6.01.2021

HAPPY BIRTHDAY REV. IKE JUNE 1, 1935

Rev. Frederick J Eikerenkotter - aka REV. IKE - YOU CAN'T LOSE WITH THE STUFF I USE!




By Gloria DULAN-Wilson
Hello All:

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ONE OF MY FAVORITE GEMINIS ON THE PLANET
REV. FREDERICK J. EIKERENKOTTER - aka REV IKE!!

REV. IKE  was born June 1, 1935 - 86 years ago - in a very poor, Black town in South Carolina.  But he managed to influence so much of the world.
Rev. Ike's prosperity philosophy based on Biblical teachings took the world by storm - especially when he quoted his catch phrase: YOU CAN'T LOSE WITH THE STUFF I USE! Which meant the power of the Living God Almighty.
He taught that we are one with God, and as long as we identified with His teachings, we would succeed in whatever we put our minds and hands to.

The interesting thing about Rev. Ike was the fact that most prosperity teachings and philosophies were bit of by modern white ministers who recognized the truth in his philosophy.

Rev. Ike served in the US Air Force, and came to New York after completing his tour of duty.  He studied Science of Mind Philosophy under Raymond Charles Barker, and decided to take the teachings and make it palatable for Black people who were suffering from poverty and poor self esteem. 

He started a business of living workshop and began to teach people how to plan, pray and prosper by putting actions to their prayers.  By combining some of the old time religious philosophies with Applied Biblical teachings, Ike helped thousands of Black people disabuse themselves of the need to wait until they died to experience Heaven.

Rev. Ike made his transition at the age of 74, but his philosophies and teachings are still very much alive.

"Why wait for the pie in the sky when you die, when you can have Heaven on earth."

In case you missed out on hearing him while he was with us, or you were a follower, but haven't tuned into his teachings for some time, I'm including some links from YouTube 


YOUTUBE - CHOICE OR CHANCE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpJbJDoO1JE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68hZAzK9vUc
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrbAct3_x5k

Reverend Ike, Who Preached Riches, Dies at 74 - NYTIMES

The Rev. Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II, the flamboyant minister better known as the Reverend Ike, who preached the blessings of material prosperity to a large congregation in New York and to television and radio audiences nationwide, died Tuesday in Los Angeles, where he had lived since 2007. He was 74.

His death was confirmed Wednesday by E. Bernard Jordan, a family spokesman. Reverend Ike had suffered a stroke in 2007 and never fully recovered, Mr. Jordan said.

“Close your eyes and see green,” Reverend Ike would tell his 5,000 parishioners from a red-carpeted stage at the former Loew’s film palace on 175th Street in Washington Heights, the headquarters of his United Church Science of Living Institute. “Money up to your armpits, a roomful of money and there you are, just tossing around in it like a swimming pool.”

His exhortation, as quoted by The New York Times in 1972, was a vivid sampling of Reverend Ike’s philosophy, which he variously called “Prosperity Now,” “positive self-image psychology” or just plain “Thinkonomics.”

The philosophy held that St. Paul was wrong; that the root of all evil is not the love of money, but rather the lack of it. It was a message that challenged traditional Christian messages about finding salvation through love and the intercession of the divine. The way to prosper and be well, Reverend Ike preached, was to forget about pie in the sky by and by and to look instead within oneself for divine power.

“This is the do-it-yourself church,” he proclaimed. “The only savior in this philosophy is God in you.”

One person who benefited from this philosophy of self-empowerment was Reverend Ike himself. Along with Jim Bakker, Jimmy Swaggart and Pat Robertson, he was one of the first evangelists to grasp the power of television. At the height of his success, in the 1970s, he reached an audience estimated at 2.5 million.(They borrowed heavily from Rev. Ike)

In return for spiritual inspiration, he requested cash donations from his parishioners, from his television and radio audiences, and from the recipients of his extensive mailings — preferably in paper currency, not coins. (“Change makes your minister nervous in the service,” he would tell his congregation.)

He would also, in return, mail his contributors a prayer cloth.

His critics saw the donations as the entire point of his ministry, calling him a con man misleading his flock. His defenders, while acknowledging his love of luxury, argued that his church had roots both in the traditions of African-American evangelism and in the philosophies of mind over matter. (as well as with the Bible - I am come that you might have life, and that you might have it more abundantly - It is the Father's Good Pleasure to Give you the Kingdom; The Kingdom of Heaven is within you!)

