A. A. Allen certainly had/has his critics. But if R.W. Schambach thought highly of him, I will take that testimony over the testimony of his critics any day.Many wonderful men of God have had far worse that quirks in their lives. No one could out-preach Ronald Brock...yet he had a moral derailment. He eventually found his way back, but shall we dismiss all the incredible preaching and blessing the his life brought? NO.I was not particularly a Kuhlman fan, but that is based on much ignorance and SOLELY on hearing a tape of her or something. I just preferred the more stereotypical Pentecostal expression.Wigglesworth? It is claimed that he had an affair. GASP! So it was ALL fake??? There's not one of us that is worthy to have God work through us. And some of us are even less worthy than others (I include myself here). Yet God does it time and time and time again. Do you reckon He has a clue? Look, Benny Hinn is someone that...well, a little bit of him goes a long way with me. I'm just not a fan of the theatrics. Yet a Baptist friend of min said that whatever Hinn was, it was still the case that God healed my friend's brother when he went to a Hinn crusade.I've never fallen out, but the worship portion of a Hinn crusade (as seen on TV, etc.) is about as good as it gets, I think. T.L. Lowery was certainly flamboyant, and yet I have never doubted that he was a man of God (and one, incidentally, that I really enjoyed). Perry Stone catches it for his secret sources, yet the man is no doubt reaching more people than any 500 Church of God pastors combined (not including Jentzen Franklin, I imagine). But like the cat who went to the palace, all we can see is the mouse under the throne, so to speak.Yes, it's hard to overlook flaw in men of God. We will give regular church members a lot more latitude than we will men of God. Certainly, if it is a MORAL or DOCTRINAL failure, we need to especially hold men of God responsible, since it can not only cause them to be lost to the Kingdom, but can bring a reproach. But just because someone is out there in some things doesn't disqualify them or make them less of a man of God. It simply means that person is not your cup of tea.Think of like we think of music. If you can't stand the Redback, then, well, besides being a godless sinner, it just might be that it is a matter of--egads!--TASTE. Others like music that I can't stand and, frankly, wonder if it IS of God. But in truth there is a wide range of music, all of which glorifies God and is doctrinally sound, that can speak to the church and the world. To dismiss one of these genres just because it's not YOUR cup of tea, well, that would be too bad...because you might be dismissing something that has been a tremendous blessing to someone, perhaps helping them hold on to God through difficult times.