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Cartoonist

(7,317 posts)
Sun Dec 7, 2014, 01:11 AM Dec 2014

Religion In The Comics - 003



This installment is about our old friend Oral Roberts. For those not familiar with this Holy Con Man, here is a snippet from Wikipedia:

Roberts' fundraising was controversial. In January 1987, during a fundraising drive, Roberts announced to a television audience that unless he raised $8 million by that March, God would "call him home." However, the year before on Easter he had told a gathering at the Dallas Convention Center that God had instructed him to raise the money "by the end of the year" or he would die. Regardless of this new March deadline and the fact that he was still $4.5 million short of his goal, some were fearful that he was referring to suicide, given the impassioned pleas and tears that accompanied his statement. He raised $9.1 million.


Here is the story even Wikipedia doesn't know. Even the official Oral Roberts website makes no mention of this. In 1956 he began publishing his own comic book called Oral Roberts True Stories. It ran for 19 quarterly issues. After the first issue, the numbering skipped to 102. While I have found images for all issues, I have only found one issue displayed in its entirety. I assume the format was consistent. It began with an image of Oral who presented himself as the narrator of these TRUE stories. Some are Bible stories, some are tales of people who found Jesus, and other stories are about the miracles God grants to his believers.

Here for your viewing pleasure is issue #106. It can be viewed in its entirity at http://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=7864
It is the story of a man who began by believing in purple elephants to believing in Jesus. A step up or down depending on your point of view. I personally see it as more of a lateral shift. After all, no one can prove that purple elephants don't exist.





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Religion In The Comics - 003 (Original Post) Cartoonist Dec 2014 OP
A comedian whom I can't recall had a great bit on Oral deucemagnet Dec 2014 #1
Again, great stuff! mr blur Dec 2014 #2
I like the picture edhopper Dec 2014 #3
Nothing says join my religion like some accordion music. n/t Goblinmonger Dec 2014 #4
I was thinking edhopper Dec 2014 #5
Yep. deucemagnet Dec 2014 #7
none of the pics will load! AlbertCat Dec 2014 #6
Thanks! Another great one! onager Dec 2014 #8

deucemagnet

(4,549 posts)
1. A comedian whom I can't recall had a great bit on Oral
Sun Dec 7, 2014, 01:49 AM
Dec 2014

re: the 900-ft. Jesus. Oral claimed that the 900-ft., floating Jesus appeared in the desert, looked him in the eye, and told him to build a medical research facility. How can a 900-ft. floating Jesus look you in the eye? Even assuming a modest 6-ft. float, that's quite a distance. This comedian had a solution, however. If the 900-ft. Jesus were floating upside down, he could easily look Oral right in the eye and tell him to build a medical research facility that will be a success (but which ultimately failed).

 

mr blur

(7,753 posts)
2. Again, great stuff!
Sun Dec 7, 2014, 10:21 AM
Dec 2014

A perfect read for Sunday morning.

Love the way that Bunk talks like James Cagney when he's drunk.

"I was born and raised right here in America - of course I'm a Christian"

edhopper

(33,585 posts)
3. I like the picture
Sun Dec 7, 2014, 10:36 AM
Dec 2014

of the poor schmuck behind bars being forced to listen to the Christian crap.
What is the caption of what he is thinking? Anyt6hing to do with the girl and the accordion?

onager

(9,356 posts)
8. Thanks! Another great one!
Mon Dec 8, 2014, 01:15 PM
Dec 2014

I grew up surrounded by Oral Roberts literature, but never saw these amazing comic books. I was robbed!

The Oral stuff I saw was the cheap little red-bound pamphlets. Usually with "666" or some reference to the Always-Imminent Apocalypse on the cover.

Some of my relatives laughed about the black folks in the neighborhood, sending their money off to obvious phonies like Father Divine or Sweet Daddy Grace. Then they'd stuff their own envelope with money and send it off to Oral Roberts or Garner Ted Armstrong.

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