"HE KNEW THINGS NO HUMAN COULD KNOW."
William Branham: The Man Who Knew Your Address and Your Secret Sins
Discover how William Marrion Branham transformed from a seventh-grade dropout in a dirt-floor Kentucky cabin to one of the most influential healing evangelists of the 20th century. Marked by a supernatural pillar of fire at birth, shaped by devastating tragedy, and commissioned by an angel in 1946, Branham demonstrated miraculous healing power that shook nations. This documentary explores his journey from poverty to power, the extraordinary price he paid to walk in the supernatural, and the controversial legacy he left behind. Witness documented miracles, supernatural word of knowledge, and a ministry that sparked the greatest healing revival the modern world has ever seen.
God wants you to thirst for Him.! As the deer panteth for the water brook my soul thirsts after thee, O God -William Branham
Picture this. A cancer ravaged woman was given 3 months to live by the Mayo Clinic is wheeled down the center aisle.
Her body is wasting away. Her family has made funeral arrangements. The doctors have sent her home with morphine and instructions to make her comfortable. The man on the platform has never met her. He's never seen her medical records. He doesn't know her name. They've never spoken a single word. Yet, as she approaches, he suddenly stops, closes his eyes, and speaks.
"Just a moment. The Holy Spirit is speaking. There's a woman here. Your name is Margaret. You're from Oklahoma City. You have cancer of the liver. The doctors gave you 3 months, but there's something else. 12 years ago, you committed adultery with your husband's business partner, and you've never confessed it. That sin has been eating away at your soul, worse than the cancer has been eating away at your body."
The tent goes deathly silent. 8,000 people hold their breath. The woman collapses, sobbing, confessing her secret sin right there before God and everyone.
"Do you believe that Jesus Christ can heal you and forgive you?"
"Yes. Yes, I believe."
"Then in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, I command this cancer to leave your body. Be healed. Your sins are forgiven. Go in peace."
3 weeks later, the woman returns. The cancer is completely gone. The Mayo Clinic confirms it. The medical community calls it impossible, but the woman calls it a miracle.
This wasn't stage magic. This wasn't psychological manipulation. This wasn't a planted testimony or a paid actress.
This was documented, verified, impossible to explain. Supernatural power flowing through a man who had paid a price most people wil never understand. A price of poverty. A price of tragedy and heartbreak. A price of rejection and misunderstanding. A price of absolute complete total surrender to God.
This is the story of William Marrion Branham. A man who started with nothing and ended up with everything that matters. A man who proved that God doesn't call the qualified, He qualifies the called.
A man who demonstrated that your background doesn't determine your destiny, but your willingness to pay the price does.
This is the story of a seventh grade dropout who became the voice of God to a generation. A poor Kentucky farm boy who commanded kings and presidents. A man marked by the supernatural from birth, shaped by tragedy, commissioned by an angel, and used by God to spark the greatest healing revival the modern world has ever seen.
This is the story of the price one man paid to walk in power. And by the end of this journey, you're going to have to answer one question. Are you willing to pay what he paid?
April 6th, 1909. Burksville, Kentucky. Deep in the hills, far from civilization, in a log cabin with a dirt floor and cracked walls. A 15-year-old mother named Ella Branham is about to give birth to her first child. The family is so poor they can barely afford food. Charles Branham, the father, works as a logger and moonshiner, struggling to keep his family alive. The cabin is freezing. Wind howls through the gaps in the wood.
There's no doctor, no hospital, just a midwife and desperate prayers. But at 5:00 in the morning, as this baby boy enters the world, something impossible happens. The midwife screams. Neighbours who have gathered outside freeze in terror. A mysterious ball of light like fire but not consuming anything descends through the cabin roof and hovers directly over the newborn child. They would later call it the pillar of fire. The same supernatural presence that led Israel through the wilderness. The same glory that filled Solomon's temple, the same light that struck down Saul of Tarsus on the Damascus road. Later was called apostle Paul. And it marked this baby boy, William Marrion Branham, from his very first breath.
But being marked by God doesn't make life easy. Sometimes it makes life harder. Young William's childhood was a nightmare of poverty and confusion. His father was an alcoholic who beat him regularly. The family moved constantly, chasing work, always hungry, always struggling. William wore hand me-down clothes so tattered that other children mocked him. He went to school barefoot. He slept in barns and sheds.
