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Amy Grant Settles Case Over Nashville Church Founded by Her Great-Grandfather

Church building was allegedly taken over in 2018 and no longer used as a church.

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Six-time Grammy winner Amy Grant, who gained much of her notoriety through her Christian songs, has agreed to a legal settlement about a church founded by her great-grandfather in downtown Nashville, Tenn., according to the Wall Street Journal.

Amy Grant performs at Dove Awards in 2019, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo via RNS/Mark Humphrey)

The boarded-up red brick building, now worth at least $11 million, served for decades as the Central Church of Christ, founded in 1925 by A.M. Burton. During its heyday, the church was involved in providing housing, daycare, food, and a free library in addition to its worship services.

Burton’s sermons were broadcast through a radio station that he founded.

He died when Grant was just 5 years old, but his life “cast a beautiful shadow” over her life, she told the WSJ.

The church had deed restrictions that required the building to operate as a church, or it would revert to the Burton estate.

Through the mid-2010s, Central Church of Christ continued to have generous revenue that it garnered from two adjacent downtown parking lots, resulting in $3 million in the bank.

Despite its hefty bank account, its membership dwindled to a few dozen people, most of them elderly.

Central Church of Christ / Photo by Spencer Heaton from 2018 via Google Maps

Introducing Shawn Mathis

In 2017, businessman Shawn Mathis began attending Central Church of Christ. Howell Townes, a long-time member, remembers welcoming him, telling the WSJ that Mathis impressed congregants with his credentials and connections.

Townes said Mathis began inquiring about church finances and was eager to become an elder. It wasn’t long before Mathis gained control of the elder board, Townes said.

Andy Burton, Grant’s cousin, said he heard from a friend in 2018 that “people [were] kind of being chased away” from Central Church of Christ. He checked on the building and found it boarded up and the new sign for Nashville Church of Christ.

That’s when Mathis is alleged to have seized control of the church and its assets, renaming it Nashville Church of Christ, and launching an online ministry. However, he didn’t hold church services in the building.

Mathis told the WSJ the congregation voted to adopt a resolution converting to Nashville Church of Christ, a nonprofit corporation.

Court battle

In 2019, Grant and other Burton descendants hired an attorney to investigate Mathis and his takeover of the church. The renamed church then sued Grant to invalidate the deed restrictions.

The court documents asserted that Mathis pushed out longtime members and installed a handful of supporters to gain control of the church — a process that Burton’s descendants called “steeple-jacking.”

Mathis’s lawyer, on the other hand, claimed the church was engaged in mission work supporting Church of Christ congregations around the world via online ministry.

Photo via Google Maps

The case settlement, which was agreed upon on Oct. 8, 2025, requires that the building must be sold at fair market value with 80% of the proceeds going to the Burton family and the Mathis side receiving 20%.

Mathis “made the strategic decision to settle the very narrow litigation relation to certain deed restrictions,” his lawyer told the WSJ, and will use the proceeds to support global mission efforts.

Grant told the WSJ she has been in talks with groups and philanthropists about setting up a large center to assist homeless persons in downtown Nashville.

“It would be amazing to have a downtown location for that,” she said. “We sure need it.”

About $600,000 in back taxes are owed on the property, and those will be divided between the parties with the Burton descendants paying $50,000 and the Mathis group paying the remainder.

Townes told WSJ he was disappointed the Mathis group will receive any proceeds.

“He’s getting paid extremely well for shutting down the Lord’s church in downtown Nashville,” Townes told the WSJ.

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The state attorney general’s office is also conducting an investigation into the Nashville Church of Christ finances. Last year, it filed a civil lawsuit against the church for improperly commingling missionary funds with other money. Mathis denies any wrongdoing.

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Kim Roberts

Kim Roberts is an award-winning freelance writer who holds a Juris Doctorate with high honors from Baylor University and an undergraduate degree in government with highest honors from Angelo State University. She has three young adult children who were home schooled and is happily married to her husband of 30 years.

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