Hubbry Logo
NewSpring ChurchNewSpring ChurchMain
Open search
NewSpring Church
Community hub
NewSpring Church
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
NewSpring Church
NewSpring Church
from Wikipedia

NewSpring Church is a Baptist Evangelical multi-site megachurch based in Anderson, South Carolina.

Key Information

History

[edit]

The church was founded in January 2000 with a handful of people in a living room. Since then, it has grown to 13 locations across the state of South Carolina.[1][2][3] In addition to gathering at multiple campuses across the state, NewSpring has established an online campus to connect with individuals who cannot join in person.

In 2016, the weekly attendance was 33,000 people. [4]

Announced July 10, 2016, founder Perry Noble was removed as Senior Pastor by the church's leadership team effective July 1, 2016 for personal issues related to alcohol and neglect of his family.[5]

A year later it was announced that NewSpring would be led by a team of Lead Pastors (Brad Cooper, Michael Mullikin, Tyler Tatum, David Hall, Lee McDerment, and Riley Cummings) and Teaching Pastors (Brad Cooper, Clayton King, Dan Lian, and Meredith Knox) would share the stage on Sundays.[6][7]

In 2016, the church was left with a $47 million debt,[8] but paid this down year on year, so that in March 2023 it was able to announce it was debt free.[9]

In November 2018, CBS News ranked NewSpring Church as the eight largest megachurch in the United States with about 23,055 weekly visitors.[10]

According to a church census released in 2023, it claimed a weekly attendance of 10,000 people.[11]

The church is based in Anderson, SC. It operates satellite campuses in 12 other South Carolina cities.[12]

In April 2025, due to criticism from pastors of other churches regarding the hiring of a female pastor at NewSpring, which contradicts the Southern Baptist Convention's statement of faith, which professes that pastoral ministry is reserved for men, it terminated its membership with the Convention, in order to preserve unity in the body of Christ.[13]

Beliefs

[edit]

The Church has a Baptist confession of faith.[14]

Regarding why NewSpring does not include Baptist in its name, founding pastor Perry Noble said “denominational loyalty is at an all-time low” and “Jesus did not die for denominations, he died for the church.”[15]

Ministries

[edit]

NewSpring has many ministries within the church. Here is a list of active ministries of NewSpring Church.

  • KidSpring (Children's Ministry)
  • [FUSE] (Student Ministry)
  • NewSpring Worship (Worship Ministry)
  • NewSpring Missions (Missions)

NewSpring Worship

[edit]
NewSpring Worship
Also known asNewSpring
OriginAnderson, South Carolina
GenresWorship
Years active2010 (2010)–present
Websitenewspringworship.com

NewSpring Worship is an American Christian music worship group from Anderson, South Carolina, established in 2010 at NewSpring Church. They have released 5 albums, 4 EPs, and 11 singles. They play worship music for the congregation at their services.[16]

The group began recording in 2010, with the album Our God Is Love, released January 1, 2010.[17]

Sexual Abuse Cases

[edit]

NewSpring Church volunteers had multiple child sex abuse allegations and over a dozen victims. [18][19][20]

In 2016, youth group volunteer Leo LaSalle Comissiong, then 20, was charged with third-degree criminal sexual conduct with a minor. In February 2016, Comissiong allegedly kissed and fondled a 15-year-old boy in NewSpring campus in Florence, SC. [21][18] In April 2016, Comissiong admitted to investigators that he fondled and kissed the boy. He pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of assault and was sentenced to three years probation. [20]

In May 2016, church volunteer Chaz Wood, then 23, was charged with one count of Criminal Sexual Conduct with a Minor. According to police report, Wood fondled a 10-year-old boy on December 6, 2015. He was a volunteer at the NewSpring campus in Anderson, SC. [22] In December 2017, Wood pleaded guilty to a charge of assault and battery.[18] Wood is listed in the Houston Chronicle's database of sexual abusers in Southern Baptist churches. [23]