And then there were the voices. William froze. The wind picked up, swirling around the tree in a circle, but nowhere else. The leaves shook violently. And then he heard it, a voice, powerful and clear, coming from inside the whirlwind. " Never drink, never smoke, never defile your body in any way. There will be a work for you to do when you get older." The 7-year-old boy ran home terrified, crying, trying to explain what happened. His family didn't understand. They thought he was having visions or going crazy. Kids at school called him 'weird Willie.' Teachers said he was mentally disturbed.
Reader , Have you ever felt marked? Have you ever felt different? Have you ever sensed that God had something special for you, but nobody around you understood? Then you understand William Branham's childhood. He was chosen but confused. Called but terrified. Anointed but absolutely alone.
For years, William Branham tried to run from his calling. He didn't want to be different. He didn't want supernatural experiences. He wanted to be normal.
At 16, he became a professional boxer. He was good. Fast hands, tough jaw, hungry for validation. But every time he stepped in the boxing ring, he felt that same presence, the voice from the whirlwind warning him, "This isn't your path." He worked as a game warden in Indiana. He hunted, fished, lived outdoors, tried to build a simple, quiet life.
But the supernatural experiences wouldn't stop. He'd see visions of events before they happened. He'd know things about people he'd never met The presence followed him everywhere. And then came the moment that began to break him. His younger brother Edward was nearly killed in a shotgun accident. As William rushed to his side, he heard that voice again. "If you don't answer my call, you will lose what you love most." It terrified him. But still, he resisted.
In 24th June, 1933, at age 24, William Branham married a beautiful young woman named Amelia Hope Brumbach. She was everything he'd ever wanted, kind, loving, supportive. A year later, she gave him a daughter, Sharon Rose. For the first time in his life, William felt happy, stable, complete. He built a smal home. He started a church, the Branham Tabernacle in Jeffersonville, Indiana. He preached simple sermons. He had a family. He had purpose. But the voice from heaven kept calling him to something greater. Pentecostal leaders visited him, begging him to travel, to hold healing campaigns, to step into a larger ministry. Every time William refused, he was content with his small church, his wife, his daughter. "I just want a normal life," he told them.
And then in January 1937, disaster struck. The Ohio River, swollen by weeks of relentless rain, flooded. It became one of the worst natural disasters in American history. The water rose 20 feet above flood stage, consuming entire towns. William fought desperately to evacuate his family, but the freezing water and exposure were too much. His wife, Hope contracted pneumonia. Baby Sharon Rose caught the same infection.
Within days, both were critically ill. William prayed. He fasted. He begged God for mercy. But on a cold winter morning, his wife died in his arms. 8 days later, his infant daughter followed her into eternity. William Branham buried his wife and daughter. In the same month he stood at their grave sites. A 27-year-old man completely shattered, destroyed by grief. And in that moment of absolute devastation, he heard God's voice one final time. "I called you. You refused. This is the price of disobedience. But if you'll surrender now, if you'll finally say yes, I will use you to shake nations."
Reader, Maybe you face tragedy. Maybe you've buried dreams, buried loved ones, buried hope itself. Maybe you're standing at your own gravesite moment right now, wondering if God has abandoned you. Hear this. The graveyard is not the end. It's the doorway to resurrection.
It's the breaking point that leads to breakthrough. It's where God takes the shattered pieces of your life and builds something greater than you ever imagined.
For William Branham, this tragedy became the hinge point of his entire existence. He stopped running. He surrendered completely. He said yes to God no matter the cost. And when he did, heaven opened.
May 7th, 1946, 9 years after the deaths of his wife and daughter, Jeffersonville, Indiana, William Branham, now remarried and pastoring his small church, went alone into a trapping cabin deep in the woods near the Ohio River. For weeks, he'd been wrestling with God, desperate for clarity.
He'd remarried a wonderful woman named Meta. He had children again. But the supernatural experiences were intensifying. He would see visions constantly, accidents before they happened, people's illnesses, events that hadn't occurred yet. He didn't understand his gift. He didn't know how to use it. He was exhausted, confused, and crying out to God for answers. "Lord, I don't understand what you want from me. I've tried to serve you. I've tried to obey. But I'm tired. I'm confused. If you'll just show me clearly what you want me to do, I will do it. I will go anywhere. l will pay any price. Just please, please show me."
