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Trinity Broadcasting’s Jan Crouch dies days after stroke
The Trinity Broadcasting Network tweeted Saturday that Crouch had suffered a significant stroke and tweeted Tuesday that “Jan Crouch, known around the world as Momma Jan, has gone home”. She met Paul Crouch in college in Springfield, Missouri.
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“Heads turned (especially the boys) as a slight, attractive angel seemed more to glide than walk toward the front of the auditorium”, Crouch wrote.
Jan Crouch has died, and she will surely rot in hell, unfortunately her Prosperity Gospel damnable heresy lives on.
The couple were a popular fixture on their show “Praise the Lord”.
A year before Paul Crouch died in 2013, The New York Times detailed the lavish living of Paul and Jan Crouch, going over how they actually spent ministry money. They married in 1957 and have two sons, Paul Jr. and Matthew, according to Charisma News.
She and her husband founded TBN in 1973 and led it in its path to become the world’s largest and most successful religious broadcasting network.
TBN has 26 global networks and more than 20,000 TV and cable affiliates.
The Christian Post reports Crouch had been in an Orlando-area hospital since Wednesday, when she suffered a “significant” stroke.
She also served as the president and manager of The Holy Land Experience theme park in Orlando, Fla.
Hal Lindsey, thought to be the best-selling non-fiction writer alive today, separated from the network after he was told to cool down his criticism of Islam. “But I have never cast the Arabs as a race in a bad light”.
The former chief financial officer of Trinity Broadcasting took the action, alleging the organization’s officials threatened her with a loaded gun when she objected to “unlawful distributions” of $100 million to themselves and others.
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In a 2007 TBN newsletter, Paul Crouch recalled seeing her at a camp meeting in Rapid City, South Dakota, where her father was preaching.