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The Beginning of Miracles - Part 1
Kathryn Kuhlman

Kathryn Kuhlman (1907–1976). Born on May 9, 1907, in Concordia, Missouri, to Joseph and Emma Kuhlman, Kathryn Kuhlman was an American evangelist renowned for her healing crusades and charismatic ministry. Raised in a German-American family, she left school at 14 to join her sister Myrtle’s traveling revival ministry in 1921, preaching across Idaho and beyond. By 1928, she led her own tent revivals, gaining prominence in Denver with a 1933 radio program, despite a brief, controversial marriage to Burroughs Waltrip (1938–1948), a divorced evangelist, which ended her early ministry partnerships. Settling in Pittsburgh in 1946, she launched the Kathryn Kuhlman Foundation and held weekly services at Carnegie Hall, broadcasting on CBS radio as The Radio Chapel. From the 1950s, her healing services at First Presbyterian Church and later nationwide crusades drew thousands, with reported miracles, though she emphasized salvation over physical healing. She authored books like I Believe in Miracles (1962), God Can Do It Again (1969), and Nothing Is Impossible with God (1974). Moving to Los Angeles in 1965, she hosted I Believe in Miracles on TV, mentoring figures like Benny Hinn. Unmarried after her divorce, she died on February 20, 1976, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, following heart surgery. Kuhlman said, “The greatest power that God has given to any individual is the power of choice.”
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, Catherine Kuhlman shares the story of how miracles began happening in her ministry. She reflects on her early years of ministry, when she was full of energy and hunger for God's word. Despite facing challenges and hardships, she devoted herself to studying the Bible and seeking God's guidance. Kuhlman emphasizes the importance of starting from the bottom and being faithful in small things before aspiring to greatness. She also mentions receiving calls from different countries, indicating the growing impact of her ministry.
Sermon Transcription
The message is entitled, The Beginning of Miracles, Part One. This is going to be one of the most practical heart-to-heart talks that you and I have ever had. What I say will come from the deep recesses of my heart, and I pray that yours will be open to what I have to say. One of the very first questions that any reporter will ask me, Catherine Kuhlman, just how did these miracles begin happening in your ministry? Have you always had these miracles? And then, I try to answer the question the best that I know how, even as I shall try to answer the question for you. I began preaching when I was young, and all that I knew, of course, was just a new birth experience. And one can never give to anyone else any more than one has experienced themselves. And for a number of years, all that I could give to anyone, as I stood behind the pulpit, was just the gospel regarding the experience of being born again. I knew that I had had that wonderful spiritual experience, an experience that I have never doubted. From the time that experience was real in my life, as I sat in that little Methodist church in Concordia, Missouri at the age of 14, I have never doubted my experience of salvation. It was that real. It was that wonderful. That was my very first contact with the Holy Spirit, but at that time, of course, I didn't even know there was a Holy Spirit. I'd never seen any manifestation of the power of the mighty Third Person of Trinity. But that Sunday morning, in that little Methodist church, a little church that probably doesn't hold any more than, oh, maybe a hundred people, I was back there recently, and I was just amazed to find out how small the church had gotten. For when I was 14, it seemed so large. The same pews are there. The same pulpit is there. I think it's the same piano. I really do. But that Sunday morning at the age of 14, sitting next to Mama, sharing the same Methodist hymnal, the last closing hymn having been announced, something happened to Joe Kuhlman's girl. I began to tremble. Oh, I have relived it over and over and over again. Little did I know it was the mighty power of the Holy Spirit. Little did I know that this was my very first contact with the Third Person of Trinity. I began to shake so that I could no longer hold the Methodist hymnal in my hands, and I laid it down. It was the power of the Holy Spirit, the same power that I have experienced over and over again in even a greater way, a thousand times since that time. And in that moment, I knew I needed Jesus to forgive my sins, not knowing what to do. I had never seen one accepting the Christ as their Savior. Oh, sure, I had seen them take in members of the church, so I did the only thing that I knew what to do. I stepped forward and sat down in the corner of that first pew in that little Methodist church. It wasn't a struggle. It wasn't even praying. It was a personal experience. In that moment, the blood of Jesus Christ and God's Son did cleanse me from all sin. It was glorious, the most real experience that I'd ever had in my life, and I'd never doubted it from that moment to this hour, even as I speak to you now. It was real. It was definite. I knew I had been forgiven. I remember how I wept. The preacher didn't know what to do with me. No altar call had been given. I doubted whether he had ever given an altar call in that little church, but I knew that something had happened to me. As I sat there weeping, Martha Johanson, a little crippled lady in the church, stepped over to my side and offered me her handkerchief, and she said, Oh, Catherine, don't cry. You've always been such a good girl, and even as she spoke those words, we both knew she was lying. Ha, ha, ha, ha. For I was the most mischievous kid in town. Something had happened that nothing could stop. Walking home that Sunday, I felt the whole world had changed. I felt that Mr. Quenicky had gotten a new paint job on his house. It was the same house, the same paint. The house hadn't changed. Concordia hadn't changed. Nobody had changed. I was the one who had changed. Going home, Papa was standing in the kitchen. Papa never overworked this thing of going to church, and I'm