Roger Morneau


Roger J. Morneau was a Christian author who wrote on prayer and the supernatural. He was a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Biography

Morneau was born in 1925 in Saint-Jacques, New Brunswick, Canada, into a family of devout French Canadian Catholics; two of his aunts were nuns, and one uncle was a priest. While he was a youth, his mother died and he experienced disillusionment in God that he later claimed stemmed from teachings in Catholic books and the Church. He claimed to have been concerned with teaching that there is no salvation outside the Roman Catholic Church, and felt he could not understand a God that would torture people eternally in hell.
As a young adult, Morneau was introduced to spiritualism through a friend, and nearly joined a secret order of spirit worshipers who claimed to be the "elite". Before he was to make a full commitment, however, he asked a Seventh-day Adventist co-worker, Cyril Grosse, to go over some Bible studies with him. This turned him away from spiritualism and began his studies of Christ as an Adventist. Morneau claims there was the threat of a bounty on his head of $10,000, should he join the Adventist Church. He became a member of the Adventist Church in 1946 regardless. In 1947, he married Hilda, a licensed vocational nurse in Montreal, after which he worked for many years in telephone advertising sales. In 1984, a virus destroyed part of his heart muscle, giving him cardiomyopathy for the rest of his life. Morneau died in 1998.
Film production company Lifestreams Media researched and produced a feature-length documentary titled "Charmed By Darkness" about Roger Morneau's life which includes previously unseen pictures, documents and footage, confirming Roger's childhood and World War II experiences as told in the full manuscript of his autobiography "Charmed By Darkness" . The film includes interviews with eye witnesses Cyril and Cynthia Grossé who studied the Bible with Roger in 1946 and later became lifelong friends. The last half of the film documents the size and impact of Roger's international prayer ministry that included over 25,000 names on his prayer list prior his death in 1998.

Publications