- Source: Ernest Angley
Ernest Winston Angley (August 9, 1921 – May 7, 2021) was an American Christian evangelist, author, and television station owner who was based in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio from the 1950s until his death in 2021.
Ernest Angley was born in Mooresville, Iredell County, North Carolina. In his autobiography, he details his early life being raised in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area as a Baptist, and at the age of 18 accepting Jesus Christ as his Savior. In the early 1950s, he moved to Northeast Ohio as a traveling "salvation and healing" Pentecostal evangelist.
Facilities
= Grace Cathedral
=Angley's non-denominational ministry was originally based at Grace Cathedral (a.k.a. the "Temple of Healing Stripes") in Springfield Township, Ohio, southeast of Akron. That church is now known as Grace Cathedral – Akron and is used by their youth ministry and for church weddings, funerals, and Bible study.
In 1984, Angley purchased part of a large complex in his home base of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, that was formerly owned by televangelist Rex Humbard, which includes the church formerly known as the Cathedral of Tomorrow (which was rededicated as Grace Cathedral) and its next-door television studios.
Humbard's Cathedral of Tomorrow complex was sold in 1984 to television evangelist Ernest Angley, along with the Channel 55 license, which was used by Angley's Winston Broadcasting Network division for WBNX-TV. This complex now includes the Grace Cathedral, channel 55's studios and offices, as well as other companies which lease space.
= Online Bible college
=Angley began an online Bible college through his website in 2011 with the purpose of providing Bible study courses for laymen, missionaries, teachers and pastors. It is not an accredited college or school of divinity.
= Boeing 747SP
=Ernest Angley's ministry once operated a Boeing 747SP, named Star Triple Seven and bearing registration P4-FSH, which was used to transport missionaries and humanitarian aid internationally. The P4- tail number indicated that the aircraft was registered in Aruba. Subsequent reports indicated that the airplane was too large to fit any hangar at its home field and was only used once or twice per year. In September 2019 it was reported the plane was in disrepair and had not been flown for over nineteen months, with church funds being unable to provide $140,000 for needed repairs. The plane was stored at a small airport in Smyrna, TN as of 2018.
Broadcasts
Ernest Angley's signature weekly one-hour program The Ernest Angley Hour could previously be seen throughout North America as well as internationally via broadcast stations, internet streaming, cable and satellite channels.
Angley also had hosted The 90 & 9 Club, named in reference to Matthew 18:12–13, weekdays on his ministry owned TV station WBNX-TV 55 in Cleveland, Ohio until his final years due to age and health issues. Additional airings of both shows as well as gospel music programming also aired on secondary digital channel 55.2.
Controversies
= Claim that Jesus heals HIV/AIDS
=Angley's Christian faith-based teachings, in particular his claims (based on the Biblical scripture Mark 9:23 "Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth.") that AIDS and other diseases can be cured by God's healing power, were met with skepticism in South Africa. In March 2007, the Advertising Standards Authority of South Africa, after receiving a complaint, cancelled a newspaper ad for Angley's ministry, based on lack of preliminary filing of medical documentation at that time for healing of AIDS through prayer.
Angley later claimed to have verifiable medical documentation from former AIDS patients that he offered to submit to any country that required it. In the same 2007 television broadcast, he displayed what he claimed was medical documentation from four alleged former HIV-positive patients of their negative tests results. Angley's claims were criticized by Guyanese officials. Health Minister Dr. Leslie Ramsammy released a statement condemning Angley: "We are unaware of the existence, to date, of any cure anywhere in the world for the HIV infection, and there has been no scientific documentation of any cure for AIDS. Anyone who promotes the misrepresentation that there is a religious-based cure for HIV is involved in an obscene exploitation of people’s vulnerability."
= Murder at church-owned restaurant
=In 1999, Shane Partin, a 27-year-old former staff member at Cathedral Buffet, stabbed and killed a volunteer, 15-year-old Cassandra Blondheim. Blondheim had previously complained to Buffet management about Partin's romantic advances, resulting in Partin's dismissal. However, Partin was later allowed to return as a volunteer. Partin was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison. Partin was denied parole in his first attempt in 2013, and again in 2023. Angley's ministry paid $100,000 in a settlement to Blondheim's family.
= Volunteer staffing of church-owned restaurant
=In March 2017, a federal district court ordered Angley to pay $388,000 in damages and back wages to a group of unpaid employees at the Cathedral Buffet whom Angley considered unpaid volunteers. The eating establishment is owned by the church. A few witnesses for the prosecution, who were former members of his church, said they felt pressured to volunteer as waiters, bussers and cash-register operators. This was the second time Angley had been cited for the same offense, the first in 1999, when he was ordered to pay $37,000 in back wages. The presiding judge added damages to the 2017 claim due to it being his second offense. Angley defended the Cathedral Buffet, stating he believed nothing wrong had been done, since the buffet served a religious purpose and the government's claims were a violation of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. Angley appealed, and said he had spoken with about 75 people who worked at the buffet who said they did not feel pressured to work there. The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed the district court and ruled in Angley's favor, concluding that the cafeteria workers had no expectation of being paid.
On April 18, 2017, Angley's ministry closed the Cathedral Buffet to the public.
= Sexual abuse allegations
=Angley, who has spoken out against homosexuality as a sin, was accused of sexual abuse by male former Grace Cathedral pastor Rev. Brock Miller. The abuse included genital touching and naked massage. Miller filed a lawsuit against Angley, claiming that he was abused for nine years. A settlement was reached between Angley and Miller in February 2020, the terms of which included a non-disparagement clause. A 1996 tape recording of Angley admitting to sexual relations with a different man was subsequently leaked by an anonymous source. Allegations of further sexual abuses, including forced vasectomies and abortions, have been reported by the Akron Beacon Journal and Forbes.
Popular culture
Comedian Robin Williams included a satire of Angley in his stage routine as "Reverend Earnest Angry".
One of the inspirations for the music video for the Genesis song, Jesus He Knows Me, a barbed parody of televangelism, came from when Phil Collins and the rest of the band watched televangelists, including Ernest Angley (whom he bases one of the televangelists in the music video on) on a TV in a hotel while on tour in the United States.
Death
Angley died on May 7, 2021, at age 99.
Bibliography
The author of many books as well as gospel songs, Angley's website states that he has donated all royalties from his books to the outreach ministry.
= Books
=Personal life
Angley married the former Esther Lee "Angel" Sikes on November 25, 1943; they continued in ministry together and remained married until her death in 1970.
References
External links
Ernest Angley Ministries
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ernest Angley
- WBNX-TV
- Cathedral of Tomorrow
- Nardwuar
- List of television evangelists
- Once in a Lifetime (Talking Heads song)
- 2025 in American television
- Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
- Jesus He Knows Me
- Reverend Lovejoy