Ronald Stone
James Robison, the Texas-born televangelist who spent more than five decades bringing his Christian message to stadiums, living rooms, and relief camps around the world, has died. He was 82.
LIFE Outreach International, the ministry Robison founded, announced his passing but did not release a cause of death.
Robison began his preaching career in 1968, and what followed was a ministry of remarkable reach. His organization says his message found its way to more than one billion people worldwide, delivered across more than 600 cities. For many of those years, he shared that platform with his wife Betty on the television program LIFE Today, a show the couple co-hosted together and that became a fixture in Christian broadcasting households.
Born in Pasadena, Texas, Robison channelled his faith into multiple ventures over the decades. He authored several Christian books and, in 2015, launched The Stream, a Christian news platform that added a digital dimension to a ministry already operating on multiple fronts. Together, he and Betty raised three children and were surrounded by 11 grandchildren.
In a statement posted to social media, the LIFE Outreach International board described a man defined by his sense of calling.
“James devoted his life to sharing the Gospel and bringing hope, help, and healing to those in need around the world,” the statement read, adding that the ministry he built “has touched countless lives and will continue impacting generations to come.”
The organization said it would carry on Robison’s core mission: delivering food, clean water, and what the ministry described as the hope of Christ to communities in need. It asked supporters to pray for Betty Robison and the broader ministry family in the days ahead.
The board closed its tribute with a verse from Matthew: “Well done, good and faithful servant.”
