Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Ike and his wife, Eula M. Dent, had one son, Xavier Eikerenkoetter. Reverend Ike died in Los Angeles on July 28, 2009, after not fully recovering from a stroke in 2007. He was 74. [2] His son gave a eulogy at his father's memorial service [11] comparing his father to Martin Luther King and Malcolm X – as a "spiritual activist" and a liberator ...
Xavier Eikerenkoetter is the son of American minister, preacher, and black televangelist Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II, better known as Reverend Ike. [1] [2] Eikerenkoetter was formerly the President of the United Palace, a theater in Washington Heights, Manhattan, New York City.
Jordan now resides in a 26,000 square foot mansion in Saddle River, New Jersey. Jordan was connected with Reverend Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II ("Reverend Ike"), a radio and television preacher who preached prosperity and "positive self-image psychology", who died in 2009. [9]
The church was founded in 2005 by the current senior pastor Mike Fabarez. It has since then established 7 additional locations, going international with the addition of "CBC Guatemala" in 2015. A Christian teaching institution, Compass Bible Institution (CBI), was also founded by the church in 2019.
Reighard may refer to: People: Jacob Ellsworth Reighard (1861-1942), American zoologist; Other: 12529 Reighard, a minor planet discovered in 1998
Prosperity theology (sometimes referred to as the prosperity gospel, the health and wealth gospel, the gospel of success, seed-faith gospel, Faith movement, or Word-Faith movement) [1] is a religious belief among some Charismatic Christians that financial blessing and physical well-being are always the will of God for them, and that faith, positive scriptural confession, and giving to ...
Jacob Ellsworth Reighard (1861-1942) was an American zoologist. Reighard was born at Laporte, Indiana, after graduating from the University of Michigan in 1882, and then studied at Harvard and Freiburg. After six years as instructor and assistant in zoology, in 1892 he became a professor at the University of Michigan.
The famous "I Have a Dream" address was delivered in August 1963 from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. Less well-remembered are the early sermons of that young, 25-year-old pastor who first began preaching at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1954. [3]