Bishop Carlton Pearson's Message In Azusa Conference 1997; The Reality Today? -

 "The lines have become so blurred until we got gospel singers singing secular music and secular singers singing gospel music.


And preachers looking like motivational speakers and motivational speakers trying to be prophets. And psychics trying to be prophets and prophets acting like psychics. And we’re standing out here in the middle.


Go to the Gospel music industry today is filled with singers who have no pastors, who do not go to church, but they have an agent who acts as a love-vendor to prostitute their gift to anybody who will pay the right amount of money. I may never get to come back, but I’m going to preach tonight.... "

This was the message by Bishop in a meeting in 1997 in a Christian conference. Bishop Pearson was a prominent Pentecostal preacher and the leaders of Higher Dimension Ministry in Tulsa - Oklahoma.


The conference featured various speakers and singers such as TD Jakes, Don-Mcclaren, Kim Boral and others with healing and empowerment.


The conference was named after the Azusa street revival which was a historic Pentecostal movement that started in Los Angeles in the 1960s which spread across the world. The Azusa meeting in 1997 was one of the many annual conferences that Bishop Pearson hosted from 1994-2001 attracting thousand of attendees from different backgrounds and denominations.


The conference also was also broadcasted on radio and television reaching millions of listeners and viewers.


TD Jakes at Azusa Conference 1997 with Carlton Pearson.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvT7lOJOf_Y?si=d3cSGh72-TNYB6zc


The Azusa meeting in 1997 was a Christian conference organized by Bishop Carlton Pearson, who was a prominent Pentecostal preacher and leader of the Higher Dimensions Ministries in Tulsa, Oklahoma.


The conference featured various speakers and singers, such as TD Jakes, Donnie McClurkin, Kim Burrell, and others, who delivered messages and songs of revival, healing, and empowerment.


The conference was named after the Azusa Street Revival, which was a historic Pentecostal movement that started in Los Angeles in 1906 and spread across the world. The Azusa meeting in 1997 was one of the many annual conferences that Pearson hosted from 1994 to 2001, attracting thousands of attendees from different denominations and backgrounds. The conference was also broadcasted on television and radio, reaching millions of viewers and listeners.

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