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Paula Michelle White-Cain (née Furr; born April 20, 1966) is an American televangelist and a proponent of prosperity theology. White was chair of the evangelical advisory board to Donald Trump's 2016 campaign. [ 1 ] She delivered the invocation at his inauguration, on January 20, 2017. [ 2 ] She is the first female clergy member to deliver the ...
Bethel Assembly of God Church, Bethel AG Church, Bangalore (20,000) Hope Assembly of God Church, Chennai (5,000) Full Gospel Assembly of God, Bangalore (7,000) Mark Buntain Memorial Assembly of God Church (4,000) Victory International AG Church, Bangalore (4,000) Calvary AG Church, Salem, Tamil Nadu (3000) Calvary Assemblies of God, KGF Karnataka.
Gateway Church is considered the largest megachurch in the United States, with an average weekly attendance of 100,000. This is a list of the largest megachurches in the United States with an attendance of more than 10,000 weekly, sometimes also termed a gigachurch. [1][2] According to The Hartford Institute's database, approximately 50 ...
Elevation Church. Elevation Church is an Evangelical non-denominational multi-site megachurch based in Charlotte, North Carolina. Weekly church attendance was 14,000 people in 2023. Elevation has 20 locations. [1] Its senior pastors are Steven Furtick and Holly Furtick.
History. Overlake Christian Church began in Kirkland, Washington, in 1969 with a handful of former attendees of Bellevue Christian Church. James Earl Ladd, then president of Puget Sound College of the Bible in the nearby city of Mountlake Terrace, agreed to serve as a temporary, part-time pastor/preacher until a replacement could be found.
Tacoma, Washington; Other. New Destiny Christian Center, a church previously led by Paula White; See also. Destiny (disambiguation) This ...
Capital Christian, wrecked reputationally and financially by self-serving, egotistic leaders, will soon be taken over by Destiny’s own self-serving, egotistic leadership team.
National Community Church held its first Sunday service on January 7, 1996. During the first nine months of 1996, average attendance at Sunday services was between 20 and 25 people. At the time, all meetings were at the Joshua R. Giddings school in southeast Washington, DC, but the school was closed due to fire code violations. [1] [2]