Kathryn Kuhlman
Kathryn Kuhlman was born in Concordia, Missouri, United States on May 9th, 1907 and is the Religious Leader. At the age of 68, Kathryn Kuhlman biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 68 years old, Kathryn Kuhlman has this physical status:
Kathryn Kuhlman (May 9, 1907-1907 – February 20, 1976) was an American evangelist known for providing healing services.
Early and personal life
Kathryn Kuhlman was born near Concordia, Missouri, to German-American parents Joseph Adolph Kuhlman and Emma Walkenhorst. She began itinerant preaching in Idaho with her elder sister and brother-in-law. She was ordained by the Evangelical Church Alliance later in life.
Burroughs Waltrip, Kuhlman's future husband, left his wife, and started a revival center called Radio Chapel, for which Kuhlman and her pianist friend, Helen Gulliford, assisted him in raising funds.
Waltrip and Kuhlman's romance left her guilt-ridden, and Kuhlman told her that she could not, "find the will of God in the matter." Kuhlman's friends tried to encourage her not to marry Waltrip, but Kuhlman defended the marriage by arguing that Waltrip's wife had left him rather than the other way around. She ostensibly married "Mister" in Mason City on October 18, 1938, but the wedding brought her no peace. There were no children with the couple. In a 1952 interview with the Denver Post, Kuhlman said, "He charged—correctly—that I refused to live with him." And I haven't seen him in eight years." In 1948, Waltrip disdited Kuhlman. Kuhlman expressed regret for her part in Waltrip's breakup's subsequent marriage on several occasions, quoting Waltrip's children's heartbreak as particularly troubling to her. She cited it as her single greatest regret of her life, second only to her betrayal of her intimate relationship with Jesus.
Kuhlman kept a hopping schedule in 1955, as a result of being warned by physicians of a heart disease, regularly traveling around the United States and abroad, with two- to six-hour long meetings that could last late into the evenings.
Kuhlman's service to her ministry was summarized in Jamie Buckingham's book 'Daughter of Destiny' (2006), which was published in 1976; "the television ministry itself needed more than $30,000 per week." To stop or even pull back, it would have been devastating. The same was true of the miracle services. Instead of offering fewer services, she increased the number as the pain in her chest became unbearable.