The cabin filled with light. Brilliant, overwhelming, impossible light. William fell backward, terrified. And then he saw him. An angel, not a vision, not a dream, a literal physical angel standing in the cabin sent from the throne room of God. "Fear not. I am sent from the presence of Almighty God to tell you that your peculiar birth and misunderstood life has been to indicate that you are to take a gift of divine healing to the peoples of the world. As John the Baptist was sent to forerun the first coming of Christ, so are you sent with a message to forerun His second coming. If you will be sincere, when you pray and can get the people to believe you, nothing shall stand before your prayer, not even cancer."
The angel explained two supernatural signs that would validate Branham's ministry. First, a physical vibration in his left hand that would detect disease when he touched people. Second, a supernatural word of knowledge, the ability to know people's names, addresses, illnesses, and secret sins. Even though he'd never met them, William Branham left that cabin a different man.
The boy marked at birth. The man broken by tragedy. The pastor confused about his calling. He finally understood. God wasn't calling him to comfort. God was calling him to power. Not for his glory, but for God's. And what happened next shook the world.
Within weeks, William Branham's ministry exploded. His first major campaign was in St. Louis, Missouri. Thousands packed the auditorium. The sick and dying filled the aisles. And then the miracle started. Branham would take someone's hand. Immediately, his left hand would begin to vibrate, a supernatural indicator of disease. Then he would close his eyes and the word of knowledge would flow. "Ma'am, you have tuberculosis. You're from Memphis, Tennessee. Your address is 447 Maple Street. 3 years ago, you had an affair with a man named Robert. You've never told your husband. That secret sin has been destroying your soul, and the guilt has manifested as physical disease. But if you'l confess your sin and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, He will forgive you and heal you. Do you believe?"
"Yes. Oh God, yes."
"Then be healed in Jesus' name."
The report spread like wildfire. Word of knowledge like the apostles. Healing like the book of Acts. Miracles like the days of Jesus walking the earth.
Within months, Branham was traveling the nation. Within two years, he was traveling the world.
70,000 people gathered in a single meeting in Durban, (city in KwaZulu-Natal), South Africa. Finland shut down to hear him. India mobbed him. Europe worshiped with him. Anywhere he went, the supernatural followed. Cancers dissolved. Deaf ears opened. Blind eyes saw. The lame walked.
The dead, yes, even the dead were raised.
In 1950, at a campaign in Houston, Texas, something extraordinary happened. A professional photographer named James Ayes set up his camera to capture the service. As Branham preached Ayes snapped a photo. When the film was developed, there it was a supernatural halo of light, a ring of fire hovering directly above Branham's head. Scientists examined the negative. George J. Lacy, a professional examiner of questioned documents, ran extensive tests. His conclusion, the image was genuine, not a double exposure, not a reflection, not a trick. It was the same pillar of fire that marked William Branham at birth, now photographed for the world to see. This wasn't about a man. This was about a God who still moves. A God who still heals. A God who still calls ordinary, broken, disqualified people to do extraordinary things. But here's what most people miss. They see the glory, but they don't see the cost. They see the miracles, but they don't see the sacrifice.
So, let me tell you what William Marrion Branham paid to walk in this power.
Power has a price. Anointing costs something. And William Branham paid more than most people will ever understand.
First, the physical cost. Every time Branham ministered in the word of knowledge, it drained him. He once said, "It feels like someone is pulling the very life out of me." After services, he would collapse backstage completely exhausted, sometimes unable to move for hours. He fasted regularly, sometimes for weeks. He prayed through entire nights alone in the woods, seeking God's face. He lived with constant spiritual warfare, demonic attacks, and physical exhaustion that aged him rapidly.
Second, the financial cost. While other evangelists grew wealthy from their ministries, Branham refused. He lived simply in a modest home, he turned down lavish offerings. He gave away money constantly. When a group of businessmen tried to give him a Cadillac, he gave it to someone who needed it more. He once said, "I don't want to get rich off of God's gift. This isn't about me building a kingdom. It's about advancing His kingdom."
Third, the emotional cost. Branham was constantly criticized. Denominations rejected him. Religious leaders called him a heretic. Theologians attacked his doctrines. Even fellow Pentecostals distanced themselves from him when his teachings became controversial.
He endured loneliness, misunderstanding, and betrayal from people he trusted. He carried the weight of his calling every single day.
Knowing that millions believers looked to him as a prophet while others called him a deceiver, William Branham lived in constant awareness of eternity. He saw visions of heaven and hell. He saw the destiny of nations. He carried prophetic burdens that crushed him. He knew things he could never speak publicly. He wrestled with revelations that terrified him. And he knew deep in his spirit that the same gift that made him famous could also destroy him if he wasn't careful.
