Pat Robertson, the popular Christian televangelist who spewed homophobic rhetoric, has died at age 93. He reportedly had an impressive net worth. Here’s what we know about his cause of death.
Over the years, Pat Robertson was many things. He was a Southern Baptist minister, media magnate, presidential candidate, and political commentator. In the waning years of his life, Pat devoted much of his time spewing anti-gay rhetoric on his show, The 700 Club. After the mass shooting at Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, Fla., he famously said that the liberal support of both the LGBTQ+ community as well as Islamic people was causing a “dilemma” among the left, adding that “for those of us who disagree with some of their policies, the best thing to do is just sit on the sidelines and let them kill themselves.”
It was recently announced that Pat passed away on June 8, 2023, at the age of 93. This announcement came by way of the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), the religious media company Pat and his wife Dede established in 1960. Like Pat, its reach was far and wide. Here’s what we know about the conservative Christian’s cause of death.
What do we know about ‘700 Club’ creator Pat Robertson’s cause of death?
According to the Associate Press, as of the time of this writing, Pat’s cause of death hasn’t been revealed yet. His life, however, was marked by his ability to bring Christian conservatives and Republicans together. Historically, Pat was known for spreading some rather alarming conspiracy theories. He had “a history of extreme, bigoted commentary — including that gay people and abortion caused 9/11, that Haitians deserved the 2010 earthquake that ravaged the island nation, and that feminists are evil,” reported Rolling Stone.
On his own website, Pat described a rather idyllic childhood. Born March 22, 1930, in Lexington, Va., he was raised in a political family. Pat’s “ancestry includes Benjamin Harrison, a signer of the Declaration of Independence,” as well as two U.S. presidents: William Henry Harrison and Benjamin Harrison. It’s no surprise that he ended up at Yale University Law School, graduating in 1955 with a juris doctor degree. He would later attend New York Theological Seminary where he earned a master of divinity degree.
Two years after earning his divinity degree, Pat founded CBN and created The 700 Club. The religious show with a talk-show format was the first of its kind and had a strangely wide variety of guests. In its first 50 years, Pat spoke with people like President Jimmy Carter, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, James Earl Jones, and Gary Busey. Of course, there were times when Pat’s opinions were criticized.
Pat “condemned Democrats caught up in sex scandals, saying for example that President Bill Clinton turned the White House into a playpen for sexual freedom,” per the AP. Two decades later, Robertson shrugged off Donald Trump’s “sexual predatory” comments by claiming the former president was attempting to “look like he’s macho.” After Trump lost to Biden, Pat said he needed to move on and was clearly living in an “alternate reality.”
Some of Pat’s more dangerous opinions were rooted in his religious beliefs. In 1998, the Christian pastor said the city of Orlando should be worried about hurricanes because they allowed an annual Gay Days event to continue. Seven years later, he “warned residents of a rural Pennsylvania town not to be surprised if disaster struck them because they voted out school board members who favored teaching ‘intelligent design’ over evolution,” wrote the AP.
Strangely in 2010, Pat demanded that mandatory prison sentences for marijuana possession convictions should end. In Pat’s opinion, the war on drugs had failed and marijuana was no different than alcohol. This is of course was little comfort when one considers how much damage Pat did in his lifetime.
Pat’s humanitarian work came under fire in 1994 after the Rwandan genocide, as explored in the film Mission Congo (per The Daily Beast). Apparently Pat pleaded for 700 Club viewers to pledge money to his nonprofit Operation Blessing International (OBI). The plan was to ship doctors and medicine to the war-torn country. That allegedly didn’t last.
Jessie Potts, who reportedly served as operations manager for OBI in 1994, claimed that the charity was no longer sending medical teams to the refugee camp Goma just weeks into the whole operation. Instead, the planes were allegedly carrying equipment used to mine for diamonds. The donations and cargo planes were supposedly used for the African Development Company Ltd, a for-profit company of which Pat was reportedly the sole shareholder and president.
Pat Robertson amassed quite a substantial net worth.
Pat was worth at least $100 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth, although some outlets report he may have been approaching billionaire status.
Not only did he launch the CBN, but Pat also founded Regent University, and penned best-selling books such as The New World Order.
Pat will be remembered for his humanitarian work, having founded non-profits such as Operation Blessing.
He reportedly lived in a million dollar-plus Virginia retreat located on 27 acres at the time of his death. In 1995, Pat said about the property, “I appreciate my privacy, and this is a sort of little place I come for my privacy. This is a rather remote, private place.”