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[Deathwatch] Jerry Falwell,television minister & Moral Majority founder, 73
- Date: Wed, 16 May 2007 01:04:54 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Deathwatch Central <cdw@slick.org>
- Subject: [Deathwatch] Jerry Falwell,television minister & Moral Majority founder, 73
Rev. Jerry Falwell dies at age 73
POSTED: 11:14 p.m. EDT, May 15, 2007
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/05/15/jerry.falwell/index.html
(CNN) -- The Rev. Jerry Falwell, the television minister whose 1979
founding of the Moral Majority galvanized American religious
conservatives into a political force, died Tuesday at age 73.
Falwell was found unconscious and without a pulse in his office at
Liberty University, the college he founded in Lynchburg, Virginia, said
Ron Godwin, the school's executive vice president.
Though paramedics tried to revive him at his office and en route to
Lynchburg General Hospital, "Those very timely and very efficient and
effective efforts were unsuccessful," Godwin said.
Godwin said he had breakfast with Falwell Tuesday morning and said they
talked about the future.
"He seemed to be in good spirits," Godwin said.
Godwin said they finished breakfast about 9:50 a.m. ET and Falwell went
into his office. He was found there about 11:30 a.m. ET.
The minister, who had a history of heart trouble, was pronounced dead
of heart failure at 12:40 p.m. Tuesday, his doctor, Carl Moore, told
reporters. He had been hospitalized twice in early 2005 with acute
onset pulmonary edema, or congestive heart failure, and at one point
was placed on a ventilator.
Moore said it was "a little early to speculate" on what caused
Falwell's death, but said he did have a heart condition.
"I would assume that he passed away from a cardiac rhythm abnormality,
which can be a manifestation of any heart disease, heart attack or
otherwise," Moore said.
Godwin said Falwell's wife, Macel, and three children "are bearing up
as best as could be expected."
Godwin told reporters that Liberty students and members of Falwell's
congregation were gathering at Thomas Road Baptist Church for a service
later this afternoon.
Laying the foundation
Born to a man who sold bootleg whiskey during Prohibition, Falwell
became the father of a religious and political movement that sought to
"reclaim America for God."
At the age of 22, he founded the Thomas Road Baptist Church in
Lynchburg in 1956. The church began with 35 members and now boasts
24,000.
Within six months of starting the church, Falwell, a onetime prospect
for baseball's St. Louis Cardinals, was airing his "Old Time Gospel
Hour" on radio and television.
He founded Lynchburg Bible College -- now Liberty University -- in
1971. It opened with 154 students and four full-time faculty members.
In 1973, Falwell began a series of meetings with fellow pastors and
conservative politicians on what he considered their responsibility to
support "pro-traditional family" policies. That led to the founding of
the Moral Majority, which claimed to have mobilized nearly 9 million
voters and helped put Ronald Reagan in the White House in 1980.
In his 1980 book, "Listen, America!" Falwell said religious voters
"cannot be silent about the sins that are destroying this nation,"
which he identified as pornography, abortion, "amoral liberals," drugs,
welfare and the abandonment of biblical morality.
"If Americans will face the truth, our nation can be turned around and
can be saved from the evils and the destruction that have fallen upon
every other nation that has turned its back on God," he wrote. "There
is no excuse for what is happening in our country. We must, from the
highest office in the land right down to the shoeshine boy in the
airport, have a return to biblical basics."
A lightning rod for controversy
In the mid-1980s, Falwell found himself at the center of what would
become a landmark First Amendment case. Hustler magazine published a
parody ad of him regarding drunkenness and incest. Falwell sued
publisher Larry Flynt and the magazine for libel.
Falwell did not win the libel claim, but in 1984 he was awarded
$200,000 for emotional distress. The case made its way to the U.S.
Supreme Court, where the original verdict in favor of Falwell was
overturned.
The details of the case were played out in the 1996 film "The People
vs. Larry Flynt."
Charmaine Yoest, a spokeswoman for the Colorado-based Focus on the
Family, said Falwell was willing to become a public lightning rod for
his beliefs.
"In watching the clips that have been rolling of him speaking out, he
was adamant about standing for the unborn and speaking out on behalf of
pro-life principles," Yoest told CNN.
"Even those who are detractors of Dr. Falwell emphasize the fact that
he was a man of integrity and consistency and real courage and bravery
in taking a public stance in what he believed in."
The Moral Majority was formally disbanded in 1989, but Falwell remained
an influential figure and source of controversy.
In 2001, Falwell had to apologize after televised comments in which he
described the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks as a judgment on
America for "throwing God out of the public square."
"I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the
feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to
make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American
Way, all of them who have tried to secularize America," he said. "I
point the finger in their face and say 'You helped this happen.' "
A day later, he told CNN that he would "never blame any human being
except the terrorists, and if I left that impression with gays or
lesbians or anyone else, I apologize."
Falwell wanted 20 more years
One week before his death, Falwell told CNN's Christiane Amanpour he
needed at least 20 more years to accomplish his vision for Liberty
University.
Falwell told the story of Hezekiah, who in the Bible asked to live for
15 more years.
"I'm praying the same prayer with an option to renew," Falwell said.
He described his goal to expand Liberty into a "major evangelical
Christian university."
"We want young people to know what they believe, why they believe it. I
believe America was built on the Judeo-Christian ethic; I want to see
the nation return to the Judeo-Christian ethic," he said.
Godwin said that Falwell had planned for a transition and that his two
sons would carry on his ministry.
"He has left instructions for those of us who have to carry on, and we
will be faithful to that charge," Godwin said.
Services for Falwell will be held Tuesday at Thomas Road Baptist
Church, according to Mark DeMoss, Falwell's former chief of staff.
There may be a viewing at a building on the Liberty University campus
before the funeral, he said.
Many thanks to TheLenGuy for posting this obituary