Church volunteer Jacop Hazlett, then 28, was charged with first-degree criminal sexual conduct with a minor on November 28, 2018. Investigators said Hazlett molested a three year old in a bathroom on the NewSpring campus in North Charleston, SC on November 25, 2018.[24] Hazlett was charged with sexually assaulting at least 14 preschool age boys in the church. The church claimed that Hazlett passed a background check; however, at 17, he was charged with gross sexual imposition of a young boy in Columbiana County, Ohio. [25][18] Between 2011 and 2015, Hazlett volunteered with The Cove Church and Elevation Church in the Charlotte, NC area. In both churches, concerns were raised against Hazlett and he was moved to positions away from children.[26] On December 12, 2019, following a two-day jury trial, Hazlett was found guilty of sexually abusing several minors and was sentenced to 75 years in prison. [27]

In 2019, the sexual abuse victims of Hazlett filed five personal injury lawsuits against NewSpring Church. According to a lawsuit's initial complaint, NewSpring failed to contact the two churches in North Carolina that Hazlett used to volunteer with but was asked to leave due to "concerns about his behavior around children." The final lawsuit against the church was settled in November 2023. [28]

Notable Members

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
NewSpring Church is a evangelical headquartered in , operating 13 campuses across the state and emphasizing multi-ethnic, multi-generational outreach to foster relationships with God. Founded in January 2000 by as a study that rapidly expanded into a multi-campus network, the church has become South Carolina's largest by attendance, drawing thousands weekly through in-person services, online streaming, and specialized ministries like children's programs. The church's growth trajectory includes significant achievements such as high weekly engagement—peaking at nearly 40,000 attendees in 2014—and initiatives like the NewSpring Network for and , reflecting a focus on scalable, life-giving ministry models. However, NewSpring has faced defining controversies, most prominently the 2016 removal of founder and senior pastor by the church's board for issues including alcohol dependency, family neglect, and doctrinal deviations, which led to a period of attendance decline and organizational reinvention. In a more recent development, NewSpring voluntarily disaffiliated from the in April 2025, citing ongoing tensions over its practice of employing women in teaching pastor roles, which conflicted with the SBC's complementarian framework despite the convention's credentials committee opting against formal disfellowship. This stance underscores the church's egalitarian leanings in , distinguishing it from stricter traditional Baptist affiliations while prioritizing internal and mission continuity.

Founding and Historical Development

Origins and Initial Expansion (2000–2010)

Perry Noble, who had been ordained into ministry in 1995 and gained experience through local church involvement, founded in , after leading a study group in his apartment starting in 1998. The church was formally incorporated as New Spring Community Church via paperwork filed on November 22, 1999, and held its inaugural service on January 16, 2000, drawing 115 attendees to a local venue. From its outset, NewSpring emphasized a contemporary, seeker-sensitive approach, featuring casual services with modern music, video elements, and Noble's straightforward preaching style targeted at those unfamiliar with traditional church settings, rather than formal . Initial growth was driven by community outreach, word-of-mouth referrals, and early adoption of media tools like recorded sermons distributed online and via portable formats, which extended reach beyond in-person gatherings. By February 2006, the church relocated to a larger facility on S.C. 81 North in Anderson, accommodating approximately 7,000 attendees at the debut services there, marking a surge from the dozens in early years. This expansion reflected pragmatic strategies such as high-energy worship events and targeted , contributing to weekly attendance climbing into the thousands by mid-decade. A pivotal milestone occurred in July 2008 with the launch of the first satellite campus in , utilizing video-cast preaching from the Anderson hub to replicate services regionally and prioritize accessibility for suburban populations. By , for its tenth anniversary celebration at the Bi-Lo Center, NewSpring had far exceeded its original projections of 1,000 attendees, demonstrating sustained momentum through consistent programming and local partnerships, though exact figures for that year remain undocumented in primary records. The church maintained loose ties to Southern Baptist networks during this period, focusing operationally on autonomous growth rather than denominational oversight.

