New Life Church (Colorado Springs, Colorado)

New Life Church
The church grounds with "The Tent" in the foreground and the mountains in the background
Location Colorado Springs, Colorado
Country United States
Denomination Nondenominational
Website www.newlifechurch.org
History
Founded 1984
Clergy
Senior pastor(s) Brady Boyd

New Life Church is a nondenominational charismatic evangelical megachurch located in Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States. New Life Church has more than 10,000 members. The church is pastored by Brady Boyd[1] and has multiple congregations that meet throughout the Colorado Springs area. The church is known for its worship music, having produced and released over a dozen worship albums.[2]

Congregations of New Life Church

New Life Church has multiple congregations, similar to campuses, that meet in Colorado Springs. Each congregation has a pastoral team and preaching team.

All congregations join together for monthly First Wednesday Services as well as Good Friday and Christmas Eve.

  • New Life North, meets at 11025 Voyager Parkway, Colorado Springs
  • New Life Downtown, meets on the campus of Palmer High School, Colorado Springs
  • New Life Friday Night, meets at 11025 Voyager Parkway, Colorado Springs
  • New Life Manitou Springs, meets in Manitou Springs, Colorado
  • Iglesia Nueva Vida (Spanish & Bilingual services), meets at 801 N Circle Drive, Colorado Springs

Church plants

New Life Church has planted multiple churches around the United States, often in partnership with the Association of Related Churches.

  • ONEChapel, led by Ross Parsley
  • Denver United Church, led by Rob Brendle
  • Mill City Church, led by Aaron Stern
  • Boulder Street Church, led by Joseph Winger
  • The House, led by Gregg Hampton
  • Radiant Church, led by David Perkins

Campus and facilities

"The Tent"
The World Prayer Center

The church established its present campus location in the early 1990s and added buildings and added onto existing buildings in this location. The initial sanctuary on the campus, now referred to as the "theater," seats 1,500 and is used primarily for the New Life Friday Night congregation and New Life Kids on Sunday mornings. The current main sanctuary (referred to as the Living Room) can seat over 8,000 but is currently set up to seat 5,000.[3]

The New Life campus is also home to the World Prayer Center. The World Prayer Team organization, founded global internet-based prayer efforts among its participants out of this building. The World Prayer Team is currently under the direction of Modern Day Missions. The building currently hosts prayer rooms.

The smallest building on the campus is The Tent which is used for various ministry gatherings including the Junior High Sunday Service.

Children's classrooms are in a Bible story-themed area.[3]

New Life Worship

New Life Church is well-known for its prolific songwriters (Ross Parsley, Jon Egan, Glenn Packiam, Jared Anderson, Corey Asbury, Pete Sanchez) and worship leaders, having released over a dozen albums (My Savior Lives, Counting On God, You Hold It All, Strong God, Soak) and hundreds of songs (I Am Free, Great I Am, My Savior Lives, Here In Your Presence) through New Life Worship and Desperation Band.

New Life Worship is now under the direction of Pete Sanchez while Jon Egan leads most Sundays at New Life North.

Desperation

Desperation Ministries is a national youth ministry that was born out of New Life Church.

Through its local student ministry, annual conferences, ministry tours, Desperation Ministries calls students to live lives of Passion, Mission, Intercession, and Consecration.

Desperation Ministry Academy is a training program for young leaders under the direction of Brad Baker.

Dream Centers of Colorado Springs

New Life Church, under the leadership of Brady Boyd, founded and launched Dream Centers of Colorado Springs which serves Colorado Springs in several ways:

  • Women's Clinic, offering free medical care to uninsured or underinsured women.
  • Mary's Home, houses homeless single moms and their children and offers support for education, medical care, life skill training.

