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  2. Paula White - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paula_White

    According to the book Holy Mavericks, meeting this third-generation preacher was a turning point in her life. The two divorced their spouses in 1989 and married each other a year later, White becoming stepmother to his children. [84] [83] Shortly thereafter, they moved to Tampa, Florida, and started Without Walls International Church. [85]

  3. Larry Lea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Lea

    After 27 years of marriage, Larry filed for divorce in April 1999. [2] During the divorce, his wife attended Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary . [ 2 ] Lea's son John started the Life Church in Rockwall , Texas in the same Dallas suburb where Larry and his ex-wife began Church on the Rock in 1980. [ 2 ]

  4. Greg Locke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greg_Locke

    In 1995, Locke and Biggers became engaged. They have four children, two of whom are adopted. In January 2018, Locke confirmed in a video posted to Facebook that he and Biggers had separated, [27] and the divorce was finalized in May. [28] Locke married Tai Cowan McGee in 2018. Prior to their marriage, she was his administrative assistant.

  5. Church of God of Prophecy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_God_of_Prophecy

    After a week-long discussion between members at this same General Assembly, the Church changed its long-standing interpretation of acceptable reasons for divorce and remarriage. The Church agreed that people who had been divorced (for the cause of fornication) and were later remarried may become members of the Church of God of Prophecy. There ...

  6. Jimmy Creech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Creech

    Afterward, Creech became a founding member of the North Carolina Religious Coalition for Marriage Equality, an interfaith same-sex marriage advocacy group, [5] [6] co-author of the Dallas Principles, [7] was a participant in the Marriage Equality Express, and became Board Chairman of the North Carolina Social Justice Project, [8] a progressive policy and advocacy organization dedicated to ...

  7. Kenneth Copeland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Copeland

    Kenneth Max Copeland was born on December 6, 1936, [1] raised in West Texas near a United States Army Air Forces airfield. This inspired him to become a pilot. [2] [3]Copeland was a recording artist on the Imperial Records label, having one Billboard Top 40 hit, "Pledge of Love", which charted in the Top 40 on April 20, 1957, stayed on the charts for 15 weeks, and peaked at No. 17.

  8. Christian views on divorce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_views_on_divorce

    For those who have been divorced and remarried prior to receiving the New Birth, many Methodist connexions, such as the Bible Methodist Connection of Churches in its 2018 Book of Discipline, teach: [60] We recognize that, in today's society, many have divorced and remarried while yet unsaved or unenlightened to the Scripture's teaching.

  9. Open Bible Churches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Bible_Churches

    Hornshuh disagreed with the AFM's isolationist stance from other full gospel groups, centralized and authoritarian leadership style, and its strict position on divorce and remarriage. The Open Bible Evangelistic Association began in 1932 when thirty-two ministers led by John R. and Louise H. Richey left the International Church of the ...