Period of Rapid Growth and Challenges (2011–2016)

During the early 2010s, NewSpring Church expanded its multi-campus model by launching the Spartanburg campus on Easter Sunday in 2011, utilizing video feeds of sermons from the Anderson headquarters to facilitate services across locations. This approach enabled simultaneous worship experiences, with the Spartanburg site initially hosting services at a Marriott before relocating to a former building in 2014 due to rapid attendance increases. By 2013, the church initiated a major building campaign aimed at adding seven additional satellite campuses, reflecting projections of statewide weekly attendance exceeding 100,000 by 2020, though actual figures reached an average of 33,761 by 2016. Baptism numbers served as a key empirical indicator of growth, with the church reporting 2,335 across its 10 campuses during dedicated services in September 2014, alongside 733 teenager baptisms at its annual summer youth camp that year. These underscored a focus on measurable conversions, contributing to NewSpring's ranking among the fastest-growing U.S. churches, with a 21 percent increase from 2015 to 2016 alone. The period also saw cultural outputs like the 2014 release of the NewSpring Worship album Salvation Rise, which amplified the church's emphasis on tied to evangelistic . Amid this surge, internal pressures emerged, including leadership strain evidenced by senior pastor Perry Noble's 2012 sermon series "Overwhelmed," where he addressed personal battles with worry and exhaustion as focal points for congregational teaching. Noble's 2014 Overwhelmed: Winning the War against Worry further detailed these experiences, drawing from his role in sustaining the megachurch's pace and highlighting risks of unsustainable demands, such as impending burnout from relentless expansion. Such disclosures reflected causal tensions between rapid scaling—via video-fed campuses and high-volume events—and the human limits of centralized leadership, even as the model prioritized quantifiable outcomes like baptisms over anecdotal spiritual metrics.

Post-Founding Leadership Transitions and Stabilization (2017–Present)

Following Perry Noble's removal in July 2016, Clayton King served as interim of NewSpring Church, providing continuity during a period of uncertainty. In July 2017, church elders announced a shift to a plural leadership structure, with King transitioning to one of several lead alongside others, marking the end of the search for a single permanent successor. By September 2018, the church formalized this team-based model in its bylaws, symbolically designating Jesus Christ as while distributing responsibilities among a group of lead and teaching , including King as teaching pastor, to distribute authority and reduce reliance on individual leaders. This approach, articulated by King as adaptive rather than prescriptive for all churches, aimed to foster collective governance. The reconfiguration supported operational stabilization, enabling the church to eliminate $47 million in by 2018 and sustain operations across multiple campuses despite earlier declines from a peak of approximately 33,000 weekly in 2016 to around 10,000 by 2023. Under the team model, lead pastors such as Brad Cooper for culture and direction, Riley Cummings for campuses, and David Hall for ministries oversaw continued expansion to 13 locations in , with no reported consolidations but investments in permanent facilities like the Aiken campus. This structure emphasized resilience through shared decision-making, allowing the church to rebound from financial and pressures without a singular . In March 2025, NewSpring Church formally withdrew from the (SBC), notifying the SBC Executive Committee on March 26 to prioritize local amid escalating denominational debates over women in roles. The decision stemmed from the church's practice of employing female teaching pastors, which clashed with SBC efforts to restrict such positions, as evidenced by inquiries and convention resolutions; elders stated the affiliation risked distracting from focus and unity. This move underscored the church's commitment to over external alignment, preserving its egalitarian-leaning ministry practices amid broader SBC membership declines.

