November 21st, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Defrocked pastor promoting documentary about own gay sex scandal


(Washington) Disgraced evangelical leader Ted Haggard has agreed to help promote a new documentary following his life in exile after a 2006 gay sex scandal – no longer bound by an agreement with his former church that prohibited him from talking publicly about the events that led to his downfall.

“The Trials of Ted Haggard,” directed by Alexandra Pelosi, daughter of U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, is set to air next month on HBO. Haggard has agreed to take part in publicity for the project, HBO said.

“We look forward to presenting the film, Ted Haggard and his family at a press tour in Los Angeles next month,” a spokeswoman for the cable network said Wednesday.

Haggard’s latest return to the public eye comes after he re-emerged last month at a rural Illinois church, where he delivered guest sermons and said he was sexually abused as a second-grader.

Haggard, 52, resigned as president of the National Association of Evangelicals and was fired as senior pastor of New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colo., in November 2006 after a former male prostitute went public with allegations that Haggard paid him for sex and used methamphetamine.

A married father of five, Haggard said he bought the drugs but never used them. He confessed to undisclosed “sexual immorality” and has said, “I really did sin.”

In February, New Life Church announced that Haggard prematurely ended a “restoration” process designed to help him heal.

Neither Pelosi nor Haggard responded to requests for comment on the documentary, which is scheduled to first air Jan. 29. However, a Web site for a Toronto-based entertainment company that promotes HBO and other television projects describes it as “a behind-scenes-look at the rise and fall of Pastor Ted Haggard.”

The 41-minute documentary “follows Haggard and his family as they move from houses to motels as the excommunicated pastor tries to redeem himself and support his loved ones,” it says.

Haggard was not excommunicated, but rather dismissed as pastor by a church oversight board. Under a severance deal with New Life Church, Haggard agreed to leave Colorado Springs and not talk about the scandal publicly, church officials said. He received a year’s salary, or about $130,000.

The deal expired at the end of 2007, which allowed Haggard to move his family back to their Colorado Springs home, the church’s new pastor, Brady Boyd, said earlier this year. But Haggard continued to tell reporters last summer and again this fall that he was forbidden to talk to the press.

Boyd said Wednesday that church leadership decided in the last few weeks to release Haggard and his wife, Gayle, from any legal obligations. He said they can do as they wish, including promote the documentary.

“They are not acting outside any parameters we set for them,” said Boyd, who recently met with Haggard. “We want them to be free to move forward with their lives the way New Life has really moved forward.”

Haggard moved his family to Arizona after the scandal, and also lived in Texas. He is now selling insurance. At the Illinois church last month, he was introduced as a “Christian businessman,” hinting at a possible future speaking to churches and organizations about his experiences.

His public return was criticized as premature by a former counselor and church members who think his sins cost him any public role, but allies say Haggard has a gift and calling that cannot be suppressed.

Haggard was prominently featured in the 2007 HBO documentary “Friends of God: A Road Trip with Alexandra Pelosi,” which was filmed before the scandal.


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  • DBKellar Said: December 31st, 2008 at 4:05 pm
    • This man is ridiculous. Anything to make a quick buck! He is so sad that he has to use every accuse to deny who he truly is inside. I dont feel sorry for the man whatsoever. Who cares if you’re gay, just come out already and be happy, instead of living your life in pity and regret and falling in these horrible traps.

  • Ladybird Said: December 22nd, 2008 at 8:56 am
    • I think that Ted Haggard will be judged by God. However, how his wife can stay with him after what he admitted to, proves that either she is a very needy person, or she’s truly a Saint! As for Mr. Jones, well, I think he is quite an opportunist. He could have handled this in a different way I’m sure.

  • Dan Said: December 21st, 2008 at 12:23 pm
    • Way to go Ted! You are a wonderful promoter of atheism! Thank you. I also thank Mike Jones for both his courage and also for his wonderful TV appearances. He looked like a movie star, and Ted Haggard looked like a lying whore caught in the act.

  • Denverguy Said: December 20th, 2008 at 10:31 pm
    • I have known Mike socially for years. His timing could not have been worse with the amendments we had on the ballot that year and what was going on with political figures in the news at the time. He was not a “hero” among a lot of members of the gay community here. He made money off of this and said so. I saw him at the opening night of a gay themed Broadway show. I have never seen him at the opening of any shows in Denver.

  • David Cox Said: December 19th, 2008 at 8:48 am
    • $130,000 a year, with hunky Mike Jones as one of the perks?! Had I known preachers got all that, I would have grown up to be one, too.

  • RMNY Said: December 19th, 2008 at 8:29 am
    • Was he really abused as a second grader?
      I didn’t know he was Catholic.

  • TANK Said: December 18th, 2008 at 8:10 pm
    • No dignity.

  • Dave Hughes Said: December 18th, 2008 at 4:12 pm
    • This is tawdry and pitiful. I wonder how much money he is getting for doing this, as well as how much he will be able to rake in for a book deal (which you know is coming).

      Can’t disgraced public figures just recede quietly into obscurity?

  • Alex Parrish Said: December 18th, 2008 at 12:54 pm
    • Haggard is still looking for someone other than himself to blame;

      “said he was sexually abused as a second-grader.”

      “said he bought the drugs but never used them.”

      As the recovery community often says, “Denial ain’t just a river in Egypt.”

      What a sad, sorry excuse for a man. Too bad he is so needy that he cannot take himself out of the spotlight and feels the need to bring attention to his inadequacy. Someone should start a ‘club’ for defrocked mega-ministers; maybe Jimmy Swaggert could host the first meeting.

  • TheRadicalRealist Said: December 18th, 2008 at 11:45 am
    • Who the hell could stomach watching this filthy bastard for 41 whole minutes?

  • Raymond Daniel Said: December 18th, 2008 at 9:45 am
    • I personally know Mike Jones. I wonder if Mr. Haggard will include Mike in his documentary? It’ll be interesting to hear what Mike has to say the next time I see him at the gym!

 
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