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WWCR is a shortwave radio station located in Nashville, Tennessee, in the United States.WWCR uses four 100 kW transmitters to broadcast on about a dozen frequencies.. WWCR mainly leases out its four transmitters to religious organizations and speakers, as well as serving as the shortwave home of Genesis Communications Network's programs. [1]
Creflo Augustus Dollar Jr. [2] (born January 28, 1962) is an American pastor, televangelist, and the founder of the non-denominational Christian World Changers Church International based in College Park, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta. [3]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=World_Changers_Church_International&oldid=77812747"
The missions agency for World Changers was the North American Mission Board until 2011, when LifeWay took over. The organization's first service projects began in the summer of 1990. The host city of the first project was Briceville, Tennessee. In 1992, World Changers expanded abroad with a project in Ciudad Victoria, Mexico. [21]
World Christian Broadcasting is a non-profit Christian organization that operates international shortwave radio shortwave stations. The station's transmitters are in Alaska and the Indian Ocean, and all of its programs are produced at the company headquarters and broadcast operations center in Franklin, Tennessee , a suburb of Nashville.
Gregory Dickow is the founder and senior pastor of Life Changers International Church, a nondenominational charismatic megachurch based in Hoffman Estates, Illinois.His messages are broadcast via The Power to Change Today, a syndicated television program on Trinity Broadcasting Network, [1] [2] Daystar, [3] The Church Channel, [4] and Word Networks.
KNLS broadcast towers. KNLS broadcasts daily for ten hours in Mandarin, five hours in Russian, and five hours in English. The station's Operations Center in Franklin, Tennessee, near Nashville, produces the programming, which follows a magazine-style format featuring Bible teachings, religious segments, reports on life in America, and music.
The facility started in 1993 with a $5.5 million gift from the George S. and Dolores Dore Eccles Foundation and included 59,191 square feet (5,499.0 m 2). [3] An expansion, completed in 2001, added 40,307 square feet (3,744.6 m 2).