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Pastor Ted Haggard is
moving his burgeoning new St. James Church out of his
Old Ranch Road barn in Colorado Springs to the city's
Pikes Peak Center for the Performing Arts beginning July
25.
St. James, marking its sixth week of existence as a
church last Sunday, drew 230 congregants to Haggard's
barn. Haggard said he expects the church, at first, will
require one of the smaller rooms at Pikes Peak for
weekly 10 a.m. Services.
However, the center's main auditorium can hold more than
2,000, and Haggard isn't ruling out a congregation of
that size in the near future.
"All the numbers have been way beyond our expectations,"
Haggard said Monday. "Jesus multiplied loaves and
fishes; we multiplied people.”
Haggard founded New Life Church in Colorado Springs
about 25 years ago, and it grew into the state's largest
at about 14,000 congregants. He became a national
evangelical leader in the process. Then, revelations in
November 2006 of Haggard's relationship with a male
prostitute and his illicit drug purchases led to
excommunication from his own church and his leaving the
state.
Haggard's return to the ministry, announced June 3, has
revived him and his wife, Gayle, he said.
"We're more happy than we've ever been," Haggard said.
"We are supremely satisfied in every dimension of our
lives right now.”
He said St. James' members have included the homeless
and the wealthy, addicted and sober, old and young,
lifelong church members and some who had never been in a
congregation.
"It's startling how the range is so broad," Haggard
said.
Haggard is taking a weekly salary of $300. The four
church offerings collected thus far, he said, have been
donated to water-well drilling in Africa, rescues of
girls from sex trafficking in Asia, medical missions in
Mexico and a local soup kitchen.
Haggard said he didn't yet know a rental cost for the
Pikes Peak Center. Electa Draper, Denver Post.
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