International evangelical pastor Luis Palau dies at 86

PORTLAND, Ore. — Luis Palau, an evangelical pastor who was born in Argentina and went on to work with Billy Graham before establishing his own powerhouse international ministry, died Thursday. He was 86.

The Lius Palau Association said he died at his home in Portland, Oregon.

He had announced in January 2018 that he had been diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.

“It is with a mixture of sadness and joy that we share with you that Dad passed away early this morning. He died suddenly and very peacefully, just as he had hoped,” his family said in a statement Thursday. “This is hard news, but Luis is experiencing the beauty of the Lord face to face.”

Born to an affluent family in Buenos Aires, Palau rose from obscurity to become one of the best-known international Christian evangelists of all time. Over a ministry career that spanned more than half a century, the son of a businessman ultimately authored 50 books and addressed to 30 million people in 75 countries at evangelical “festivals” that were his modern-day take on the more traditional crusades that boosted his mentor and idol, evangelist Billy Graham, to fame.

“In many ways, I feel the Lord has much more in store for me. Yet whatever tomorrow holds — I’m completely at peace. Both Patricia and I are. As we look back, we praise the Lord. Fifty-seven years of marriage. How many places we’ve been. How many people we’ve reached with the Gospel,” he wrote to his followers after the diagnosis.

His radio programs, including the international Spanish-language “Luis Palau Responde,” are broadcast on 3,500 stations in 48 countries and his Portland, Oregon-based organization, the Luis Palau Association, organizes dozens of events each year on five continents.

The vastness of his evangelical empire, especially among Spanish-speaking faithful, long ago earned him the nickname the “Billy Graham of Latin America.” A decade ago, Palau began transferring the day-to-day operations of that empire to three of his four sons, including one who is now an international evangelist in his own right.

“Everything is ready, so if the Lord wants to take me home … I’m ready,” he said in a January 2018 video to his followers. “I’ve preached about heaven … and I’ve often preached about the second coming and the resurrection and now, it’s reality for me.”

Palau was steeped in faith early in life by his father, who had been introduced to Christianity by a missionary. But when Palau’s father died suddenly the family fell on hard times. In an autobiographical video interview on his website, Palau recalls his mother dividing a loaf of bread among her children or cutting a steak in eight pieces for dinner.

Palau, who had hoped to become a lawyer, took an entry-level job at a bank and was working there when he heard evangelist Billy Graham on the radio in 1952. The experience was transformative, he would later say, and Palau decided he wanted to become an evangelist himself one day.

“I would have gladly had a business or been a lawyer — either one — but the real commitment of my life was to win people to Jesus Christ. There’s nothing greater in the whole world,” he said in an interview on his website.

Palau moved to Oregon in 1960 to attend the Multnomah School of the Bible in Portland and met his future wife, a fellow Bible school student named Pat. The couple married in 1961 and had four sons as they built their early family life around missionary work.

Palau interned with Graham in 1962 during a crusade in Fresno, California, and in the 1960s, he served at Graham’s Spanish-language interpreter during crusades in South and Central America.

Palau began an international Spanish-language radio program called “Luis Palau Responde” in Colombia and throughout the 1970s, he gave sermons in Latin American.

Now a U.S. citizen, Palau began attracting tens of thousands to his appearances in Colombia, Peru, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Mexico and Spain. In 1978, Palau incorporated his ministry as the Luis Palau Association in Portland, Oregon, and later set an attendance record at the city’s enormous waterfront park during an evangelist event.

Reaching an American audience, however, presented more of a challenge. In 1999, Palau shifted his emphasis at home from traditional crusades — the long-time staple of evangelists — to edgier, more modern-feeling Christian outdoor “festivals” to draw in non-believers.

The events had corporate sponsors and featured Christian rock bands, skate parks and family activities. “It revolutionized everything we do,” Palau told The Associated Press in 2003. “I’d never go back to the old model unless God held a gun to my head.”


Follow Gillian Flaccus on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/gflaccus