putting it very mildly. Ha, ha, ha. Oh, sure, Christmas, when I gave a recitation on special occasions, but it had to be very special. But that Sunday, I walked in, and I said, Papa, something's happened to me. Jesus has come into my heart. Whether he understood or not, I'm not quite sure. I never knew. But he just looked at me and said, I'm glad. But it was the beginning of something that changed my whole life. All I knew was that glorious new birth experience. When I went to preach in Idaho to those farmers, I could tell them nothing more or less than that Jesus would forgive their sins. Oh, those little country churches in Idaho. I'm still getting letters from some of those precious farmers, members of their family, who said, we remember you well. We see you now on television. We remember you as the young girl who came to our church. We remember you as the one who preached so simply. You haven't changed. You know, that's the greatest compliment that anyone can pay me, is to say, you haven't changed. Why should I change? The gospel is the same. The word of God is the same. And I pray to God I will never change. I used to wait until those farmers were through with their milking, their plowing, their harvesting. And then when it got dark, they would file in one by one. Emmett, Idaho. Tyler, Idaho. Pat, Idaho. If you've ever been to Idaho, I've been in every one of those little crossroads towns. Every one. If they didn't have a preacher, I offered my services. Nobody really wanted me. I didn't blame them much. But I would say to them, your church is closed anyway. You haven't anything to lose. And you might gain something. That was where I really began. My spiritual education, you know. I think so very often these days, everybody wants to start at the top rung of the ladder. Everybody wants to be a big preacher. A great preacher. A famous preacher. A wealthy man. A celebrity. I know where I began. I know from whence I have come. Only several weeks ago, sitting in the kitchen, five o'clock one Sunday morning, I was to preach in Youngstown, Ohio. I'd just gotten off the plane at midnight. And I always give my people the best that I have. They're so faithful, they stand behind me through thick and thin. That week, I'd been so busy. Calls had come in from everywhere. A call from Australia. Three from England. There was the call to come over to Sweden. Pastor Petrus was urging me. Another call to Norway. Would I come? Five o'clock that morning, I looked up, weary in body, for I'd gotten very little rest. And I found myself weeping, all alone in the house. And my tears were falling on my open Bible. And I just looked up and I did it audibly, just as though I could see my heavenly Father. And I said, Oh dear Jesus, why didn't you allow all of this to happen to me when I was sixteen years of age? Seventeen? I never got tired in body. I didn't know what weariness the body really was. I could ride those buses all night. And then preach all day. All I can remember was, I didn't need sleep at all, I was so hungry. And sometimes there was only the price of a bowl of soup. Rolls were five cents then. That was a long time ago. It seemed I was hungry all the time, but never tired in body, not really. I loved every minute of it. Why didn't you let this all happen to me when I never got weary in body? But I never needed sleep. Why did you wait so long, wonderful Jesus? There wasn't an audible voice. I would tell you an untruth if I told you that I heard an audible voice so that he spoke to me audibly. But he did speak to me as definitely as though I could see his person and I could hear his voice. And this is what he said, Catherine, had I given it to you then, you would have blown the whole thing. And I knew exactly what he meant. There was a growing process. There was a time of learning. There was a time of schooling. Oh, not in some seminary, not in some university. The greatest teacher in the whole world is the Holy Spirit. You get your theology straight when the Holy Spirit is your teacher. I studied my Bible. Oh, how hungry I was for the word of God. Those days, you know, I never stayed at a hotel. I never thought of staying at a hotel. I don't think they had many motels then, you know. Not really. Sometimes a deacon would put me in the guest room. In winter it was so cold, they didn't have heat in their guest rooms then. Those Idaho farmers had enough to do to keep their kitchens warm. Oh, it seemed that in every one of those guest rooms they had these great big pictures of grandpa and grandma. Huge frames. And why did those grandpas and grandmas have to look so stern? Oh, I never saw one smiling down at me. I would sleep in those cold bedrooms. Sometimes almost freezing to death. Almost afraid to open my eyes because somebody's grandmother would be staring down at me with a high lace collar. Almost frightening me. And those mustaches on somebody's grandpa almost scared me to death. I almost felt like I was sleeping with them, you know, kind of like that. Oh, my friend, those were the days. Believe me. I mean, how often to keep warm I would lie on my stomach in the bed and pour over the Word of God. Studying it. Reading it. I know who's been my teacher. I know why I know what I know today regarding the Word of God. It didn't just happen. Beloved, nothing ever just happens and you never get something for nothing even when it comes to the spiritual things. Always remember that. I remember when I was still in my teens someone said of me, my, but she's a lucky girl. It wasn't luck, my friend. I know the price that I paid. I know the price. So all I could preach was salvation. But suddenly I realized there was a third person of the Trinity. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. I had to know more regarding this wonderful third person of the Trinity. I had to know more about it. And I began studying the Word. I knew that the divine healing was in the Word of God and you cannot with an open heart and open mind study the Word of God without knowing, without seeing that the healing for the physical, the healing for the whole man is in the Word of God. When He died on the cross, when He cried, It is finished. He not only died for our sins but remember there was also the body. He died for the whole man. Wounded for our transgressions. Bruised for our iniquities. And by His stripes we are healed. We partake of the bread and the wine at the communion table. Everyone knows what the wine represents. The shed blood of Jesus Christ. At that first Passover, remember, the little lamb was killed. And He sprinkled the blood on the doorposts of the house. That blood representing the one which come in the future. The very Lamb of God. It is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul. Perfect blood. His blood. The blood of the Son of the living God. That's for our sins. But at that first Passover there was something more than the blood. They were told to eat of the flesh of the Lamb. What did the flesh represent? What does the bread represent? Can you take communion? His body broken on the cross. By His stripes we are healed. And there's healing through the body of the Son of the living God. Every time you partake of the bread and the wine, remember the wine for the soul representing the blood of Jesus Christ, the blood that maketh atonement for the soul, and the bread that has nothing to do with our forgiveness of sins, but for the healing of our body. There's healing for the whole man through Jesus Christ, the Son of God. In every church where communion is served, and every time communion is served, and the bread is passed, and you partake of that bread, there should also be the healing of the body. Oh, it's thrilling. It's marvelous. I saw it. And only the Holy Spirit can reveal these things to your heart. Flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee, but to my Father which is in heaven. These things are only spiritually revealed. That's the reason sometimes the most uneducated person can know more about the deep truths of the Word than someone who has spent years trying to attain an education through much learning. I saw healing, but I could not see scriptural healing as I watched many who had long healing lives, but I knew it was in the Word. I knew that whether or not I would ever see a miracle in the healing of the physical, it didn't alter God's Word one iota. I knew that if I lived and died and would never see a miracle of the healing of the physical, it still would not change God's Word. God said it. He made probation for it. But if it was there, then I wanted it. It was there, and I had to experience. I shall not betray confidence in giving you the name of the one who is conducting a service under a great big tent. I went there to see, but I didn't find what I was seeking. I began weeping. I left weeping, and all that I could say were these words, They've taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid Him. I wept all that night uncontrollably. I couldn't stop weeping. They have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid Him. I cried all the next day. I couldn't stop. I hungered. I was thirsty. The Bible says, Blessed is he who hungers and thirsts after righteousness, for he shall be filled. It is a hungry heart. You'll not mock the hunger in that heart. I never gave up seeking. I knew it was there. I was waiting, patiently waiting. And then it happened. It happened in Franklin, Pennsylvania, in the old Billy Sunday Tabernacle. Think what a place God chose. Think what a place. I was standing on the same platform where Billy Sunday, years and years and years previous to that night, had stood, preaching the gospel. I had gone to Franklin, not knowing what I would find there, really by faith. In the first service, there were 38 people there. The next service, there were nearly 200. After that, the tabernacle never held the crowds. It was my first service. As I was preaching on the Holy Spirit, the little that I knew about the Holy Spirit then, when just before I began speaking my second message, a woman stood up and said, Catherine, may I say something? I said, of course you may. She said, last night, while you were preaching, I was healed. I was shocked. I said, how do you know? She said, because I'd had a tumor. It had been diagnosed by my doctor. While you were preaching, something happened to me. Something happened in my physical body. I was so sure that I was healed. I went to my doctor, had it verified today. There's no longer a tumor there. That was the first healing that took place in this ministry without the laying on of hands, without any prayer. Just a woman sitting in the audience in Franklin, Pennsylvania, while I was preaching on the power of the Holy Spirit. I have told you the best that I know how. How the first miracle of healing took place. Since that time, there have been thousands and thousands of healings. The secret? The third person of the Trinity. For part two of this message, please stop your machine at this point and turn the cassette over.
The Beginning of Miracles - Part 1
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Kathryn Kuhlman (1907–1976). Born on May 9, 1907, in Concordia, Missouri, to Joseph and Emma Kuhlman, Kathryn Kuhlman was an American evangelist renowned for her healing crusades and charismatic ministry. Raised in a German-American family, she left school at 14 to join her sister Myrtle’s traveling revival ministry in 1921, preaching across Idaho and beyond. By 1928, she led her own tent revivals, gaining prominence in Denver with a 1933 radio program, despite a brief, controversial marriage to Burroughs Waltrip (1938–1948), a divorced evangelist, which ended her early ministry partnerships. Settling in Pittsburgh in 1946, she launched the Kathryn Kuhlman Foundation and held weekly services at Carnegie Hall, broadcasting on CBS radio as The Radio Chapel. From the 1950s, her healing services at First Presbyterian Church and later nationwide crusades drew thousands, with reported miracles, though she emphasized salvation over physical healing. She authored books like I Believe in Miracles (1962), God Can Do It Again (1969), and Nothing Is Impossible with God (1974). Moving to Los Angeles in 1965, she hosted I Believe in Miracles on TV, mentoring figures like Benny Hinn. Unmarried after her divorce, she died on February 20, 1976, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, following heart surgery. Kuhlman said, “The greatest power that God has given to any individual is the power of choice.”