Theological Beliefs and Doctrinal Stance

Core Evangelical Principles

NewSpring Church affirms the doctrine of the , positing one eternal existing in three distinct persons—Father, Son, and —who are co-equal and co-eternal, as foundational to Christian . This view aligns with historic evangelical confessions, emphasizing 's sovereignty as Creator and sustainer of all things, unchanging in nature and character. The church's teachings underscore that humanity, marred by inherent sinfulness, stands in need of divine redemption, rejecting self-reliant efforts toward moral improvement as insufficient to atone for transgression. Central to its soteriology is by grace alone through in Christ's atoning death and , positioning Him as the exclusive to and deliverer from sin's penalty. NewSpring maintains that this is secured eternally by 's power rather than human merit, reflecting a commitment to the amid broader evangelical affirmations of assurance. The is regarded as divinely inspired and authoritative, serving as the infallible guide for and conduct without accommodation to contemporary reinterpretations that dilute its literal intent on core tenets like human depravity and . These principles prioritize scriptural sufficiency over cultural adaptations, evidenced in the church's doctrinal stance that equips believers for and discipleship rooted in unyielding fidelity to biblical .

Positions on Baptism, Salvation, and Scripture

NewSpring Church holds that the , comprising the Old and New Testaments, is the infallible and inspired word of , authored by humans under the Holy Spirit's supernatural guidance and serving as the supreme authority for , reproof, correction, and instruction. This view encompasses the inerrancy of Scripture in its original form, positioning it as without error and resistant to reinterpretations driven by cultural shifts, as evidenced by the church's continued alignment with the 2000's affirmation of Scripture's total truthfulness even after disaffiliating from the on April 1, 2025. Salvation, according to NewSpring, occurs exclusively through personal trust in Jesus Christ as the sole mediator to , freeing believers from sin's penalty and curse while granting abundant eternal life commencing at the moment of . It is presented as God's unmerited gift, initiated by admitting one's sinfulness, confessing Christ as , and committing to follow Him, rather than through human effort or ritual. The church counters notions of superficial or "easy" —often termed easy-believism—by stressing that true manifests in transformed lives, with teachings and resources probing whether professions of yield evident through discipleship and rather than mere assent. Baptism functions as a believer's ordinance, an outward symbol of inward regeneration and public to one's decision to follow Christ, performed by immersion to represent death to and to new life. It follows conversion and is not essential for but an act of obedience, with the church conducting mass events termed "" that have yielded hundreds per occasion, such as over 400 baptisms statewide on August 24, 2025, contributing to thousands annually across its campuses.

Views on Gender Roles and Pastoral Leadership

NewSpring Church affirms that both men and women are called to ministry and roles within the church, including women serving as teaching who deliver sermons and preach to mixed audiences. This position is exemplified by Meredith Knox, listed as a teaching on the church's staff directory since at least 2024, who regularly preaches messages such as those on approaching in prayer and living with spirit-filled purpose. The church maintains, however, that the office of elder or overseer—equated with the lead role—is reserved exclusively for qualified men, distinguishing it from fully egalitarian models while allowing doctrinal flexibility in other teaching capacities. This approach contrasts with strict complementarian interpretations prevalent in the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), which prohibit women from serving in pastoral roles involving authority or preaching over men, based on passages like 1 Timothy 2:12 emphasizing male headship in church eldership. Tensions arose as the SBC's Credentials Committee scrutinized churches with women in such positions, viewing them as incompatible with the Baptist Faith and Message 2000's affirmation of male-only elder qualifications. NewSpring's practices, including Knox's role, were reported to the committee in early 2025, prompting debates over whether such arrangements constituted "friendly cooperation" despite the church's stated male eldership limit. In March 2025, NewSpring voluntarily withdrew from the SBC effective immediately, citing a desire to avoid distraction from the gospel and preserve unity, as their affiliation had fueled division amid the convention's push for clearer enforcement of male-only pastoral leadership. The decision followed formal notification to the SBC Executive Committee on March 26, 2025, reflecting a prioritization of internal mission over denominational alignment. Conservative critics, including outlets aligned with reformed Baptist perspectives, argue that permitting women like Knox to function as authoritative teachers effectively undermines scriptural hierarchy, equating to practical egalitarianism regardless of titular restrictions on eldership. This flexibility has been linked by church leadership to broader engagement in ministry, though it correlates with traditionalist departures in similar contexts, as evidenced by SBC-wide enrollment declines amid such debates.

