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Ted Haggard, Mega-Church Founder Felled By Sex Scandal, Returns To Pulpit

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Gay revelations were a disaster for a hero of US evangelicals. Now he has launched a new church in his garden.

Ted Haggard is back and about to start preaching again. Haggard, once America’s leading evangelical pastor, who was brought down and removed from his own mega-church after admitting to a gay sex scandal, has set up a new ministry and will hold the first service in his new church today.

His wife, Gayle, who has stood by him throughout his troubles, will be the church’s co-pastor.

“We realised that I am a sinner and she is a saint, but that way we do have a very broad appeal,” he joked in an interview from his home in Colorado Springs, a city that has been described as the Vatican of America’s evangelical movement. “I feel we have moved past the scandal. We have forgiveness. It is a second chance,” he said.

For Haggard, the formation of a new church – to be called St James – marks the beginning of a remarkable comeback and the latest stage of a rollercoaster ride through evangelical power.

Haggard first arrived in Colorado Springs in 1984, after he said he had received a vision from God that he had to form a church in the heartland of American evangelism.

That church, which began in the basement of his house with 22 people, eventually grew into New Life Church, one of the largest mega-churches in America. It had a congregation of more than 14,000 and Haggard became so prominent that he paid several visits to the White House of President George W Bush. He also became president of the National Association of Evangelicals.

But that all ended in 2006, when a gay prostitute said Haggard had paid him for sex. The revelations destroyed Haggard’s career almost overnight. He lost his position at New Life and had to leave Colorado. He ended up in Arizona and started a new job selling insurance. He also received controversial religious counselling about his sexuality. Haggard now says he is heterosexual, but had gay urges because he was molested by a man when he was a child.

Now Haggard says he wants gays and bisexuals to come to his new church, whose first few meetings will be held in the garden of his suburban home. “St James church is for anyone, and I do mean anyone… If you are straight, gay or bisexual, I want to walk through the scriptures with you,” Haggard told a press conference last week to announce his church.

Haggard’s view of homosexuality – and his own actions – appear bound to annoy almost everybody. Many gay rights activists are offended by his view that his actions were caused by child abuse and that it is possible to receive counselling for having same-sex sexual feelings. On the other hand, many evangelicals are still outraged at his past conduct, and will be equally furious at his openly reaching out to gays, whom they believe are sinning with their sexuality.

Haggard seems to be trying to span the two poles of opinion. When asked what he would tell a gay person who came to St James, he said: “I would tell them to study the scriptures. I would tell them to explore that with God. It is an individual walk for them.”

But he denied that he thought homosexuality was forbidden in the Bible, a common belief among many conservative Christians. “I would not say that. I would say that all of us need God’s grace,” he said.

Haggard talked openly about what he calls “my scandal”, but also clearly felt that it left him an undeserving sinner. “I feel that I need forgiveness. But I do not feel that I deserve forgiveness,” he said.

But there is no doubt that Haggard is trying to move on and start to rebuild his life and old career. He said the reaction to his announcement of a new church had been huge and overwhelmingly positive: “It made me feel elated. Forgiven. Loved.” One man had heard about it in Germany and immediately flew to Colorado to meet him. “He just got on a plane in Frankfurt,” Haggard said.

Haggard talked quickly and frequently cracked jokes and burst into laughter as he confessed he had no idea how big St James could eventually be. “I have no future plans for that. I am going to accept every blessing and see how it goes. We have got 200 chairs for our first service and maybe in a few weeks we will need 2,000. Or maybe we won’t,” he said.

Haggard said the scandal that wiped out his first career as a pastor had given him a strong insight into suffering and that made him a better counsellor for others who were under stress. It had also shown him the power and importance of unconditional love, especially for those who were in trouble or who had sinned.

“Our aim with St James is a love reformation,” he said with another laugh. “After what I have been through, I see people differently now. Sometimes I just watch the news and cry because my heart is so tender and passionate and filled with love,” he said.

The same, however, cannot be said for all members of the Colorado Springs evangelical community. Though many, including some prominent columnists in the local newspaper, have welcomed Haggard and his new church, some have not.

Haggard said he had wanted to do a TV interview about his church using a studio belonging to a powerful local religious group, but they had refused to have anything to do with him and he had been forced to drive to Denver to use a different studio there. “It made me feel that we all need to keep reading our Bible, including some of our evangelical leaders,” Haggard said.

Source: The Guardian

Fake Rapture Prank

Monday, April 5th, 2010

File:1992 Rapture.jpg

Many Evangelicals, especially in the United States, hold the return of Christ to be in two stages. 1 Thessalonians 4:15-17 is seen to be a preliminary event to the return described in Matthew 24:29-31. Although both describe a return of Jesus in the clouds with angelic activity, trumpets, heavenly signs, and a gathering of the saints, these are seen to be two separate events. The first event is to be unseen, the rapture proper, when the saved are prophesied to be ‘caught up,’ from whence the term rapture is taken. The ‘second coming’ is the public event when Christ’s presence is prophesied to be clearly seen as he returns to end Armageddon.

