The Reverend Ted
Haggard moved Wednesday from his longtime home in
Colorado Springs, Colo., to Phoenix, where the
disgraced minister will join the same church that
helped fallen televangelist Jim Bakker. Haggard, 50,
resigned as president of the National Association of
Evangelicals last year, after a former male prostitute
alleged a three-year cash-for-sex relationship.
The man also said he saw Haggard use
methamphetamine. Haggard confessed to undisclosed
''sexual immorality'' and said he bought meth but never
used it.
As part of his
severance package from New Life Church, a 14,000-member
congregation he started in his basement, Haggard agreed to
leave Colorado Springs, a city he helped make an
evangelical center.
''When he moved
out of town today, there was a kind of relief on the part
of the church that life can get back to normal,'' said the
Reverend H.B. London, one of three ministers
overseeing what has been called Haggard's
''restoration.'' ''For the Haggards, it is the beginning of
a huge new chapter. It's a brand-new start for them,
the beginning of a new beginning.''
Before his fall,
Haggard was an emerging voice in evangelical politics.
He took part in White House conference calls and fought to
broaden the movement's agenda to include environmental
issues.
In Phoenix,
Haggard plans to pursue a graduate degree in counseling at
an area university, said London, who heads an outreach
effort for pastors through Focus on the Family, the
Colorado Springs-based conservative Christian
group. London was not sure where Haggard would be studying.
The Haggards and two of their children--another
three are grown--are expected to live in a home
made available by a supporter.
Ted and Gayle
Haggard have ties to Phoenix. The couple spent three weeks
at a secular treatment center in the area after the scandal
broke. And the Pentecostal church they will attend,
Phoenix First Assembly of God, is led by the Reverend
Tommy Barnett, another member of Haggard's restoration
team.
Bakker, the
televangelist, found refuge at Barnett's church after being
released from federal prison for bilking supporters of $158
million. He volunteered at a Los Angeles church
mission run by Barnett's son.
London said he
believes Barnett told his congregation Sunday that Haggard
would be joining them. Barnett and officials at his church
did not return calls seeking comment.
Haggard faces a
test in going from being on the pulpit to becoming just
another face in the pews, London said. ''Once you were in
charge of a megachurch and a megastaff and making
mega-decisions; now your main decision is where you're
going to school, where to eat, and what you're going
to do on your day off,'' London said.
The Reverend Mike
Ware, a member of a separate panel of pastors that
investigated the claims against Haggard, said, ''We've all
been in agreement that Ted should have a fresh start,
gain some fresh perspective, and it's very difficult
for them to get the kind of healing they need staying
in Colorado Springs.''
Ware said Haggard
is continuing to receive counseling, which officials
said will include an exploration of his sexuality. Haggard
has told his advisers he does not believe he's gay.
As part of a
severance package that will pay Haggard through 2007,
Haggard agreed not only to leave town but to refrain from
discussing the scandal publicly. He did not return
messages Wednesday. Haggard's most recent annual
salary was about $138,000, benefits excluded.
His former
congregation has felt the sting of the scandal. Since
Haggard's fall, attendance has fallen 20% and giving has
dropped 10%, said Rob Brendle, an associate pastor. As
a result of the decline, the church laid off 44
employees, or 12% of its workforce. (Eric Gorski, AP)