Organizational Structure and Operations

Multi-Campus Model and Membership Statistics

NewSpring Church operates a multi-campus model centered in , functioning as one unified congregation with 13 locations statewide. This structure relies on a video-venue system, live sermons and from the flagship Anderson campus to sites, enabling centralized teaching while accommodating local . The model began expanding in July with the Greenville and has since prioritized regional reach within the state, avoiding out-of-state physical expansions beyond church plants. Weekly attendance peaked in the mid-2010s at 33,761 on in 2016, driven by aggressive growth strategies under prior . Post-2016 changes and institutional challenges correlated with a reported decline, with current figures exceeding 10,000 worshippers across campuses as of 2025—substantially below earlier highs and reflecting broader post-controversy stabilization rather than sustained megachurch-scale expansion. Claims of 30,000+ consistent attendees in recent years lack verification in available data, which instead highlight a contraction from peak metrics. Baptism and conversion metrics underscore evangelistic efforts, with notable events including 2,335 baptisms across 10 campuses on September 7, 2014, and nearly 3,000 for the year. Such figures, tied to "Watermark" baptism weekends, indicate periodic surges in professions of faith but do not equate to verified long-term membership growth, as retention data remains undisclosed.

Worship Services and Media Production

NewSpring Church's worship services emphasize a contemporary, high-energy format designed to engage attendees through live band performances featuring the church's own group, , which delivers upbeat, rock-influenced music akin to a concert experience complete with production elements such as lasers. These services typically combine musical with a practical, Scripture-focused message aimed at challenging participants to follow , lasting approximately 60 minutes in a casual atmosphere that prioritizes for newcomers. Held multiple times on Sundays across the church's 13 campuses, the format reflects a seeker-sensitive approach intended to lower barriers for unchurched individuals by mirroring modern entertainment styles while directing attention toward God through song lyrics rooted in biblical themes. Complementing in-person gatherings, NewSpring invests in media production via NewSpring Worship, which has released original albums such as Our God Is Love (2010), Salvation Rise (2014), Able (2017), and Poderoso (2018), available on platforms like and . These efforts extend the church's reach digitally, with the band's tracks accumulating tens of thousands of streams—for instance, "Your Freedom" exceeding 135,000 Spotify plays—and monthly listeners totaling around 20,700. Services and sermons are also streamed live and archived on , drawing 1,000 to 2,000 views per recent upload, alongside a for on-demand access to content that reinforces weekly teachings. This and media strategy has demonstrably aided growth by appealing to contemporary tastes and facilitating easy entry for , as evidenced by the church's expansion to status. However, within evangelical circles, the heavy reliance on energetic production and seeker-oriented elements has drawn critiques for tilting toward entertainment over reverence, potentially fostering emotional highs without equivalent doctrinal rigor or the "" outlined in passages like Psalm 96:9 and 12:28. Proponents counter that such dynamism effectively hides God's Word in hearts through repetitive, accessible singing (Psalm 119:11), balancing attraction with , though empirical data on long-term disciple-making depth remains debated among observers.

Ministries for Children, Youth, and Families

NewSpring Church operates age-segregated ministries for children and youth, with KidSpring serving infants through fifth-grade students in environments emphasizing fun, active learning about through play, , small groups, and teaching tailored to developmental stages. These sessions occur during weekend services across the church's multi-campus model, featuring safety personnel and volunteer-led small groups to foster relational discipleship. The ministry's curriculum, developed internally and distributed via the NewSpring Network, includes resources for leaders covering safety training, discipline, and small-group facilitation to equip volunteers for effective engagement. For middle and high school students (sixth through twelfth grades), the church's Fuse ministry convenes weekly on Wednesdays at 6:15 p.m. for , scriptural instruction, and peer-led small groups aimed at building lifelong commitment to Christian . Fuse prioritizes connecting adolescents with and community leaders, with volunteer requirements including mandatory background checks and awareness training to mitigate risks in interactions. This structure supports distinct from adult services, reflecting the church's emphasis on phased discipleship. Family-oriented components integrate these programs by providing special needs accommodations, such as one-on-one buddy systems during services, to enable parental attendance without childcare barriers. Additional supports include guides and resources like articles on elementary-age child-rearing, though formal counseling services are not prominently detailed in operational descriptions. Pre-2019 volunteer protocols, including codes of conduct for interactions with minors, underscored background verification and behavioral guidelines, though implementation gaps later highlighted in external reviews exposed screening limitations. Overall, these ministries prioritize experiential engagement over numerical metrics, with no publicly verified participation figures beyond the church's general attendance of thousands weekly.

