Zachery Tims Funeral: T.D. Jakes “Zach Died, Tims Stood UP!”

 Update:  After more than 2 years of battling to keep the court documents sealed, it has finally been revealed that Pasto Zachery Tims died of an overdose of herion and cocaine, click here for full story. 

zachery-tims-cause-of-death-td-jakes-paula-white-riva-timsPraise God!  thousands of saints showed up at the First Baptist Church, Orlando, to  pay their respects to Pastor Zachery Tims today.   No matter what the toxicology report reveals, one cannot deny that Pastor Zachery Tims loved the Lord and God’s people with all his heart. Nor did he try to hide his imperfections.   Rest in Peace, Pastor Tims!

The Orlando Sentinel reported that mega church pastor, Bishop T.D. Jakes who delivered Zachery Tims eulogy compared Pastor Tims to the Biblical Preacher,  Jacob, who was renamed Israel,  a man with many problems.  According to the Sentinel Jakes stated:

“The names represented two different sides of the same person,  just as “Dr. Tims” was different from “Zach.” Jakes, who pastors a 30,000-member congregation in Dallas, said he knew both  Dr. Tims — the charismatic, compassionate spiritual leader who ministered to
imperfect people — and Zach, who was an imperfect person himself. “I thought I was the only one who know how unhappy Zach was, how broken he  was, how afraid he was if anybody was to see any flaw in him. He tried hard to  heal himself, to fix himself,” said Jakes, chief pastor of The Potter’s  House.

As leader of New Destiny Christian Center in Apopka,  Dr. Tims could help others with their problems, but Zach couldn’t ask for help
himself before he was found dead last Friday in a New York hotel room. Tims’  death is under investigation, and the cause has not been determined.

“I don’t know what happened in that room in New York, but I can only hope  that as Zach was dying, Dr. Tims stood up,” Jakes said.

About 5,000 people attended the three-and-a-half-hour funeral service at  First Baptist of Orlando. It was a cross between a tribute and a tent revival,  with songs, prayers, silence, stories and high-volume preaching. There was more  rejoicing than weeping, more laughter than grief.

One preacher told the story of accompanying Tims to London, where the  pastor was mistaken for the actor Will  Smith and chose not to correct the misperception.

First Baptist Pastor David Uth confessed his envy of Tims’ preaching style:  “I’ve watched Zachery on TV and I’ve thought, ‘God, why can’t I preach like  that?’ I’ve actually said a few times, you know sometimes being white just gets
in the way.”

Jakes said Tims sometimes reminded him of a mischievous child who knew he was  too cute to scold. “Zach had a way of acting like he was your kid,” Jakes said. “He would come  into your house and go straight for the refrigerator. You couldn’t say anything,
because he’d bust that big old grin on you.” Evangelist Paula White said the smile was Tims’ defining feature.

“He smiled with his eyes. His eyes showed the depth of his soul,” said White,  pastor of Without Walls International Church in Tampa.

A few weeks before his death, Tims spoke of dying in a sermon, White  recalled: “He said, ‘If I die — and I don’t want to die — I want you to know I  am saved and I’m going to heaven.”

TIms’ ex-wife, Riva Tims, who started New Destiny with him in 1996, commented  on his short but productive life. “Forty-two years may seem young, but in those 42 years he circled the Earth  many times. In those 42 years he achieved goals few could imagine,” she said.
“Let us not forget what he has accomplished.”

Dyer, Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs,  Orange County Commissioner Tiffany Moore Russell, and U.S Rep. Corrine Brown
all praised Tims for his work in the church and the community.

“You have lost a spiritual leader, New Destiny,” Jacobs said, “but we all  gained an angel.”  About a dozen preachers spoke of their admiration and friendship with Tims.  Some called him a mentor. Some called him a brother. Some preached, some sang.

“Dr. Tims had one speed, and that was fast,” one said. “He would start  getting out of the car before it stopped because he was in a hurry to do the  work of the Lord.”

Jakes said Tims’ life, and death, were a wake-up call for many young  preachers who are in a hurry to get somewhere fast. The greater the light, Jakes  said, the greater the heat. “The light burns things you don’t want it to burn,” he said.

Two hours before the 11 a.m. funeral, the line of mourners snaked from the  doors of the First Baptist and around the parking lot. Many of those in line  were dressed in black: men in their suits, women in their finest dresses, and  children dressed as if for church.

“He made a great impact on the lives of people,” said Dorothy Douglas, 58, who joined the church in 1999. “He didn’t wait for them to come to him. He went  into the neighborhood to bring the church to them.”

Saturday, they returned the favor.  Thousands stood in the heat to pay their final respects to their spiritual
leader. “This is for closure and to be supportive of his family. For me, I respected  and loved Pastor Zach, but I also loved him as the son I never had. You could  approach him. You could talk to Pastor Zach,” Douglas said.

Others spoke about Tims’ impact on the congregation. “He has prepared us for this,” said Jackie McCall, a 55-year-old church
member who joined the congregation three years ago. “We are ready to go on.”

View Orlando Sentinel’s video coverage below.

Video Link: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/features/religion/os-video-zachery-tims-funeral,0,5133050.premiumvideo