November 21st, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Parish rift forms at prominent Florida megachurch


(Miami) Descendants of two of the country’s most influential evangelical leaders – Billy Graham and the late D. James Kennedy – are feuding over control of a Florida megachurch that is a bedrock of the religious right.

Under the leadership of Kennedy, the former pastor who died in 2007, Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church was a forerunner to modern evangelical megachurches and a fiercely conservative voice on social issues like homosexuality and abortion in the mostly liberal, Democratic city of Fort Lauderdale.

Graham’s grandson, Tullian Tchividjian, took over earlier this year as its pastor.

But some Kennedy loyalists, including his daughter Jennifer Kennedy Cassidy, are upset with the direction Tchividjian is taking the church and have called for his ouster.

Tchividjian cuts a far different image from Kennedy. His hair is spiky, his beard sometimes scruffy, his skin tan. He has forgone wearing a choir robe at services, as Kennedy had.

And while he has shown no sign of theological differences with Kennedy, he has rejected politics as the most important way to change the country, while Kennedy was extremely active in politics as an influential Christian broadcaster.

Cassidy and five other members recently circulated a letter with a petition urging a meeting to consider the firing of Tchividjian, indicating he had misled them in their search for a new pastor.

Dissenters at the church have been vague in their criticism of Tchividjian’s leadership. Their letter called him “a disaster” who has shown “a complete lack of respect” and made “grievous missteps.”

They lament the merger with Tchividjian’s former church, the far smaller New City Presbyterian, saying “their staff has taken complete control.”

“We were told many things that all sounded good at the time, but in fact those soothing words have largely proven empty and it keeps getting worse,” the dissenters wrote. “They range from preferences bordering on the mundane to violations of ethical standards that have guarded the purity of the church for decades.”

Tchividjian dismissed the dissenters as “a super small but very vocal minority” in an e-mail message to The Associated Press, but referred calls to Bill Ashcraft, a longtime member and church elder. Ashcraft estimated fewer than 100 of the church’s roughly 2,000 members support the pastor’s dismissal.

“They would like for things to be exactly as they were under Pastor Kennedy,” Ashcraft said. “We didn’t bring Tullian Tchividjian to Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church to do exactly what D. James Kennedy was doing.”

After the Coral Ridge members circulated the first letter, Tchividjian called a meeting to address their concerns, but Ashcraft said none of the dissenters attended, instead sending a second letter. After that, they were told they were not welcome at the church until an internal judicial process was complete.

“They spelled out some vague complaints for the pastor but they didn’t ask for any modification of anything. They just asked to sign a petition to sever this pastor’s relationship with the church,” Ashcraft said. “It’s hard to negotiate with people like that.”

Jim Filosa, a Coral Ridge elder who along with his wife is among those disciplined by the church, said he couldn’t discuss the matter in detail. Cassidy and others who were disciplined didn’t return calls seeking comment, but Filosa said Kennedy’s daughter shouldn’t be described as the effort’s ringleader.

“She is just one voice in many,” he said.

Cassidy still remains on the board of Coral Ridge Ministries, the broadcast ministry founded by her father that is technically separate from the church, though it is closely affiliated. A spokesman for Coral Ridge Ministries, John Aman, released a statement saying despite Cassidy’s involvement in the leadership challenge, there was no further comment.

Ashcraft said the hope is that the dissenters eventually rejoin the fold. In an Aug. 6 letter to congregants, Tchividjian wrote “No church government can tolerate such an insurrection from those who will not listen to admonition, refuse all counsel and will stop at nothing until they have overthrown legitimate authority and replaced it with their own.”

Tchividjian, 37, is the middle of seven children born to Stephan Tchividjian and Graham’s eldest daughter, Gigi. He attended Coral Ridge and its adjacent school as a young man and Graham officiated at the church’s dedication ceremony. Tchividjian eventually dropped out, spending about five years partying on South Beach before recommitting to Christ, joining the seminary and becoming a minister.

Coral Ridge’s founding in 1959 marked the creation of what would become one of the country’s first megachurches. It had been without a pastor from Kennedy’s death in September 2007 until Tchividjian was appointed in March.