Whether legitimately or not, the money flooded in, making him a multimillionaire and enabling him to flaunt the power of his creed with a show of sumptuous clothes, ostentatious jewelry, luxurious residences and exotic automobiles. “My garages runneth over,” he said.  (And in the process, Ike helped many of his followers likewise prosper using his philosophy)


Image
The Rev. Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II, the flamboyant minister better known as the Reverend Ike.
The Rev. Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II, the flamboyant minister better known as the Reverend Ike. Credit...United Press International, 1973

Frederick Joseph Eikerenkoetter II was born on June 1, 1935, in Ridgeland, S.C. His father was a Baptist minister of Dutch-Indonesian extraction, his mother an elementary school teacher who taught her son in a one-room schoolhouse. The couple divorced when Frederick was 5.

His calling came to him early, he said. “Even when I was a young child, the other kids came to me to solve their problems,” he told the writer Clayton Riley.

At 14 he became assistant pastor for his father’s congregation, the Bible Way Baptist Church in Ridgeland. After high school, he attended the American Bible College in Chicago, receiving a bachelor’s degree in theology in 1956. After two years in the Air Force as a chaplain, he returned to Ridgeland to found the United Church of Jesus Christ for All People.

Finding the traditional Christian message constricting, he moved to Boston in 1964 to found the Miracle Temple and to practice faith-healing, which “was the big thing at the time,” he told Mr. Riley, “and I was just about the best in Boston, snatching people out of wheelchairs and off their crutches, pouring some oil over them while I commanded them to walk or see or hear.”

Two years later, still dissatisfied, he moved to New York City, setting up shop in an old Harlem movie theater, the Sunset, on 125th Street, with a marquee so narrow that it forced him to shorten his name to “Rev. Ike.” There he tinkered with his act, polishing his patter, introducing radio broadcasts and taking his show on the road.

He began to refine his message to attract a more striving, stable, middle-class audience, people who wanted to hear that their hard work should be rewarded here and now. To this end, in 1969, he paid more than half a million dollars for the old Loew’s 175th Street movie theater and made it his headquarters, calling it the Palace Cathedral. In his book “On Broadway: A Journey Uptown Over Time,” David W. Dunlap, a reporter for The New York Times, described the former theater as “Byzantine-Romanesque-Indo-Hindu-Sino-Moorish-Persian-Eclectic-Rococo-Deco style.”(It was elegant and well kept)

With the move, the Reverend Ike stretched Christian tenets, founding the doctrine he named the Science of Living and thereby relocating the idea of God to the interior of the self, calling it “God in me,” with the power to bring the believer anything he or she desired in the way of health, wealth and peace of mind. He became, as he told Mr. Riley, “the first black man in America to preach positive self-image psychology to the black masses within a church setting.”

By the mid-1970s, Reverend Ike was touring the country and preaching over some 1,770 radio stations. Television stations in New York, Chicago, Atlanta, San Francisco, Los Angeles and other major markets were telecasting his videotaped sermons. A magazine he founded, Action!, reached more than a million readers.

In 1962, he married Eula May Dent. They had a son, Xavier F. Eikerenkoetter, who also became an ordained minister at the United Church and took over the ministry when his father retired. They both survive him.

Because of his emphasis on material self-fulfillment, Reverend Ike alienated many traditional Christian ministers as well as leaders of the civil rights movement, who believed black churches should further social reform.

His huge income also provoked suspicion. Detractors accused him of preying on the poor, and the Internal Revenue Service and Postal Service investigated his businesses. Though its fortunes have waxed and waned in the last 20 years, the church continues to operate from the former Loew’s theater, which maintains tax-exempt status as a religious property and is occasionally rented to outside promoters to present concerts.

Reverend Ike could be an electric preacher, whether at the old theater or on the road appearing before standing-room-only audiences. And he could make his congregations laugh, drawing on the Bible to drive home his message about the virtues of material rewards. “If it’s that difficult for a rich man to get into heaven,” he would often say, citing Matthew, “think how terrible it must be for a poor man to get in. He doesn’t even have a bribe for the gatekeeper.”

The foregoing cynical obituary was from the New York Times - since there's so much more to Rev. Ike than their depiction, I made a few comments in red).  Rev. Ike was a visionary.  So many of the so called prosperity ministers learned from him, but few gave him credit for what they learned.

I had the pleasure of meeting Rev. Ike on several occasions; I attended a few of his Business of Living Seminars, which were really run by successful businessmen and women to teach how to make your dreams come true and reach your goals in real time. 
 
He was an amazing teacher, leader and businessman.  There is still so much to learn from him. 
 
He's probably up there now teaching the Ancestor/Angels the practical/spiritual application of Biblical teachings.
 
Again HAPPY BIRTHDAY REV. IKE
 
NOW THAT YOU KNOW
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?


Gloria DULAN-Wilson





STAY BLESSED

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