Influence

New Life Church, along with Focus on the Family, established Colorado Springs as a conservative evangelical center in the 1990s.[4] In 2005, Jeff Sharlet claimed that while New Life is "by no means the largest megachurch ... [it] holds more sway over the political direction of evangelicalism" than any other church in America.[3]

History

New Life Church was founded in 1984 by Ted Haggard. The church started under his leadership as an independent church meeting in his home. From these origins, the church grew through a succession of larger meeting spaces including strip mall office space and other non-traditional church locations.

Ted Haggard scandals and resignation

The south entrance and worship center

On November 2, 2006, Haggard was accused of paying a male escort for sex for three years and of also using methamphetamine.[5] Later the same day, Haggard voluntarily stepped down as pastor so "the overseer process can be allowed to proceed with integrity", and that he would be seeking "spiritual advice and guidance".[5] Two days later, New Life Church's Board of Overseers announced that they had decided to permanently dismiss Haggard from his role.[6]

In January 2009, new allegations emerged that Haggard, while pastor at New Life, had an inappropriate relationship with a former attendee.[7] Haggard's successor, Brady Boyd, said the church reached a six figure settlement with the man, who was in his early 20s at the time.[8] According to a News Channel 13 report, the man said the contact was "not consensual".[8]

Pastorship of Brady Boyd

Following a pastoral selection process, Brady Boyd became the Senior Pastor in August 2007. Under his leadership, New Life Church has planted 6 churches around the United States, established give congregations within New Life Church and launched the Dream Centers of Colorado Springs. In addition to pastoring New Life Church, Boyd has also written several books, including Fear No Evil, Sons & Daughters, Let Her Lead, Addicted to Busy, and Speak Life.

Boyd had served Gateway Church in Southlake Texas and Trinity Fellowship in Amarillo, Texas. He still speaks at both churches.

Shooting

On December 9, 2007, Matthew Murray, age 24, opened fire in the New Life Church, striking five people and killing two, sisters Rachel and Stephanie Works; their father David Works was one of the individuals injured. Jeanne Assam, a church security volunteer, shot and wounded the gunman who then killed himself.[9] Several hours prior, the same gunman opened fire at a Youth With A Mission training center in Arvada, Colorado, striking four people and killing two. He was formerly a missionary-in-training with Youth With A Mission and was from a devout Christian family.[10] Police found a letter from the shooter addressed "To God".[11]

Ted Haggard and other members of the church were featured on a 1997 episode of the PRI radio program This American Life,[12] as well as the documentaries Jesus Camp, Friends of God, Constantine's Sword, and The Root of All Evil?.

References

  1. "A New Life big as church". Rocky Mountain News. 11 August 2007. Archived from the original on May 20, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
  2. "Discography". New Life Worship. 2014-06-14. Retrieved 2017-02-07.
  3. 1 2 3 Jeff Sharlet (2005). "Soldiers of Christ: I. Inside America's most powerful megachurch". Harper's. 310 (1860): 42–44.
  4. Emery, Erin (2006-11-05). "Church altered Springs; will scandal change city?". Denver Post. Retrieved 2006-11-10.
  5. 1 2 "Haggard steps down amid sex allegations". Rocky Mountain News. November 2, 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-11-07. Retrieved 2006-11-03.
  6. "Board of Overseers Press Release" (PDF) (Press release). New Life Church. 2006-11-04. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-11-07. Retrieved 2006-11-10.
  7. "Disgraced pastor faces more gay sex accusations". Washington Post. Jan 23, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-17.
  8. 1 2 "New Life Addresses NEWSCHANNEL 13 Investigation". KRDO-TV. January 25, 2009. Archived from the original on February 4, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-17.
  9. "Security guard's shots weren't fatal, autopsy reveals". 2007-12-13. Archived from the original on 2008-05-13.
  10. "US church gunman killed himself". BBC News. 2007-12-12.
  11. "Church shooter left letter "To God" in car". Denver Post. 2008-01-17.
  12. "Pray". This American Life. Episode 77. 1997-09-26. Public Radio International.

Coordinates: 38°59′33″N 104°47′44″W / 38.99250°N 104.79556°W / 38.99250; -104.79556

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