Kathyrn Kuhlman is known as A Miracle Woman. God used her to hold large Healing Crusades meetings around the world. Many people got healed of terminal illnesses and walked out of wheelchairs. Read her biography below.
Kathryn Kuhlman - Miracle Woman
The world called me a fool for having given my entire life to One whom I’ve never seen. I know exactly what I’m going to say when I stand in His presence. When I look upon that wonderful face of Jesus, I’ll have just one thing to say: ‘I tried.’ I gave of myself the best I knew how. My redemption will have been perfected when I stand and see Him who made it all possible.
Born May 9th, 1907, Death Feb 1976
In a time that was suspicious of both women ministers and Pentecostals, Kathryn Kuhlman shook twentieth-century Christianity back to its roots. Believers of all persuasions—Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, Episcopal, or whatever, it didn’t matter—flocked to her meetings to be healed or filled with the Holy Spirit as they had read about in the book of Acts. Though she called herself “an ordinary person,” the effects of her ministry were anything but ordinary. Kathryn was one of a handful of ministers after World War II who prophetically reintroduced the Holy Spirit and His gifts to the body of Christ on the earth in what has proven the greatest revival of all time: the Charismatic Renewal.
Kathryn Kuhlman was born on May 9, 1907, to Joseph and Emma Kuhlman. A childhood friend described Kathryn as having “large features, red hair, and freckles. . . . She wasn’t dainty or appealingly feminine in any sense of the word. She was taller than the rest of ‘our gang,’ gangly and boyish in build, and her long strides kept the rest of us puffing to keep up with her.”
One Sunday when Kathryn was fourteen, she attended church with her mother. As she stood singing, she began to shake all over and sob. A weight of conviction came over her, and she realized that she was a sinner in need of salvation and forgiveness. She slipped out from where she was standing, went to the corner of the front pew and sat weeping. At that moment Jesus lifted the weight from her shoulders and entered her heart.
In 1924 when Kathryn was about seventeen, she and her older sister Myrtle persuaded their parents that it was God’s will for Kathryn to travel with Myrtle and her husband Everett in their evangelistic tent ministry. Then in 1928, after a meeting in
From the “pool hall” mission, she went on to minister in
Burroughs and Kathryn decided to wed. While discussing the matter with some friends, Kathryn had said that she could not “find the will of God in the matter.” These and other friends encouraged her not to go through with the marriage, but Kathryn justified it to herself and others by believing that Waltrip’s wife had left him, not the other way around. On October 18th, 1938, Kathryn secretly married “Mister,” as she liked to call Waltrip, in
The three women left
In a moment’s time, the ministry that Kathryn had so diligently built was completely undone. People stopped attending her services. Her ministry was dissolved. Kathryn sold her portion of the Tabernacle. She’d lost everything. Her relationship with the Lord had suffered because she had put a man before her God. But from the moment she made the decision to divorce Waltrip and to surrender herself fully to the Lord, she never wavered again in answering the call that God had placed on her life so many years before.
After Kathryn spent some time preaching in a mining community in
Not long after she opened meetings at the Tabernacle, she began daily radio broadcasts. Responses to the broadcasts were so great she soon added a station in
As Kathryn searched the Scriptures about divine healing, she made a life-changing discovery. She read that healing was provided for the believer at the same time as salvation, and it was at this time that she began to better understand the believer’s relationship with the Holy Spirit. Then one night, a woman stood to give a testimony of healing. At Kathryn’s service the night before, without anyone laying hands on her and without Kathryn being aware of it, this woman had been healed of a tumor. She had even gone to her doctor to confirm her healing. Then that next Sunday, a second miracle occurred. A World War I veteran who had been declared legally blind from an industrial accident had eighty-five percent of his vision restored in the permanently impaired eye and perfect eyesight restored to his other eye.
The crowds at the Tabernacle grew. Auditoriums would fill to capacity hours before she was to speak, and thousands were turned away. Countless miracles took place, most without any touch or prayer by Kathryn. She would simply walk the stage and call out healings as they took place where people sat. Sections of those in wheelchairs would walk. In one service, a five-year-old boy who had been crippled from birth walked onto the stage. In another in
Great healing services continued and her ministry expanded to the neighboring towns. In 1950, a worldwide ministry began to develop and Kathryn’s messages were heard all over the
Kathryn Kuhlman’s last miracle service was held in that same arena. Three weeks later, Kathryn lay dying in the Hillcrest Medical Center of Tulsa, Oklahoma, after open-heart surgery. Oral and Evelyn Roberts were among the few visitors permitted to see her. As they walked into her room and began to pray for her healing, Kathryn recognized what they were doing and “put her hands out like a barrier and then pointed toward heaven.” Kathryn gave her sister, Myrtle, the same message and on Friday, February 20th, 1976, Kathryn Kuhlman went home to be with Jesus.
4 comments:
THANK YOU FOR THE INFORMATION ABOUT THIS GREAT WOMAN OF GOD! MAY THE WORK OF THE MOST HIGH GOD CONTINUE TILL HIS BELOVED JESUS COMES BACK FOR US. AMEN
Kathryn did not divorce Waltrip. He divorced her. She was in a state of adultery, according to scripture, while "married" to someone else's spouse. She never taught that healing was included in salvation. She saw too many believers who were never healed. She believed healing was God's grace, even for unbelievers. Her ministry suffered terribly because she never publicly admitted her sin. There were many in her employ who committed the same sin, who could have used "corrective" teaching. I'm not sure she ever "got" it, because she "bragged" how nobody ever would know how much she really gave up to become an evangelist. Every valentine's day she would pull out an old "love" card from Waltrip that he had sent her after the divorce and think what could have been. Nevertheless, there was never a more "annointed" servant of the Most High. Miracles by the thousands, always documented for television and publication. She was my Pastor, contrary to Paul's admonition against women preachers. I sang in her choir every Sunday in my hometown for years. Travelled to other towns to help her minister there. She is a contradiction in spiritual understanding. She always said God chose her because somewhere a man failed to follow the call on his life. Ever since her death much of my theology has changed, but I will always be grateful to Miss Kuhlman for her life of sacrifice and faithfulness to The Master.
Kathryn is just more proof that the Lord does his greatest works thru such people. People that will say, "Not my will Lord but yours be done".
Kathryn lived a difficult life which she seldom spoke of. In public she was confident, charismatic, striking. In private she was forever uncertain. She always remained an ungainly little girl from a small Missouri town. When the healings began at her service, Kathryn did not expect them and could not explain them. She quickly learned she could not explain why some people were healed and others weren't or why some of the most faithful people imaginable weren't healed and some who didn't believe in God or any religion were. She did know she was not the source of the healings but that something took place at her services that remained undefinable.
She was, in a word, special.
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