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Rex Humbard was a guest at the Kenneth E Hagin Campmeeting in Tulsa, OK In July of 1980. In this video Rex Humbard tells how he became a believer at age 13, and how he became a Radio and TV Pioneer. He also speaks prophetically about a coming outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the last days. He grew up mostly in Hot Springs, Ark., but his family regularly traveled a gospel circuit. During the Depression, his father bought musical instruments at a pawnshop for his six children. Rex got a guitar. Soon they were performing as the Humbard Singers in a traveling country-western tent show called the Gospel Big Top and building a large radio audience as well. In 1942, after the family had moved to Dallas, Mr. Humbard met Maude Aimee Jones and married her after a Sunday night service. Rex Humbard, a guitar-strumming revival preacher who became a pioneer of television evangelism in the 1950s and remained a familiar Sunday morning presence in millions of American homes for almost half a century. He was 88 when he died. Mr. Humbard’s sermons were televised on Sundays from 1953 to 1999, reaching up to 20 million viewers, his ministry estimated. For most of that time, Mr. Humbard broadcast from his 5,400-seat, marble-and-glass Cathedral of Tomorrow in suburban Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. At its peak, in 1977-8, the program leased time on 378 television stations in the United States and Canada and broadcast on about 1,200 stations in other countries. Mr. Humbard claimed that “Cathedral of Tomorrow” was on more television stations than any other program in the nation. “I am proud to be an electronic evangelist,” he wrote in his 1971 autobiography, “Miracles in My Life,” “for I believe that God has a plan — a plan to get into the homes and hearts of mankind for Jesus.” To the faithful, Mr. Humbard was mesmerizing. "What America needs is an old-fashioned, Holy Ghost, God-sent, soul-savin’, devil-hatin’ revival!" he would thunder. Elvis Presley was a loyal viewer, and Mr. Humbard preached a sermon at Presley’s funeral in 1977. With his guitar and folksy ways, Mr. Humbard was enormously popular in the new television medium. At a typical “Cathedral of Tomorrow” service in the 1970s, before five television cameras, the velour draperies at the back of a 168-foot-wide stage would rise to disclose a 40-voice choir. A 100-foot cross with red, white and blue lights dangled from the ceiling. The choir, the Cathedral Singers, would cut loose with a spiritual. His wife would join in. Unlike Pat Robertson, the Rev. Jerry Falwell and other televangelists, Mr. Humbard avoided the political messages of the religious right. “For me to preach about the Vietnam War,” he said in the early ’70s, “would be like going to a blacksmith to get a tooth pulled.” If Jesus were preaching today, he said a decade later, “He would never get into politics.” Check out more great videos @ Consuming Fire Revival Channel / fgsltw316 TheRevivalChannel / therevivalchannel Follow on Twitter @channelRevival #Revival #JesusIsLord #HolySpirit