Disgraced pastor has a “resurrection” – and develops a “compassion” for gays

CREEPY evangelist Ted Haggard, whose enormous influence and power in the US once rested on a foundation of bigotry and homophobia, is trying desperately to wheedle his way back into public favour.

Ted Haggard welcomes the faithful to his home

Ted Haggard welcomes the faithful to his home

The former pastor, who headed the National Association of Evangelicals, and ran the New Life Church in Colorado Springs, fell spectacularly from grace in 2006

He was exposed as a liar and a hypocrite after it emerged that he had paid  a male prostitute for sex over a period of three years whilst aggressively denouncing same-sex unions from the pulpit.

Haggard – married with has five children – initially said the sexual allegations were false, and admitted only to receiving “a massage” from his accuser and buying drugs from him.

But he later confessed to “sexual immorality” and deeply-rooted gay feelings. He resigned as President of the NAE, and was also  forced out of the mega-church he founded.

As part of a severance package with New Life Church, Haggard agreed to leave Colorado Springs for a period and not speak publicly about the scandal. The family moved back to their $700,000 home down the road from New Life Church in 2007.

Earlier this year, Haggard admitted he had an “inappropriate” relationship with a church volunteer a few years ago. He insisted that the relationship with the man, who was 22 at the time, did not involve physical contact.

His latest attempt to climb back on the Christian carousel took place at his home in Colorado Springs last Thursday, where, according to this report, he held a “well-attended” prayer meeting. The 53-year-old told reporters:

For the people who come tonight, that means they believe in the resurrection in me … I died. I was buried.

He added with a grimace:

People find it hard to stomach me. I understand.

Many of those who attended carried cookies, pies, and brownies along with their Bibles. By the time prayers began, more than 50 cars were parked outside the home. Reporters weren’t allowed inside.

The one-time evangelical superstar insisted that his intent is not to start a new church, but he isn’t ruling out the possibility. He said the reason for starting prayer meetings after three years of exile was a simple one.

We were getting lonely.

And he probably needs MONEY!

Said Alan Hawkins, a pastor from Albuquerque, New Mexico, who travelled to Colorado Springs to be at the prayer meeting:

The essence of our faith as Christians is to forgive. When this thing happened, I said, ‘Ted, nobody is defined by their worst moments.’

A day before the meeting, Haggard  said in a TV interview that his trials in recent years had made him more compassionate towards gay people.

Sick bag, anyone?