Leadership and Governance

Founding and Successor Pastors

Perry Noble founded NewSpring Church in Anderson, South Carolina, in January 2000, initially as a small congregation that grew rapidly under his leadership as senior pastor. Noble, who had prior experience in youth ministry, emphasized a high-energy, contemporary preaching style focused on evangelism and practical application of Scripture, which attracted thousands and expanded the church to multiple campuses across the state by 2016. He served in this role until July 2016, overseeing average weekly attendance that reached approximately 32,000 by that time. Following Noble's departure, Clayton King, a longtime teaching pastor at NewSpring and founder of Crossroads Camps and Conferences, was appointed interim senior pastor in July 2016. King, who had preached at the church since its early years and held a doctoral degree in , provided continuity during the transition, delivering sermons and maintaining operations across the multisite network. His interim tenure lasted through 2017, after which the church shifted to a shared model with multiple lead pastors rather than a single senior figure. Under the current structure as of 2025, NewSpring operates with a team of lead pastors overseeing specific areas, including Brad Cooper as Lead Pastor of Culture & Direction, David Hall as Lead Pastor of Ministries, and Lee McDerment as Lead Pastor of Gatherings & Prayer; Clayton King remains a teaching pastor contributing to preaching duties. This pluralistic approach, formalized post-2017, distributes responsibilities for vision, operations, and teaching among the team, reflecting the church's emphasis on collaborative governance.

Oversight Mechanisms and Accountability

NewSpring Church's incorporates a Board of and a body of elders to provide oversight. The Board, consisting of at least five members including the Senior as an ex officio voting member, holds responsibility for the church's overall direction, legal compliance, and management decisions, meeting at least five times annually with majority voting on matters. Elders, appointed by the Senior with the concurrence of existing elders for three-year terms, offer spiritual leadership, ensuring doctrinal health and pastoral guidance while qualifying through mature faith, teaching ability, and irreproachable character. These structures formalize , particularly for the Senior , who reports to the Board and elders on ministry fulfillment and personal leadership, with provisions for independent in cases of alleged . Prior to 2016, oversight depended on a and a Pastor Advisory Team, which ultimately executed the Senior Pastor's removal for conduct issues but revealed causal gaps in proactive checks, as the founding pastor's extended singular from the church's in 2000 limited distributed and enabled unchecked personal deterioration over time. The 2020 constitutional update addressed such deficiencies by elevating elders' roles in spiritual oversight and , enhancing systemic resilience against failures through term limits, qualification standards, and removal processes for elders themselves. This evolution reflects a shift toward pluralistic , though hinges on consistent enforcement, as prior reactive intervention underscores the risks of founder-centric models in large congregations. For volunteer involvement, particularly in vulnerable areas, NewSpring mandates background and reference checks for all participants in children's (KidzWorld) and youth (Fuse) ministries prior to service approval, aiming to screen for risks through criminal history and personal vetting. These policies, integrated into volunteer handbooks, represent a baseline safeguard but depend on regular updates and comprehensive scope to maintain efficacy, with no public data indicating periodic re-screening intervals beyond standard practices.

