THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: Saturday, September 7, 1996 TAG: 9609070195 SECTION: LOCAL PAGE: B1 EDITION: FINAL SOURCE: BY DIANE TENNANT, STAFF WRITER DATELINE: VIRGINIA BEACH LENGTH: 100 lines
Like moths to an open flame, the faithful have been flocking this year to a huge tent on Centerville Turnpike to seek salvation.
Pitched next to the television studios of Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network, the humble tent has taught an interesting lesson: high-tech can't hold a candle to the drawing power of an old-fashioned tent revival.
The network ministry's tent has drawn crowds of up to 8,000 people for preaching and music during the past year, and organizers of next weekend's RevivalFest hope the trend will continue.
``This tent has been an amazing experience,'' said Norman Mintle, vice president of ministry events at CBN. ``We never had less than 3,000 people a night.''
The white tent, with its folding chairs and gravel floor, is a throwback to the sawdust trail, where hellfire-invoking preachers raised spirits and saved souls earlier in the century. CBN has discovered it works just as well near the end of the millennium.
``It's a radical departure from the TV thing,'' Mintle said. ``Television, as powerful a medium as it is, it's vicarious. It's not a be there, see it, feel it, touch it.''
The tent was erected last fall for CBN's first RevivalFest, a week-long series of sermons and music. It was so popular that the tent remained for the rest of the year, and a second RevivalFest was planned.
The revival is part of the network ministry's five-year campaign to spread the Gospel message in the hopes of attaining 500 million converts to Christianity. The campaign is timed for the year 2000, which Robertson has said he considers a historic period for religious rebirth.
Evening speakers for this year's event, which begins Friday, include T.D. Jakes, Larry Lea, Carlton Pearson, Oral Roberts, Richard Roberts and, of course, Pat Robertson. Morning speakers are Kay Arthur, Kent and Candy Christmas, Cindy Jacobs, Sid Roth and ``Love Boat'' captain Gavin MacLeod and his wife, Patti.
The tent will also host the American premier of the musical ``Shalom Jerusalem'' and a daylong YouthFest featuring Ron Luce and the band DC Talk.
Local church choirs and pastors will participate, and that has been a focal point of the tent ministry during the past year.
``We wanted to create an atmosphere where churches from Tidewater could come in a nondenominational setting,'' Mintle said. ``We wanted to be a unifying factor for Tidewater. It's really turned out to be very successful from that goal.''
Success is no stranger at CBN. The ``700 Club,'' which originates from the enormous brick building near the tent, reaches 1 million households a day in the United States, Mintle said, and is aired in about 60 countries.
A recent show found an audience of about 40 people seated in a cold, dark studio, watching makeup artists scurry around patting down shiny noses and errant hairs before the lights came up behind the set. The guest hosts for the show, Scott Ross and Gordon Robertson, interviewed supermodel Kim Alexis before a backdrop of an anonymous skyline, artificially lit with the colors of sunset.
Mintle was also a guest on that show, telling viewers about the tent. ``This is a new thing that God is doing,'' he said. ``The tent is a huge part of what God is doing at CBN these days.''
This past Tuesday's tent service with the Rev. Jerry Falwell, founder of Liberty University in Lynchburg, was all natural, from the breeze to the twilight sky to the soft whispers of ``Amen'' and ``Hallelujah'' in the crowd.
Although the tent was taken down while Hurricane Fran passed by, it should be back in place Friday.
``The tent can look spectacular but it's warm, there's no air conditioning,'' Mintle said. ``The reality for people is, `I'm in a folding chair sitting in a tent.' '' MEMO: REVIVALFEST AT CBN
Friday, Sept. 13: Free performance of the musical ``Shalom
Jerusalem,'' 7 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 14: YouthFest, a 12-hour event of alternative music
and ministry for youth, featuring Ron Luce, DC Talk, Christafari, Johnny
Q. Public, GRITS and Erace, 10:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 in
advance, $23 at the door. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m.
Sunday, Sept. 15: Pat Robertson, 7 p.m., free.
Monday, Sept. 16: Sid Roth breakfast, 7 a.m., $15; Carlton Pearson, 7
p.m., free.
Tuesday, Sept. 17: Kent Christmas breakfast, 7 a.m., $15; Richard
Roberts, 7 p.m., free.
Wednesday, Sept. 18: Kay Arthur, breakfast, 7 a.m., $15; Oral
Roberts, 7 p.m., free.
Thursday, Sept. 19: Gavin and Patti MacLeod breakfast, 7 a.m., $15;
T.D. Jakes, 7 p.m., free.
Friday, Sept. 20: Cindy Jacobs breakfast, 7 a.m., $15; Larry Lea, 7
p.m., free.
Breakfasts will be held at the Founders Inn. Evening events will be held
at the tent. For information or tickets to any event, call
1-800-677-7087. ILLUSTRATION: Color photo by RICHARD L. DUNSTON, The Virginian-Pilot
``This tent has been an amazing experience,'' said Norman Mintle, a
CBN vice president. ``We never had less than 3,000 people a night.''
Color photo
Pat Robertson by CNB