Christian author, famed pastor Tim Keller dead at 72, church says

Keller was receiving hospice care at home just prior to death

Best-selling Christian author and noted theologian Tim Keller has passed away Friday following a battle with pancreatic cancer, his church says. 

Keller, the founding pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, was initially diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer in May 2020. 

"It is with a heavy heart that I write today to inform you that Redeemer Presbyterian Church founder and long-time senior pastor, Tim Keller, passed away this morning at age 72, trusting in the sure and certain hope of the resurrection," Bruce Terrell said on behalf of the Redeemer Network Leadership Team. "We are forever grateful for his leadership, heart, and dedication to sharing the love of Christ with others. 

"While we will miss his presence here, we know he is rejoicing with his Savior in heaven," he added. 

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Tim Keller, founder of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, was receiving hospice care at home. (Tim Keller/Facebook)

Just prior his death, his son Michael wrote on his Twitter page Thursday that "Dad is being discharged from the hospital to receive hospice care at home."

Michael later posted midday Friday that "Timothy J. Keller, husband, father, grandfather, mentor, friend, pastor, and scholar died this morning at home. 

"Dad waited until he was alone with Mom. She kissed him on the forehead and he breathed his last breath. We take comfort in some of his last words... 'There is no downside for me leaving, not in the slightest.’" the statement read.

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Since Keller’s 2020 diagnosis, he has undergone two years of chemotherapy. He was also participating in the immunotherapy drug trial at the National Institute for Health in Bethesda, Maryland as recently as January. 

However, despite the immunotherapy successfully killing 99% of the cancerous tumors, Keller announced in a Facebook post in March the return of additional cancerous tumors requiring him to undergo a variation of the previous immunotherapy treatment. 

"They are unfortunately in some fairly inconvenient places, so the doctors encouraged us to go through the treatment again, this time targeting a different genetic marker of cancer," Keller wrote. 

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In April, he shared he was recovering from the treatments, and it would be a "long and slow process back." 

Keller is also a survivor of thyroid cancer, which he was diagnosed with in 2002. 

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