Reader, so here's the question for you. Are you willing to pay that price? Are you willing to fast when others feast? Are you willing to pray when others sleep? Are you willing to be criticized, misunderstood, rejected, and betrayed for the sake of your calling? Are you willing to give up comfort, wealth, approval, and ease to walk in the power of God?
Because that's what it cost William Branham and that's what it will cost you.
By the early 1960s, William Branham's ministry began to shift. The massive healing campaign slowed. He moved away from stadiums and focused on teaching. He preached a series called the Seven Church Ages, outlining church history and claiming direct revelation from God about the end times.
In 1963 in the desert near Flagstaff, Arizona, he had a visionary experience involving seven angels who commissioned him to preach the Seven Seals of Revelation.
His followers believed this marked him as the final prophet before Christ's return, the Elijah spoken of in Malachi 4:5.
His critics called it heresy. Branham taught controversial doctrines. Oneness theology about the Godhead (here), serpent seed doctrine (here), women shouldn't wear pants. Denominations were the mark of the beast. And here's where William Branham's story becomes complicated because mixed with genuine prophetic gifting and supernatural power. There were teachings that divided the church and created controversy that continues to this day. Some viewed him as God's final messenger. Others saw him as a dangerous cult figure. But regardless of where you stand theologically, one thing remains undeniable.
William Branham demonstrated supernatural power that shook nations. And he paid an extraordinary price to walk in it.
December 18th, 1965. William Branham was driving from Arizona to Jeffersonville, Indiana to spend Christmas with his family. It was early morning. The roads were quiet.
Near Fiona, Texas, a drunk driver crossed the center line. The collision was catastrophic. Branham's car was destroyed. He suffered massive internal injuries.
He was rushed to the hospital clinging to life. For 6 days, he lingered between life and death. His family prayed. His followers around the world fasted and interceded, believing God would heal him. Some even believed he would be resurrected if he died.
On December the 24th, 1965, Christmas Eve, William Marrion Branham passed into eternity. He was 56 years old, but his followers refused to accept it. They delayed his burial, believing prophecy required his resurrection. They kept his body until Easter Monday, April 11th, 1966.
The resurrection never came. And so, William Branham was buried, leaving behind a complicated legacy. Millions still follow the message, preserving his recorded sermons and teachings. Churches around the world, from Africa to Asia to South America, revere him as a prophet. Others reject him entirely.
The question remains, was he a true prophet of God or a misguided teacher? Was he the Elijah of the end times or a man who mixed truth with error? History will debate that question. Theologians will argue it. Denominations will divide over it.
But here's what cannot be argued
William Branham started with nothing. Born in a dirt floor cabin to a teenage mother and alcoholic father. Couldn't read until his 20s. Stuttered when he spoke. Buried his wife and daughter in the same devastating month. Was rejected, criticized, and misunderstood his entire life. Yet he rose to become one of the most influential healing evangelists of all times. To operate in the supernatural, he paid a price most people will never pay. He fasted for weeks at a time, prayed through entire nights alone in the woods, and turned down wealth while other evangelists built their own empires. When that angel appeared in 1946, Branham did not ask for comfort. He asked for clarity. Then he paid whatever price that clarity demanded.
The question is not whether you want God's power. It is whether you'll fast when you're hungry, pray when you're exhausted, and obey when it costs you everything. Faith that will equip you to boldly fulfil the call of God in your life.
This week, spend 15 minutes every morning in prayer before you check your phone or start your day. Ask God what price he's calling you to pay. Write down what he shows you and take one concrete step toward obedience.
What is happening in this picture?
This is William Branham, and this picture was taken on January 24, 1950, at Sam Houston Coliseum in Houston, Texas. This image, captured by photographer James Ayers during a revival meeting, shows a visible light or "halo" over William Branham’s head. This photograph has become one of the most well-known and frequently referenced images associated with his ministry.
This light was speculated to be a glare or simply a light on the stage, but those around William Branham said they felt the presence of the Lord that night so strongly that they knew that couldn't be a lens glare but the Pillar of Fire itself. Naturally this caused a lot of speculation and arguing on whether it was a glimpse of the supernatural or just a lens glare. The photo was taken to George J. Lacy, a professional examiner of questioned documents and the head of the FBI fingerprinting department at that time, and was asked to authenticate the photograph. After analyzing the negative, Lacy concluded that the light was not the result of a photographic error or light hitting the lens but was indeed present when the photograph was taken. In his report, he stated that the negative had not been tampered with and that the light source was genuine and unexplainable by natural means.
