Many
healing evangelists have fallen from grace. This humble giant, at age
88, is finishing well.
I heard T.L. Osborn preach when I was a college student, and at
the time I thought, That guy looks pretty good for an old man.
That was 31 years ago. I sat down with this spiritual giant for an
hour in his office in Tulsa, Okla., two weeks ago, and I thought, I
hope I can keep up this guy’s pace when I’m his age.
Osborn, who is 88, was born 29 years before the first commercial
airliner took flight. Yet he and his immediate family have preached
in 90 nations, and he took a trip to India last January. He is
remarkably agile (he is strict about a healthy diet), his intellect
is still sharp (he spoke fluent French and Spanish to international
guests when I was with him) and he is as spiritually intense as ever.
“At a time when so many charismatic and Pentecostal
ministers are going down in the flames of financial or moral scandal,
T.L. Osborn gives me hope that I don’t have to end up in failure.”
“I once had a vision of the Lord,” Osborn told me, leaning
over in his chair to look into my eyes. “But in the vision, God
didn’t have any hands. Then He looked at me and said, ‘You are my
hands.’” Throughout his worldwide ministry—which has never been
well-known in the United States—he reminds Christians that God is
waiting on us to obey the Great Commission.
I was thrilled to hear stories of this man’s missionary
ventures. But what encouraged me most about our hour-long visit was
seeing a man who is finishing well. At a time when so many
charismatic and Pentecostal ministers are going down in the flames of
financial or moral scandal, Osborn gives me hope that I don’t have
to end up a casualty. I noticed five distinct qualities about this
man that I admire:
His primary passion is evangelism. We charismatics are
easily fascinated with exotic teachings, and this has led us down a
path to weirdness or downright deception. Osborn prefers to keep it
simple. He believes in all the gifts of the Holy Spirit (and sees
them manifest regularly), but he teaches that the secret to living a
vibrant Christian life is fully understanding what Jesus did on the
cross to redeem us. This has fueled his desire to take the gospel to
every nation—especially in print so people in the developing world
can have the gospel in a format they can read over and over. (In one
of his overseas campaigns, Osborn shipped and distributed 56 tons
of literature!)
He expects the supernatural. After T.L. and his wife,
Daisy, watched God perform healings in meetings with Gordon Lindsay,
founder of the Christ for the Nations Institute, they became
convinced that the Lord wanted them to take the supernatural power of
Jesus to the world. Wherever they went—especially throughout
Africa—the Osborns saw the Lord heal blindness, leprosy and dozens
of other diseases. Yet Osborn never sensationalized the gift of
healing, marketed it with a price tag or cheapened it with
exaggerations.
He’s radically committed to gender equality. Osborn says
he was called into missions after hearing a sermon by a female
missionary who was working in India. Later, he and his wife were
powerfully touched by the ministry of a woman named Hattie Hammond,
an Assemblies of God preacher. This may explain why T.L. and Daisy
were so radical in their insistence that the Holy Spirit empowers
women to work in the harvest. Daisy was a founding voice in the
organization known as Christians for Biblical Equality, and today
T.L. and Daisy’s daughter, LaDonna, provides oversight to an
international network of churches.
He has a global focus. Many faith preachers in the 1970s
and 1980s focused their efforts on the saved—and they ended up
developing a message of prosperity that pumped up Americans but
didn’t relate to the poor in Nairobi, Jakarta or Dakar. Osborn
refused to preach to the choir. He had to go—and he didn’t
carry an American gospel. His international evangelistic campaigns
typically attracted 250,000 to 500,000 people, but he never came home
to brag about his accomplishments. Many Americans, even those living
in Tulsa, still aren’t aware of the impact this man has made on the
world.
He exudes Christlike humility. Success can destroy people,
especially if they let fame and money corrupt them. But Osborn has
never been a showman, and he doesn’t exude even a hint of
aloofness. I don’t know if this has anything to do with the fact
that T.L. (his full name is Tommy Lee) grew up on a potato farm in
the tiny town of Skedee, Okla.
During the hour I spent with him, Osborn gave me his full
attention as he shared insights from the Bible, his missionary trips
and his marriage. (Daisy died in 1995.) Then I asked him to pray for
me. I fell to my knees and expected him to pray from his chair. But
when I opened my eyes he was struggling to kneel on the floor with
me.
His prayer was powerful, but his posture spoke even louder. I’m
grateful we still have this humble giant with us for a while longer.
He’s modeling what it means to be a true Jesus follower.
J. Lee Grady is contributing editor
of Charisma. You can follow him on Twitter at leegrady. His most recent book
is 10 Lies Men Believe (Charisma House).
T. L. Osborn with J. Lee Grady