Anyway, Gorman had his own sex scandal to contend with, and thereafter he lived mostly in semi-obscurity:
Rev. Gorman was brought down in an epic feud that sullied the Pentecostal movement three decades ago. In 1986, Swaggart, a fellow Assembly of God televangelist based in Baton Rouge, accused him of adultery. Swaggart also helped blow the whistle on Jim Bakker, an Assembly of God televangelist in Charlotte, N.C., for an extramarital affair with a church secretary.
In response, Rev. Gorman circulated photographs of Swaggart and a prostitute at an Airline Highway motel in Metairie, leading to Swaggart's downfall, and he sued Swaggart for defamation. He won a $10 million award, although the parties later settled out of court at $1.85 million.
By this time all three men's ministries were in ruins. Rev. Gorman declared bankruptcy, Bakker went to prison and Swaggart's empire collapsed.
That scandal was and remains endlessly fascinating. I had followed Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker's program for many years prior.
Currently, I am finishing up Tammy Faye's memoir, which focused much attention on the scandal and its aftermath, Tammy: Telling It My Way. It was published in 1996, several years after her divorce from Bakker and eleven years before she died of lung cancer. It is a very good book especially reminding the reader of the shenanigans that went on behind the scenes in the toppling of Bakker. He trusted the wrong people time and time again.
It was a pattern with Bakker. He helped get Pat Robertson's 700 Club off the ground, but Robertson wanted to appear in front of the camera instead of the Bakkers, so Bakker left. He started up the Trinity Broadcasting Network, becoming an instant hit, but Paul and Jan Crouch wanted to appear in front of the camera, so Bakker left. He got two major religious networks their starts, and then he went on and formed his own satellite network, one of the first if not the first of its kind. It was a huge success and helped spur the movement for a Christian Disneyland near Fort Mill, South Carolina, called Heritage USA. In fact, Bakker at this point was suffering from the Edifice Complex with one building project after another, until it ultimately got out of hand. As we know, Bakker once again put trust in the wrong people, who pounced when Bakker had taken a leave from the PTL program to take care of Tammy Faye following her bout with pneumonia and then a stint at the Betty Ford Clinic for dependency on medication. He never came back to the network as Jerry Falwell pretty much stole the business away from him because Falwell wanted the satellite facilities which in the end he never got. Falwell ran the entire enterprise into bankruptcy solely because he wanted the satellite network. That was the real scandal, but it got buried because of all the turmoil surrounding Bakker, the Jessica Hahn payoff, and the mismanagement primarily orchestrated by Richard Dortch, head of PTL. Three times was not the charm for Bakker, and he spent five years in prison. Falwell emerged from the scandal with nary a scratch, as he had major connections in D.C. politics, unlike Bakker.
But, as we know, Bakker got out and just couldn't give up the idea of a Christian talk show, so, starting very small with a brand new wife, Lori Graham Bakker, he set up a small-scale television show near Branson, Missouri. He has been doing this show for fifteen or more years. However, he has gotten more and more paranoid in his old age, so now he has a program with lots and lots of end times nonsense with guests like the crackpot Lance Wallnau claiming Trump is doing God's work, while at the same time Bakker his hocking his food buckets of freeze dried slop (slop when water is added).
Tammy Faye, rest her soul, would spin in her grave if she knew what a crackpot her ex turned out to be. Maybe the second part of this post's title is wrong, for as long as Jim Bakker remains in the limelight, the PTL scandal won't be forgotten.
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