Swaggart, Jimmy (1935-) - Research Article from St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 4 pages of information about Swaggart, Jimmy (1935—).

Swaggart, Jimmy (1935-) - Research Article from St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 4 pages of information about Swaggart, Jimmy (1935—).
This section contains 917 words
(approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Swaggart, Jimmy (1935-) Encyclopedia Article

A leading televangelist of the 1980s, Jimmy Swaggart became an American celebrity whose rise and fall were both comedy and tragedy. A self-trained piano virtuoso, whose hot Gospel stylings were barely distinguishable from the rock 'n' roll standards performed by his cousin, Jerry Lee Lewis, Swaggart might have become a major popular music artist. But he chose preaching, evolving a pulpit manner characterized by physical gyrations, abundant tears, and impassioned Biblical declamations. Scorning as bland sentimentality the positive thinking of other religious opinion makers, he further rejected the ecumenical spirit of Billy Graham. Swaggart chose instead to deliver fire-and-brimstone sermons, always tough on sin, especially that of a sensual nature. Though he first imitated the preaching of the tent evangelists of his Southern youth, he quickly learned the masterful use of media, first radio and later television. Often regarded as the most effective of...

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This section contains 917 words
(approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Swaggart, Jimmy (1935-) Encyclopedia Article
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