in August 2017 and paid a courtesy
call to President Uhuru Kenyatta at State House, Nairobi. He also
visited Uganda, Tanzania and Ethiopia during that tour.
But Cerullo has had his own fair share of controversy. At one point he
was accused of tax evasion in California but the charges were dropped.
In another incident, the preacher was accused of having underrepresented
his income between 1998 and 2000 but on August 8, 2007, a court in
California ordered the indictment to be dropped.
In 2001, a group calling itself UK Apologetics took on the preacher
accusing him of what they called ‘Massive Distortions’, questioning his
mode of preaching.
The group charged: “Cerullo, who is widely-known to be fabulously
wealthy, has claimed many miracles but many observers strongly question
the validity of some of these claimed ‘miracles,’ indeed, a few of these
are genuinely tragic. One such case is the case of the little girl,
riddled with cancer, who is informed by Cerrullo that she is “healed.”
Tragically this poor little girl was dead within weeks.”
In 1991, he was accused for airing miracles he claimed to have
performed, leading to the suspension of the license of a TV station or
broadcasting a programme dubbed Victory with Moris Cerullo, until the
station agreed to place a disclaimer stating, “Morris Cerullo World
Evangelism cannot substantiate the claims made by participants featured
in this programme.”
His death was yesterday received with an outpouring of grief on social media.
John King’oo, a Nairobi resident, wrote on Facebook: Rest in power Dr
Morris Cerullo. Immediately after high school, I attended your meetings
in Nairobi.