Financial Transparency and Stewardship

NewSpring Church derives the majority of its operational funding from tithes and offerings contributed by members, viewing these as acts of aligned with biblical principles that emphasize returning the first portion to . The church undergoes annual independent audits by external accounting firms, conducted in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles to ensure accountability and transparency in . Publicly available annual reports provide detailed breakdowns of income and expenditures, facilitating verifiable oversight of fund allocation. In 2022, total income amounted to $46.03 million, with general tithes and offerings comprising $41.85 million (91 percent), supplemented by $3.48 million from the Overflow Fund (7.5 percent) and $0.70 million from The Gauntlet Fund (1.5 percent). Expenses for the same period totaled $44.34 million, distributed as follows: $10.52 million (23.7 percent) to next-generation ministries for children and youth; $18.54 million (41.8 percent) to gatherings, events, and facilities across campuses; $7.52 million (17 percent) to discipleship, outreach, and missions—including $4.48 million directly to mission partners; and $7.76 million (17.5 percent) to operational support. Stewardship practices prioritize debt avoidance and growth-funded expansion, exemplified by the church's elimination of $45 million in debt between 2017 and 2022 without incurring new obligations, achieved through disciplined allocation and operational efficiencies. This fiscal discipline supported investments in permanent campus facilities, such as the 2023 opening of the debt-free Aiken location and land acquisitions for future sites, while Overflow Offerings channel excess giving toward Vision 2030 goals like church plants and community missions. Such measures underscore a model of prudent , directing verifiable portions of contributions—historically including multimillion-dollar outflows to over 600 partner organizations—toward ministry sustainability and evangelistic outreach.

Perry Noble's Removal and Personal Conduct

On July 10, 2016, NewSpring Church announced that founder and senior pastor had been removed from his position, effective July 1, for personal conduct issues including , a strained posture toward his marriage, ongoing family relational strains, and other unspecified behaviors that violated the church's policies and disqualified him from ministry. The church's secretarial team, in consultation with external overseers, determined these factors created an unsustainable leadership crisis, leading to Noble's immediate dismissal without severance. Noble later acknowledged in public statements that his removal stemmed from a pattern of daily alcohol consumption, which escalated into overuse and contributed to a "double life" involving marital discord and emotional isolation. He admitted the alcohol reliance intensified under ministry pressures, exacerbating family tensions and impairing his judgment, though he entered rehabilitation shortly after the ouster to address the addiction. In the aftermath, Noble founded Second Chance Church in , launching services in 2018 after initial online efforts. That , he issued what he described as his "last apology" to NewSpring's congregation and staff, expressing for the caused by his actions and signaling a desire to move forward without further public reconciliation attempts. The removal correlated with a decline in NewSpring's attendance, which had peaked at approximately 33,000 weekly prior to 2016 but fell noticeably in the following year amid the leadership transition.

Child Sexual Abuse Incidents and Institutional Responses

In November 2018, Jacop Hazlett, a 28-year-old volunteer in the children's ministry at NewSpring Church's North Charleston campus, was arrested after church surveillance video captured him performing a sexual act on a three-year-old boy in a bathroom facility. Subsequent review of footage revealed evidence of at least 14 similar assaults by Hazlett on young boys, some as young as three, over an unspecified period while he assisted in preschool activities. Lawsuits filed by victims' families alleged over 15 child victims in total, with claims that the church's security system documented the incidents but failed to detect them promptly despite active monitoring capabilities. Hazlett faced escalating charges, including 10 additional counts of filed by a Dorchester County in August 2019. In December 2019, a convicted him on six counts of criminal sexual conduct with minors involving four victims, resulting in a 75-year sentence. He pleaded guilty to 13 related charges in June 2021. Civil suits highlighted screening lapses, noting Hazlett had been removed from a children's volunteer role at in for inappropriate behavior with minors prior to joining NewSpring, yet no comprehensive background verification prevented his involvement. NewSpring Church pastors addressed the allegations publicly during a 2018 service at the affected campus, emphasizing cooperation with . The institution initially denied liability in court responses, arguing Hazlett's actions were independent and unforeseeable despite its volunteer policies. Multiple lawsuits proceeded, culminating in settlements with victims' families, including a sixth agreement in June 2023 and final approval on November 3, 2023, for seven juvenile plaintiffs. These outcomes underscored critiques of delayed detection in high-volume volunteer settings, where empirical patterns in megachurch abuse cases often trace to incomplete vetting and overreliance on self-reported histories rather than cross-institutional checks, though no evidence indicated systemic patterns beyond this incident at NewSpring.

