Roberts: God Told Me To Step Down
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

TULSA, Okla. — Richard Roberts told students at Oral Roberts University yesterday that he did not want to resign as president of the scandal-plagued evangelical school, but that he did so because God insisted.
God told him on Thanksgiving that he should resign the next day, Mr. Roberts told students in the university’s chapel.
“Every ounce of my flesh said ‘no'” to the idea, Mr. Roberts said, but he prayed over the decision with his wife and his father, Oral Roberts, and decided to step down. Mr. Roberts said he wanted to “strike out” against the people who were persecuting him, and considered countersuing, but “the Lord said, ‘Don’t do that,'” he said.
After submitting his resignation, he said, for “first time in 60 days peace came into my heart.” Mr. Roberts spoke for only a few minutes and was applauded and cheered by students. He wiped away tears with a white handkerchief and his hands.
“This has nearly destroyed my family, and it’s nearly destroyed ORU,” Mr. Roberts said.
A lawsuit accuses Mr. Roberts of lavish spending at a time when the university faced more than $50 million in debt, including taking shopping sprees, buying a stable of horses and paying for a daughter to travel to the Bahamas aboard the university jet.
Mr. Roberts has previously said that God told him to deny the allegations. The week the lawsuit was filed, Richard Roberts said that God told him: “We live in a litigious society. Anyone can get mad and file a lawsuit against another person whether they have a legitimate case or not. This lawsuit … is about intimidation, blackmail, and extortion.”
Yesterday, Mr. Roberts said God told him he would “do something supernatural for the university” if he stepped down from the job he held at the 5,700-student school since 1993.
Mr. Roberts said he would return to the full-time evangelistic healing ministry, “which is where my heart has always been,” and told students and faculty that he will be praying for them every day of his life.