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The Voice of Healing

William Marrion Branham
Born (1909-04-06)April 6, 1909
Cumberland County, Kentucky
Died December 24, 1965(1965-12-24) (aged 56)
Amarillo, Texas
Cause of death Car accident
Resting place Jeffersonville, Indiana
Spouse(s)

Amelia Hope Brumbach m. 1934 (b. July 16, 1913 - d. July 22, 1937)

Meda Marie Broy m.1941 (b. April 26, 1919 - d. 1981)
Children

William 'Billy' Paul Branham (b. September 13, 1935)

Sharon Rose Branham (b. October 27, 1936 - d. July 26, 1937)

Rebekah Branham Smith (b. March 21, 1946 - d. November 28, 2006)

Sarah Branham De Corado (b. March 19, 1950)

Joseph Branham (b. May 19, 1955)
Parent(s)

Charles C. E. Branham (b. January 2, 1887 - d. November 30, 1936)

Ella Rhee Harvey (b. June 24, 1887 - d. October 27, 1961)

Amelia Hope Brumbach m. 1934 (b. July 16, 1913 - d. July 22, 1937)

William 'Billy' Paul Branham (b. September 13, 1935)

Sharon Rose Branham (b. October 27, 1936 - d. July 26, 1937)

Rebekah Branham Smith (b. March 21, 1946 - d. November 28, 2006)

Sarah Branham De Corado (b. March 19, 1950)

Charles C. E. Branham (b. January 2, 1887 - d. November 30, 1936)

William Marrion Branham (April 6, 1909 – December 24, 1965) was an American Christian minister, generally acknowledged as initiating the post World War II healing revival.

Branham's first meetings as a faith healer started in 1946. Branham's sensational healing services are well documented and he is regarded as the pacesetter for those who followed him. Historians generally mark the 1946 meetings as inaugurating the modern healing revival. William Branham claimed to have received an angelic visitation on May 7, 1946 commissioning his worldwide ministry. Branham's healing power became legendary and there were continued reports that he had raised the dead, although controversy surrounded Branham from the early stages of his ministry. His ministry started to falter in 1955 and never regained the status it had in its initial stages. Branham died in a car accident in 1965.

Branham's most controversial revelation was his claim to be the end-time "Elijah" prophet of the Laodicean Church age. His theology seemed complicated and bizarre to many people who admired him personally. In his last days, Branham's followers had placed him at the center of a Pentecostal personality cult that continues to this day. However, other than those that still follow him as their prophet, Branham has faded into obscurity.

William Branham was baptizing converts on June 11, 1933 in the Ohio River near Jeffersonville when he claimed that people along the bank saw a bright light descend over where he was standing, and that he heard a voice say, "As John the Baptist was sent to forerun the first coming of Jesus Christ, so your message will forerun His second coming." The only available newspaper report on the event was the Jeffersonville Evening News on June 2, 1933 which indicated that the Branham campaign reported 14 converts. Given the lack of corroborating evidence for this supposed supernatural event, Weaver’s opinion is that it is possible that Branham later embellished the incident by "remembering" the forerunner message when he was achieving success in the healing revival.


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