pastors like Haggard pose challenge for faithful
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Pastor Ted's
influence was felt everywhere in New Life Church: in the
videos shown at worship; in the New Life bookstore, which
stocked books he recommended; and in the story of the
church itself. He started New Life in his basement in
Colorado Springs, Colo., building it into a
14,000-member nationally known megachurch. As the Reverend
Ted Haggard's fortunes rose, so did the church's.
So when Haggard fell spectacularly from grace in
a scandal involving drugs and allegations of gay sex,
many wondered if New Life, so tied to his public
persona, would crash with him. The answer has significance
far beyond the Haggard tragedy. As evangelical
megachurches have sprung up around the country,
concerns have grown over whether superstar pastors
help or hurt faith communities.
''When you get to these top 25 or 50 of the
largest or most influential churches, these pastors
are clearly celebrities. They were the founders, they
created much of the growth, and they are, in some sense, a
brand in and of themselves,'' said Scott Thumma, a
professor at Hartford Seminary in Connecticut who
specializes in studying megachurches. ''It's just like
a business where the name of the founder is, in fact, a trademark.''
America has always had big-name preachers, from
Billy Sunday, the pro baseball player turned
evangelist, to Billy Graham. But the two were not
closely tied to a single church. Among today's best-known
pastors, Rick Warren has Saddleback Church in Lake
Forest, Calif., Joel Osteen has Lakewood Church in
Houston, and Bishop T.D. Jakes has the Potter's House
in Dallas.
Graham and Sunday also worked in a vastly
different media environment. Modern-day celebrity
pastors have Web sites, where they promote their
books, along with the DVDs, TV shows, and films they
produce, while preaching internationally. With such
high profiles, word of any wrongdoing will spread
quickly, intensifying the damage to them and their congregations.
Haggard felt the impact firsthand last week. On
November 2, Mike Jones of Denver came forward to say
that he had drug-fueled trysts regularly with
Haggard over the last few years. The claims spread through
the Internet, where they were placed side by side with
video and past news articles in which Haggard had
condemned same-sex marriage and had presented his
family life, with wife Gayle and their five children, as a model.
Haggard, 50, immediately resigned as president
of the National Association of Evangelicals, an
umbrella group for about 45,000 conservative churches,
and within days was fired by New Life. In a letter
read Sunday at New Life services, he did not address the
specifics of Jones's claims but confessed he was
guilty of ''sexual immorality.''
New Life's reaction was swift, yet most
megachurches don't have such effective oversight. Many
have boards stacked with relatives, friends, personal
lawyers, and hangers-on who wouldn't dare contradict the
pastor, said Bill Martin, a Rice University expert on evangelicals.
Nearly all megachurches are independent from a
denomination--an asset because of
the flexibility this encourages but a liability when it
comes to checks on power. By contrast, mainline Protestant
denominations vet clergy credentials and have
elaborate systems of church tribunals, similar to
civil courts, that discipline errant ministers.
''The pitfall with the megachurches, the
personality-driven churches, is it's so easy for a
person to consider him- or herself above
accountability,'' Martin said. ''If that accountability is
absent or reduced, then trouble is on the way.''
Some megachurch pastors are aware of the risk.
They allow independent audits of their finances and
have elaborate rules meant to minimize any chance of
sex scandal. For example, some allow male staff members to
counsel women only if someone else is in the room or if the
door is open. And in a highly unusual practice for
pastors, Warren, who has sold millions of copies of
his book The Purpose Driven Life, gives 90% of
his income to the church.
''Money is a difficult issue with megachurch
pastors,'' Thumma said. ''They're accused all the time
of fleecing their flocks and using that money to buy
fancy cars and homes when their members have less.''
With Haggard gone and the crisis he created
easing, New Life members face a different challenge:
They must decide whether they wish to belong to a
church without the charismatic leader. Nancy Ammerman, a
Boston University sociologist who researches
congregational life, said the megachurch might be
saved by its extensive programs that create social
groups within the church. New Life uses the small-group
model, where churchgoers meet regularly with just a
few others, sometimes based on common interests
outside of worship.
''That also gives them a forum within which to
deal with what happened,'' Ammerman said.
But Randall Balmer, a Barnard College historian
of American religion, said megachurches are so wrapped
up with their pastor that New Life inevitably has hard
times ahead. Without any creed or denominational
identity for the church to cling to, attendance will
eventually drop by half or more, he predicted.
''You have a kind of cult of personality that
confuses the faith with a particular individual,''
said Balmer, author of Thy Kingdom Come: How the
Religious Right Distorts the Faith and Threatens
America. ''I just think it's very difficult to
recover from this sort of thing.'' (Rachel Zoll, AP)