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- Author: radicalgrace
Name | Jack Coe |
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Birth name | Jack Coe |
Birth date | March 11, 1918 |
Birth place | USA |
Death date | December 17, 1956 |
Death place | Dallas, Texas |
Death cause | Bulbar polio |
Occupation | Evangelist/faith healer |
Title | Head of Dallas Revival Center |
Spouse | Juanita Geneva Scott Coe |
Children | Six |
Jack Coe (March 11, 1918 – December 17, 1956) was one of the first faith healers with a touring tent ministry after the Second World War in the United States. Coe was ordained in the Assemblies of God in 1944, and began to preach while still serving in World War II. In the following twelve years, travelled the U.S. organizing tent revivals to spread his message. Coe was hospitalized and died from bulbar polio in December 1956.
According his obituary in the Charleston Gazette, "Coe was frequently the center of controversy," and "preached extensively through the South and employed some 80 persons."
Before his conversion to Christianity, Jack's life was filled with uncertainty and drinking. His alcohol consumption brought a warning from his doctor that he was on the path of dying at a young age. Coe continued drinking and wandered between California and Texas, constantly pledging to God that he would stop. Years later, Coe would recount the experience that turned his life around. Jack testified that the Lord spoke to him during one of his drinking binges and said “This is your last chance.” Jack shook off alcohol and soon became a devout Christian attending church and studying the Bible. Jack attended Southwestern Bible Institute at Enid, Oklahoma (an Assembly of God Bible school), but he left the school after the start of World War Two and joined the Army. Coe continued his ties with the Assemblies of God, and preached several meetings while he was in the Army [eventually being ordained in 1944]. A year later [1946] Coe and his wife Juanita sold their house and bought an old truck and used tent and began to live on the road as itinerate preachers, taking the message of God and healing to whoever would hear them.
In 1950, Coe left as co-editor of the Voice of Healing magazine and began his own magazine, which he called the Herald of Healing. Coe had worked with fellow evangelist Gordon Lindsay on the Voice of Healing, but Jack wanted his own magazine. The magazine, at the time of his death, was circulating at around 350,000 copies. In 1954, Coe opened a children's orphanage at Waxahachie, Texas, and built the Dallas Revival Center seating nearly night large crowds.
After his death, A. A. Allen bought his tent and continued on with large tent meetings. Coe’s magazine ceased publications, his Jack Coe Revival Center was renamed, and his orphanage is under other’s care. Dallas Revial Center was located at 2127 South Corinth St Rd. Many well known evangelists came from every where to speak. However, Coe is viewed as a pioneer by Oral Roberts, Kenneth E. Hagin, and several others, and acknowledge him as a trailblazer in the faith and healing movement.
His wife, Rev. Juanita Geneva Scott of Lancaster, Texas died on September 27, 1996 and was buried in Laurel Land Memorial Park in Dallas, Texas. Jack Coe's son, Jack Coe, Jr. is now a preacher with a healing ministry.
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