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BATON ROUGE, La. — A well-known Baton Rouge televangelist has died. The Rev. Jimmy Swaggart died on Tuesday after he suffered cardiac arrest on June 15.
Famed televangelist Jimmy Swaggart died in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on Tuesday, July 1, his family and publicist announced. He was 90. The Pentecostal preacher and pioneer of televangelism had been ...
Mr. Swaggart responded in February 1988 with an extraordinary, tear-gushing mea culpa to some 7,000 followers at his World Faith Center in Baton Rouge.
BATON ROUGE, La. — Jimmy Swaggart has passed away, concluding a ministry that spanned over seven decades. The announcement comes after Swaggart suffered a cardiac arrest at his Baton Rouge home ...
Louisiana televangelist the Rev. Jimmy Swaggart is living his final days, his son Donnie Swaggart said. Swaggart, 90, has been unconscious in a Baton Rouge hospital since suffering a heart attack ...
BATON ROUGE - Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart has died after suffering a cardiac arrest on June 15. He was 90 years old. Swaggart and his wife Frances moved to Baton Rouge in 1968 and, beginning the ...
Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, 90, suffered cardiac arrest Sunday and remains unconscious in a Baton Rouge ICU. Swaggart's son, Donnie, told the congregation his father's time is short without a ...
BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) - Louisiana native and Evangelical pastor Rev. Jimmy Swaggart has died at the age of 90. His family announced on Tuesday, July 1, that Swaggart “finished his earthly race ...
He was 90. His death was announced by Jimmy Swaggart Ministries, in Baton Rouge. It provided no other details.
Funeral arrangements have been set for Rev. Jimmy Swaggart, who died Tuesday at the age of 90. A public viewing and wake will be held 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. July 12 at the Family Worship Center, 8919 ...
Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart's funeral and wake will be open to the public at the Family Worship Center in Baton Rouge. Swaggart, who died at 90, was the most popular TV preacher in the 1980s.
His church, Jimmy Swaggart World Ministries, bought more than 200 acres of land in Baton Rouge, where he built a 7,500-seat church, dormitories, warehouses and television production studios.
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