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Harold Marshall Sylvester Richards Sr. | |
|---|---|
Richards in 1973 | |
| Born | (1894-08-28)August 28, 1894 Davis City, Iowa |
| Died | April 24, 1985(1985-04-24) (aged 90) |
| Other names | H.M.S. Richards |
| Education | Washington Missionary College (nowWashington Adventist University) |
| Spouse(s) | Mabel Annabel Eastman Richards (August 15, 1899 - October 25, 2002) |
| Children | Virginia Cason H.M.S. Richards Jr. Kenneth E. H. Richards Jan Richards |
| Parent | Halbert M. J. Richards |
| Church | Seventh-day Adventist |
Offices held | Founder/Speaker/DirectorVoice of Prophecy |
Harold Marshall Sylvester Richards Sr. (August 28, 1894 – April 24, 1985), commonly known asH. M. S. Richards, was a well-knownSeventh-day Adventist,evangelist, andauthor.
Born inIowa, he is most famous for founding theVoice of Prophecy radio ministry and was a pioneer in religious radio broadcasting. His ministry inspired broadcasts in 36 languages on more than 1,100 stations, and Bible courses in 80 languages offered by 144 correspondence schools.[1]
Richards began his ministry as a tent preacher when he was 17. His brother worked as a driver for thenSenator Warren G. Harding. Harding invited him to see a demonstration of the newly invented radio. Richards came to view radio as a way to bring the Gospel to nations. He came to California duringthe Great Depression and made radio broadcasts starting in 1929, when he gave a 15-minute guest sermon on KNX inLos Angeles. He noted that every six days 1,000,000 more people come into the world. He viewed the radio as a way of keeping up with these new additions to the human race.[2]
Richards married Mabel Annabel Eastman in 1920, and they had 1 daughter and 3 sons. He died in 1985 at the age of 90.[3] In 1940, Richards ran on a very limited budget. By contrast, in 1980, he had a $6 million budget and a staff of researchers to help him avoid early foibles.[2]
Upon graduation from Washington Missionary College (nowWashington Adventist University) in 1919, H.M.S. Richards served as an evangelist in various places in theUnited States andCanada and during this period experimented with radio announcements in connection with his meetings.[4]He began regular radio broadcasts on October 19, 1929 onKNX (AM) inLos Angeles.[5][6][7]
Later Richards presented daily live broadcasts ofThe Tabernacle of the Air overKGER inLong Beach, and live weekly remote broadcasts from his tabernacle toKMPC (AM) inBeverly Hills.[5]
In his presentations he taught history. "Bible prophecy is not given so we can see what will happen, but so we can see what already happened, and get confirmation that the Bible is true. If it came true historically, then when Jesus gives his wonderful teachings, we ought to believe that, too," he noted.[2]
In January 1937 his radio footprint expanded over a network of several stations of theDon Lee Broadcasting System, and the name of the broadcast was changed to theVoice of Prophecy.[5]
His first coast-to-coast broadcast over 89 stations of the Mutual Broadcasting System was on Sunday, January 4, 1942.[5][6]
Throughout the years Richards'Voice of Prophecy broadcasts were marked by an opening theme song of "Lift Up the Trumpet" performed by theKing's Heralds quartet and closed with his poem "Have Faith in God" each week having a new verse written.
In addition to published sermons and booklets, Richards authored the following books:
His life has been the subject of two biographies:
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