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Encyclopedia > Robert Schuller

Robert Harold Schuller (born September 16, 1926) is an American televangelist known around the world through his weekly broadcast The Hour of Power.

Image:RHSchuller.jpg

Schuller was born in Alton, Iowa and, after finishing his studies, was ordained as a minister in the Reformed Church in America. He worked in Chicago before moving to Garden Grove, California where, after humble beginnings, the Crystal Cathedral was opened in 1980.


Strongly influenced by his mentor, Norman Vincent Peale, Schuller has focused in his teaching on the positive aspects of the gospel. Rather than condemning people for the sins they have committed, he has tried to convince non-believers that by positive thinking they can achieve anything they wish. Heavily criticized by theologians of other denominations, Schuller is nevertheless recognized as a successful propagator of Christianity in an increasingly secularized world.


Also, compared to other televangelists, there have been no major scandals about his own person, although in 1997 criminal charges were brought against Reverend Schuller for allegedly assaulting a United Airlines attendant prior to takeoff. Authorities dismissed all criminal charges following a plea bargain.


Robert H. Schuller is the author of numerous religious books such as Way To The Good Life (1963), Move Ahead With Possibility (1973), Self-Love (1975), You Can Be The Person You Want To Be (1976), Self-Esteem: The New Reformation (1982), Living Positively One Day At A Time (1986) and, most recently, My Journey: From An Iowa Farm To A Cathedral Of Dreams (2001).


He is married to Arvella Schuller. They have one son, four daughters and 17 grandchildren. His son, Robert Anthony Schuller (born 1954), is also an ordained minister, author and co-host of The Hour of Power.


Schuller features prominently in Michael Moore's documentary Roger & Me for his campaign in the economically devastated city of Flint, Michigan. His activities are portrayed as superficial and useless.


Schuller's associate William Baker was exposed in the February 15 - 21, 2002 edition of the Orange County, California Weekly in an article entitled "Hour of White Power: Reverend Robert H. Schuller relies on a man with ties to Neo-Nazis to build religious understanding." [1] (http://www.ocweekly.com/ink/02/24/cover-brin.php) Author Stan Brin confirmed Baker's close ties to Willis Carto, called the "dean of American neo-Nazi politics," and revealed Baker's numerous other shady associations, including his 1984 chairmanship of the Populist Party, which critics charged was an electoral vehicle for neo-Nazis. Soon after, Robert H. Schuller expelled Baker and cut all ties to him. [2] (http://www.ocweekly.com/ink/02/37/news-brin.php)


External links

  • Crystal Cathedral Ministries (http://www.crystalcathedral.org/)
  • The Hour of Power (http://www.hourofpower.org/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
The Pros and Cons of Robert Schuller (2553 words)
Robert Schuller is an ordained minister of the Reformed Church in America.
Schuller makes no bones about the fact that his church has some rather schmaltzy furnishings -- like a number of water fountains that begin spraying when he presses a button in the pulpit -- and that their purpose is to impress the unchurched.
While my first negative impression of Schuller was somewhat modified after a week’s exposure to his institute and the testimonies of other pastors who spoke in glowing terms of how their own ministries had taken on new life after they followed some of Schuller’s principles, I still have some deep theological problems with these principles.
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