His findings verified the integrity of the negative but did not offer a scientific explanation for the light itself. So if it was actual light present over William Branham's head, is this the Pillar of fire?
Let's step back for a moment.
Throughout history, God has always sent a timely message to guide His people, often delivered through prophets who were chosen to speak His Word for their generation. Just as Noah, Moses, and Paul each carried specific messages for their time, today we are called to walk in the light of God's present truth. Scripturally we believe we are living in the "last days" as prophesied in the Bible. So understanding what God is doing today, and what His message for this time, is crucial. While some have looked to men as prophets, as seen in denominations like Mormonism and others, our focus should be on the Word of God itself. Just because someone says they are a prophet or someone else says that a person is a prophet isn't reason enough to believe that. It must be a scripturally vindicated "Message". Examining the life and ministry of William Branham and looking for a vindicated prophet will leave you with questions upon questions, we must look at what the Message is and look for a scripturally vindicated Message.
Are we looking for a Messenger?
The Bible gives us clear evidence that God will send a prophet before the great and dreadful day of the Lord, before the spirit of Elijah and Moses come in Revelations chapter eleven. This is prophesied in the Old Testament, specifically in the book of Malachi:
Malachi 4:5-6 (KJV): “Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the LORD: And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with a curse.”
John the Baptist partially fulfilled Malachi 4:5-6 by coming "in the spirit and power of Elijah" (Luke 1:17) to prepare the way for Jesus' first coming, turning the hearts of the fathers to the children. However, the prophecy also speaks of a future fulfillment before the "great and dreadful day of the Lord" (Malachi 4:5), which did not occur during John’s ministry. The second part was not fulfilled by Jesus either because this second part is to happen before the great and dreadful day of the Lord which is at the end times. This final fulfillment is expected at the end times, when the full turning of the hearts will occur before God's final judgment as described in Revelation 11.
The spirit of Elijah appears multiple times throughout scripture: first in 1 Kings 18, where Elijah calls Israel back to God during a time of idolatry; then in 2 Kings 2:9-15, where Elisha receives a double portion of Elijah’s spirit. Lastly, in the New Testament, Luke 1:17 shows John the Baptist coming "in the spirit and power of Elijah" to prepare the way for Christ’s first coming, fulfilling part of the prophecy in Malachi 4:5-6. In total, the Bible speaks of the spirit of Elijah coming five times throughout history.
This prophecy in Malachi reveals that, just as the spirit of Elijah was sent in times of crisis in Israel’s history, there would be another “Elijah” figure who would come before the final judgment. This messenger’s purpose is to call people back to the Word of God, turning their hearts toward the faith of the early fathers (the apostles), and restoring them to their rightful relationship with God.
Scriptures Indicating We Are in the Last Days
The New Testament contains several warnings and indicators that we are living in the final stages of human history—the "last days." The apostle Paul speaks about this in multiple passages:
2 Timothy 3:1-5 (KJV): “This know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall be lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy... having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away.”
Paul outlines the moral and spiritual decline that would characterize the last days, and we can see many of these traits prevalent in today’s world.
Hebrews 1:1-2 (KJV): “God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds.”
Here, the Bible confirms that we have been in the "last days" since the time of Christ, indicating that the culmination of human history and God’s plan is imminent.
So who was William Branham?
William Branham was born in 1909 and became widely known in the mid-20th century as a preacher and healer who drew multitudes to his meetings. What made William Branham stand out was his discernment (This video shows the difference between his ministry and other preachers of the time). These miracles were not like other fanatics and theatrics, but genuine touches from the Lord. My Grandfather sat next to a man healed in one of these meetings from lung cancer, something he knew was not theatrics, but a genuine miracle. The other defining feature of his ministry was his firm stance on sticking to the Word of God, avoiding denominational influence. Unlike other ministries that often associated with denomination or the other, or built new sects or churches, William Branham’s ministry emphasized returning to the pure, unadulterated teachings of Scripture.
His healing ministry was extraordinary—thousands of miraculous healings were documented at his meetings, and many were drawn to him because of the supernatural signs that accompanied his ministry.
Malachi 4:2 (KJV): “But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings; and ye shall go forth, and grow up as calves of the stall.”
Many believed that William Branham’s healing ministry was a direct fulfillment of this verse. The "healing in his wings" was symbolic of the supernatural gifts that God used through Branham to draw people to Christ.