Popularized by the Left Behind series of 16 best-selling novels by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, the Rapture is on the minds of millions of gullible readers.

Watch Prank 3:16

Kent Hovind Doctoral Dissertation Leaked

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Kent Hovind’s doctoral thesis for Patriot University, a diploma mill, has been leaked. And it is everything you would expect to come out of a genius of his magnitude. It is full of references to the bible and attacks on evolution. Basically, if you could summarize all the content from his presentations (i.e. the ones on youtube) you would get the same thing. It is creationist drivel at its best.

Seriously, if he can call himself “Dr.” from the basis of this dissertation, anyone past elementary school deserves a PhD. You only need to look at the introduction to see the level of “scholarship” of it.

His dissertation begins with, “Hello, my name is Kent Hovind”. Was that not evidently clear from the cover page? And then he goes on about God giving him the opportunity to preach and the evils of Satan. I’m sorry Kent, but preaching doesn’t count as scholarship.

Read Kent Hovind’s Phd Dissertation
Paul Chartley Dissassembles “Dr.” Hovind’s Dissertation

American Evangelicals Behind ‘Death To Gays’ Law In Uganda

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

March 10, 2010 on ABC Nightline – Preaching Hate in Uganda

Is ‘Avatar’ The Most Satanic Film?

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

The founder of Seattle’s Mars Hill Church told his congregation last Sunday that the highest grossing movie of all time is “the most demonic, satanic film I’ve ever seen.”

If you follow local theological circles, you know Driscoll is something of a superstar among national evangelical leaders. Or at least, he’s someone to watch.

Driscoll helped build the popular Mars Hill Church into one of the most talked about evangelical mega-churches in the country, despite its home at the heart of a secular stronghold. That distinction, combined with his church’s culturally savvy but socially and theologically conservative views, gives him significant weight in religious debate.

Mark Driscoll on Avatar (mp3)

‘Avatar’ is the most satanic film Mark Driscoll has ever seen (SeattlePI.com)

Voodoo Ceremony in Haiti Attacked By Evangelicals

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Haiti’s supreme voodoo leader vowed “war” on Wednesday after Evangelicals attacked a ceremony organized by his religion honoring those killed in last month’s massive earthquake.

The attack on Tuesday in the capital’s sprawling Cite Soleil slum came with religious tensions rising, as Protestant Evangelicals and other denominations recruit in the wake of the earthquake that killed more than 200,000.

“It will be war — open war,” Max Beauvoir, supreme head of Haitian voodoo, told AFP in an interview at his home and temple outside the capital.

“It’s unfortunate that at this moment where everybody’s suffering that they have to go into war. But if that is what they need, I think that is what they’ll get.”

The quake also left more than a million homeless and left much of the capital and surrounding areas, in this Caribbean nation of more than nine million, in ruins.

Police said a pastor urged followers to attack the ceremony, resulting in a crowd of people throwing rocks at the voodoo followers.

Rosemond Aristide, police inspector in Cite Soleil, said he has since spoken with the pastor, who agreed to allow voodoo ceremonies to take place there.

However, Aristide could not explain why no arrests were made nor provide further details.

Beauvoir claimed hundreds of Protestant Evangelicals along with other people they hired attacked the ceremony, causing a number of injuries.

About half of Haiti’s population is believed to practice voodoo in some form, though many are thought to also follow other religious beliefs at the same time.

The religion — whose practitioners often use the vodou spelling as opposed to the Westernized version — is deeply rooted in Haitian culture.

A voodoo priest named Boukman has been credited with setting off the country’s slave rebellion in the late 18th century.

Source: AFP

German Evangelicals Granted US Asylum

Monday, February 8th, 2010

An immigration judge in Nashville, Tennessee ruled that parents Uwe andHannelore Romeike, and their five children, are free to stay in the US, where they have been since 2008, news agency AP reported late on Tuesday.

The parents, who came from the state of Baden-Württemberg, allege they were persecuted for their faith and defiance of Germany’s compulsory school attendance since those who do not comply face fines and jail time.

According to Uwe Romeike, his family was fined the equivalent of some $10,000 over two years, but could not afford to make payments after their court appeals failed.

“I think it’s important for parents to have the freedom to choose the way their children can be taught,” Romeike told AP, later adding that German curriculum was increasingly “against Christian values.”

In October 2006, police forcefully took the family’s children to school in their home town of Bietigheim-Bissingen when they refused to do so themselves. One year later, the country’s high court ruled that in some similar cases the state could take children from their parents.

Homeschooling German family granted US asylum (The Local)