Rev. Ike, who preached prosperity, dies at 74











Family spokesman Bishop E. Bernard Jordan told The New York Times that The Rev. 
Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II, who suffered a stroke in 2007 and never fully 
recovered, died in Los Angeles. He moved to the city two years ago, Jordan said.



Reverend Ike preached the power of what he called "positive self-image 
psychology" to his 5,000 parishioners at the United Church Science of Living 
Institute. The church was housed in a former movie theater in New York's 
Washington Heights neighborhood.

In the 1970s, Reverend Ike was one of the first evangelists to reach an 
audience of millions through television.


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


Reverend Ike stretched Christian tenets, relocating the idea of God to the 
interior of the self, with the power to bring the believer anything he or she 
desired in the way of health, wealth and peace of mind.


The philosophy did not sit well with traditional Christian ministers and civil 
rights leaders who felt black churches should focus on social reform rather 
than self-fulfillment.


His critics said he preyed on the poor and conned the faithful into giving him 
donations that he spent on cars, clothes and homes for himself. The IRS and the 
Postal Service investigated his businesses.


Others defended his philosophy of mind over matter, which appealed to 
middle-class believers who felt their hard work should be rewarded in this life.


"If it's that difficult for a rich man to get into heaven," he said, riffing on 
the famous verse from the book of Matthew, "think how terrible it must be for a 
poor man to get in. He doesn't even have a bribe for the gatekeeper."


Reverend Ike was born on June 1, 1935, in Ridgeland, S.C., to an elementary 
school teacher and a Baptist minister from Dutch Indonesia.


He became an assistant pastor in his father's church at age 14. He attended the 
American Bible College in Chicago and spent two years in the Air Force as a 
chaplain. He founded his first church in Boston and moved to New York City two 
years later.


He moved his church into a Harlem movie theater with a narrow marquee that 
forced him to shorten his name to "Rev. Ike."

In the 1970s, Reverend Ike toured the country and preached over some 1,770 
radio stations and television stations in major markets.


He is survived by his wife, Eula May Dent, and his son, Xavier F. 
Eikerenkoetter, who took over the ministry when his father retired.



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