Carlton D’Metrius Pearson (1953- )

October 11, 2021 
/ Contributed By: Beatrice Johnson

Carlton D. Pearson

Carlton D. Pearson

Carlton D’Metrius Pearson is an American preacher, author, and gospel singer. He was born on March 19, 1953, to the Rev. Adam Louis Pearson and Lillie Ruth Johnson Pearson in San Diego, California. Pearson’s father was the pastor of St. John’s Church of God in Christ in La Jolla, California. Growing up with one brother and four sisters, Pearson started his first “church” at the age of 6, where the children used pie pans for tambourines.

By 1975, Pearson was a theology major and World Action Singer at Oral Roberts University in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Licensed and ordained in the Church of God in Christ (COGIC), Pearson at the age of 22 pastored Higher Dimensions Evangelistic Center, later renamed Higher Dimensions Family Center, a megachurch with 5,000+ diverse congregation members and staff in Tulsa. Pearson served on the Oral Roberts University board and hosted the annual Azusa (named after the place where the COGIG was founded) conference in the Oral Roberts University Mabee Center with filled-to-capacity crowds of approximately 50,000 people from all over the world. A regular on global Christian television, appearing on Larry King Live, advising Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton and serving as spiritual mentor to NFL player Dion Sanders, Pearson was nominated for a Dove award and won two Stellar awards for his Live at Azusa music projects.

Pearson married Gina Marie Gauthier on September 3, 1993, at the age of 40 and their union produced two children, Julian D’Metrius Pearson (born July 9, 1994) and Majeste Amour Pearson (born October 29, 1996). Ordained as bishop on the first night of the annual Azusa conference in 1996, Pearson would be consecrated on the first night of the Azusa conference in 1997. Despite being diagnosed with prostate cancer, Pearson made an unsuccessful bid in the primary election for mayor of Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 2002.

While pondering his uncle’s salvation after his death at the Ysidro Detention Center in San Diego, California, and receiving an epiphany while watching the news about the Rwandan genocide crisis in 1994, Pearson began preaching a controversial doctrine that everyone is going to heaven. He based this idea on scriptures, 1 John 2:1-2 and 1 Timothy 4:10. This new teaching, called “Gospel of Inclusion,” was quickly deemed outside the theological parameters of orthodox Christianity. The resulting controversy caused Higher Dimensions Family Church to lose most of its membership. With the mass exodus of tithers, Pearson lost the Higher Dimensions church building on South Memorial Drive in Tulsa when it was foreclosed in 2006.

A few hundred remaining members followed Pearson to Trinity Episcopal Church, then to All Souls Unitarian Church in Tulsa. In 2009 Pearson moved to Chicago, Illinois, to become interim senior minister of Christ Universal Temple. He returned to Tulsa in the summer of 2014 to be with his ailing father, who died on March 21, 2015, at age 88. The movie Come Sunday on Netflix is based on a portion of Pearson’s controversial life.

Author Profile

Beatrice Johnson is a native of Tulsa, Oklahoma born to Reverend Alvan Nathaniel Johnson, Sr. and Verla Odelma Clardy Johnson. She is an alumna of Booker T. Washington High School and the University of Tulsa. In 1995, she started writing for the Oklahoma Eagle newspaper, where her uncle Reverend Ben H. Hill was once the editor. Her love for writing has never stopped. Earning an MBA degree in Business Administration, Johnson is a co-author for the book, Before I Got Here: The Wondrous Things We Hear When We Listen to the Souls of Our Children edited by Blair Underwood. Johnson became an Independent Historian while researching her grandfather, Bishop William Decker Johnson’s history with the AME (African Methodist Episcopal) church. She is currently an actress and freelance writer in Atlanta, Georgia.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Johnson, B. (2021, October 11). Carlton D’Metrius Pearson (1953- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/carlton-dmetrius-pearson-1953/

Source of the Author's Information:

Margaret Ramirez, “Preacher faces new controversy,” Chicago Tribune, May 11, 2009; https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2009-05-11-0905100192-story.html; Bill Sherman, “Bishop discusses movie about his life,” The Oklahoman, January 14, 2018; [login may be required]; Bill Sherman, “Former Tulsa Pentecostal preacher returns to town,” The Daily Oklahoman, May 16, 2015; https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/452773566/.

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