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Harvest Bible Chapel disclosed this week that it gave all digital and physical assets of Walk in the Word—including $1.2 million and a parcel of land—to its disgraced former pastor, James MacDonald, in a recent ...
Chicago-area Republic Bank has stopped foreclosure proceedings against disgraced celebrity preacher, James MacDonald, and reinstated MacDonald’s mortgage on his $1.5 million Elgin estate.
Seven months after launching a Home Church Network (HcN) for those who “struggle to get to church or to stay in church,” former celebrity pastor, James MacDonald, is suspending the program.
Ousted pastor and founder James MacDonald and Harvest Bible Chapel have reached an undisclosed agreement after months of arbitration involving MacDonald’s termination last year and the ownership of his former broadcast ministry, Walk in the ...
This month’s MinistryWatch list is a departure for us because it is not a list curated from our own database. It is a list of all evangelical Christian ministries and churches that received at least ...
James MacDonald, the founder of megachurch Harvest Bible Chapel, is currently in danger of losing his home in Elgin, Ill., after he has failed to pay his mortgage with the Republic Bank of Chicago, according to court ...
Well-known evangelical groups receive funds – including Ligonier Ministries, Willow Creek, Harvest Bible Chapel, and David C. Cook
Religious organizations, including churches and Christian non-profits, received at least $6-billion in COVID relief funds. The funds were a part of the Paycheck Protection Program run by the Small Business Administration, according to a list ...
Former Harvest Bible Chapel Pastor James MacDonald plans to return to the pulpit this weekend.
Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared at The Roys Report. It is re-printed with permission. Former Harvest Bible Chapel Chief Information Officer, Jeffery Parham, has been charged with four counts of felony theft for ...
Harvest Bible Chapel owes more than $500,000 in property taxes after officials said one of its suburban Chicago campuses was wrongly categorized as eligible for tax exemption.