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  • Craig Church Said: August 14th, 2009 at 9:31 am
    • My heart BLEEDS at the thought of a “church” in turmoil (yeah right) I hope the bastards sue each other into the poorhouse.

  • Drewski Said: August 13th, 2009 at 2:38 pm
    • @Don Roberts–You don’t see how the Church of the Holy Wackjob is a gay news story? Then maybe you need to learn a little more about Coral Ridge. That church seems to think it can dictate public policy in Ft Lauderdale and Broward County, things like doing everything it can to keep government in gay bedrooms. Is that enough of a gay news story for you? Or how about the former CEO of AOL, Steve Case (this is back when AOL mattered), leaving the impression that his family’s involvement with that church could also have an impact on content policy at a (then-)primary internet provider? Does that make the cut? How about when there was a scandal about local politicians–some involved with the church–getting caught on camera with a cop, whose husband was a voyeur with a video camera. When those same politicians ramble on about morality, including gays being immoral, does that meet your threshold of gay content?

  • bama-stu Said: August 13th, 2009 at 2:34 pm
    • CmxfanM: LMAO – I did just as you suggested (YouTube) and you are so right! My Gaydar was pinging off the scale lol

  • CmxfanM Said: August 13th, 2009 at 1:43 pm
    • Tullian raises my Gaydar a 100%, youtube him and you’ll see-that is if you believe in Gaydar.

  • Sporty_g Said: August 13th, 2009 at 9:29 am
    • …“They spelled out some vague complaints… but they didn’t ask for any modification of anything. They just asked to sign a petition to sever this…relationship…,” Ashcraft said. “It’s hard to negotiate with people like that.”

      Gosh! sure sounds like something that we have been saying about their entire attack on the GLBT community!
      Funny, that small, closed minds will even fight among themselves, even when they can’t tell you why they are fighting. 4000 years of religious fighting in the middle east and no one has yet to figure out the problem with religion? We have a microcosm of the problem and it is right down in Ft. Lauderdale! I say let them fight and splinter! At least then the GLBT community can laugh at them as the self destructive hateful idiots that they are showing themselves to be.

  • Facebook User Said: August 12th, 2009 at 7:48 pm
    • Oh heaven, churches have been splitting and splintering for years. Let ‘em split.

  • Mo Rage Said: August 12th, 2009 at 6:13 pm
    • Okay, now maybe we can move on, culturally and in all other ways and rank and rate and judge these people on what they’re on these shows for in the first place–they’re talent. It would be/will be nice if/when we can be post-everything–post-racial, everything. We need to just look at the individual and/or their work and not judge what color they are or what sexual preference they have or how tall they are or whatever.

      “Post-everything.”

      I like it.

      Mo Rage
      The Blog and blogger

  • Wayne M. Said: August 12th, 2009 at 5:47 pm
    • This can be a good opportunity for the Coral Ridge church to examine their attitudes toward LGBT people. Churches have two choices. They can respond to the call of Christ to bring ALL people unto Him, or they can follow the sad story of the church in America and some other parts of the world by continuing to exclude people and separate people from Christ through racism, sexism and homophobia/transphobia. For this reason, this event IS important for many of us who are Gay and Christian.

  • Don Roberts Said: August 12th, 2009 at 5:21 pm
    • The last time I looked this was a gay website for news and information relating to our lives. How does a conservative right wing Christian church’s issues affect us? Are they too busy with internal politics to bash us? I think not….just give them an issue or a scapegoat and we’ll still be in their bullseye.

  • Draigh Lunara Said: August 12th, 2009 at 3:58 pm
    • I wonder if these dissenters are getting thier orders from the Republican party and the way they are disrupting the townhall meetings? It just goes to show that people like this only want one way, thiers and all others be damned. I guess they are as far as they are concerned.
      May Goddess Bless Those Who Learn and Grow!
      Blessed Be!
      Rev. Draigh Lunara

  • Chris Sullivan Said: August 12th, 2009 at 3:16 pm
    • Ah, the inner workings of contemporary cults. How amusing.

 
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