The Voice of Elijah Calling People Back to Christ
Now we come back to the picture above. William Branham’s "Message" was not about creating a new denomination or fostering divisions among believers. His purpose was to point people directly to Christ and His Word, avoiding the man-made traditions that often creep into religion and fractures the church. Like the prophetic spirit of Elijah, William Branham called people away from religious formalism and back to the simplicity of the Gospel and receiving the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
Matthew 24:28 (KJV): “For wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together.”
This verse is often interpreted as the eagles (true believers) gathering around the carcass (the Word of God). In Branham’s ministry, he emphasized that believers must come face to face with Christ through His Word, not through human systems or denominations. His call was to gather around the “carcass,” the revealed Word for this hour.
John 1:1 (KJV): “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”
William Branham constantly pointed people, not to himself, but to the fact that Christ is the Word, and only through the Word and the Holy Spirit could people truly come into fellowship with God. He believed that the bride of Christ (the true church) would be gathered not around any particular organization, but around the living Word of God as revealed through the Scriptures.
William Branham: The Messenger for This Time
Those who surrounded William Branham in the 1960's believed that he was the fulfillment of the messenger prophesied in Malachi 4:5-6 and Revelation 10:7. His message was to bring believers back to the Word, warning them of the dangers of denominationalism and man-made doctrines. He taught that the true Church of God is not found in organizations or buildings but in individuals who are filled with the Holy Spirit and who live by the Word.
Revelation 10:7 (KJV): “But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as he hath declared to his servants the prophets.”
William Branham taught Christians not to follow a man or a system, but to look for the unveiling of the Word in our day. As Peter wrote in 1 Peter 1:5 (KJV), where Peter speaks of a mystery to be revealed in the last times: "Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time."
His ministry was this exact message of restoration to Christ. He did not bring reformation, but restoration between the believer and Christ and His Word. His message revealed the final mysteries of God and preparing the Bride of Christ for the rapture. His teachings focused on the importance of being filled with the Holy Spirit and aligning oneself with the Word of God in preparation for the second coming of Christ.
What do we believe at CFT?
At the end of the day, we walk in the light as He (Christ) is in the Light. We aren’t following a man—we’re following Christ and His Word. It’s not about denominations, traditions, or systems of belief that have developed over the centuries. It’s about what Christ Himself said and what He’s doing today.
We look at Scripture, we look at the life of William Branham, and we look at the message he delivered—and we call it for what it is. We don’t want to be like those who were outside Noah’s ark when the rain started when their eyes were opened but it was to late, or those who saw Jesus but turned away because they were listening to the Pharisees. We want to recognize what God is doing right now and follow His voice.
This isn’t about putting William Branham on a pedestal—it’s about hearing God’s call through him, just as He used other prophets throughout history. God used William Branham to speak to this generation, calling His Bride—you—back to the pure Word of God. He wasn’t pointing people to a denomination or an organization but to Christ Himself.
Scripture tells us to follow His voice and His Word for our day:
John 10:27 (KJV): “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me.”
Hebrews 3:15 (KJV): “While it is said, To day if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts.”
1 John 1:7 (KJV): “But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.”
Let’s stay focused on walking in the light of God’s Word, hearing His voice for this hour and following Him. Christ is calling His Bride in these last days, and it’s not about a man—it’s about the message of Christ, the Word, being revealed in this time. In a day and age filled with countless fakes and alleged supernatural signs, you have to make the call. Just as the pillar of fire appeared to Paul on the road to Damascus and over the disciples on the day of Pentecost, was that the same pillar of fire over William Branham’s head?
If you would like to learn more about William Branham and the Message he brought, please reach out to us.
William Branham, 64-0719E Going Beyond The Camp, "More and more I am made to believe that people are not getting to Christ. Now, I am here to try to help in every way that I can and make my statements as clear as I know how to make them. And you suffer with me if you will. As I look and preach across the nation and watch the people, I'm fully persuaded that the people are not getting to Christ. And I believe that it's the enemy that's throwed this hindrance, because the reason I believe this, He is not the object that they have been pointed to. They have either been pointed to a dogma, or a doctrine, or a party, or experience, or a sensation, or something like that instead of being pointed to Christ the Word. That's why I think that people are resting their eternal destination upon some dogma or some sensation, like some say, "I danced in the Spirit!" "I spoke with tongues!" "I felt fire run over me!" And do you know, all those things can be impersonated by the devil? There's just one thing that he cannot impersonate; that's the Word!"
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