Doctrinal Conflicts Leading to SBC Withdrawal

In March 2025, NewSpring Church, facing increasing scrutiny from the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) over its practices regarding women in ministry, sent a formal withdrawal letter to the SBC Executive Committee on March 26. The decision, announced publicly on March 31, stemmed primarily from the church's egalitarian approach, which includes appointing women to pastoral roles such as teaching and preaching, exemplified by Meredith Knox serving as a teaching pastor. This conflicted with the SBC's longstanding complementarian framework, which interprets passages like 1 Timothy 2:11-12 as restricting authoritative teaching roles over men to qualified male elders, a position reaffirmed in the Baptist Faith and Message 2000 and enforced through credentialing processes. The tension escalated amid broader SBC efforts to address churches with female pastors, including the failed Law Amendment in 2024, which sought to amend the SBC constitution to explicitly exclude such congregations from cooperative membership. NewSpring's , under Pastor Brad Cooper, stated that continued affiliation was causing "tension and division" within the convention and distracting from the church's mission, prompting the voluntary exit to "preserve unity in the ." From a conservative evangelical perspective, this move represented a theological drift toward progressive , prioritizing cultural accommodation over scriptural authority on gender roles in church , as critiqued in outlets aligned with SBC traditionalism. Post-withdrawal, NewSpring emphasized its commitment to women exercising "God-given gifts, including , teaching, and preaching," positioning the split as a strategic choice for rather than outright rejection of SBC entities like the . However, the independence risks severing access to SBC's resources, seminaries, and annual meetings, potentially isolating the church from a network of over 47,000 congregations while enhancing flexibility in doctrinal application. This episode underscores ongoing fractures within American evangelicalism between complementarian fidelity and egalitarian inclusivity, with NewSpring's exit amplifying debates on and .

Achievements and Broader Impact

Evangelistic Reach and Community Engagement

NewSpring Church has pursued evangelistic growth through multi-campus expansion and international initiatives, as outlined in its Vision 2030 plan launched to advance the gospel locally and globally. The church operates across 13 locations primarily in , with efforts to establish permanent facilities at all sites to facilitate ongoing ; as of 2025, 12 campuses have achieved this status, including a recent launch in Aiken in September 2025. Evangelistic reach extends internationally via a goal of planting 10 new churches, with five completed to date, including NewSpring , Society Church in , , and Artisan City Church in . Quantifiable indicators of conversions include reported , a key metric in Baptist evangelical contexts signifying personal faith commitments. In 2014, the church recorded nearly 300 during services across its campuses on a single Sunday. Earlier gatherings also highlighted significant response, with 2013 marking the largest baptism event in the program's seven-year history, though exact figures beyond aggregate attendance of around 25,000 weekly congregants were not detailed publicly. These events correlate with periods of rapid attendance growth, as NewSpring ranked among the fastest-growing U.S. churches in Outreach magazine surveys through 2016, attributing expansion to evangelistic emphasis. Community engagement manifests through structured giving and service partnerships, exemplified by Project Generosity, an annual initiative partnering with and global organizations for tangible . Since 2017, the church has distributed approximately $29 million to over 600 Christ-centered nonprofits and ministries, representing 10% of its tithes and offerings allocated annually to such causes. This includes support for community needs like food drives and benevolence projects, fostering causal links to impact by enabling partner organizations to address physical and spiritual requirements, though specific outcome metrics from recipients remain unreported in church disclosures. Such efforts align with the church's debt-free status achieved in 2023 after paying off $45 million, freeing resources for expanded without financial encumbrance.

Contributions to Contemporary Worship

NewSpring Worship, the music ministry of NewSpring Church, has produced original songs and recordings intended for congregational use, releasing several EPs and albums since the mid-2010s that blend (CCM) elements such as synth-rock, EDM, and acoustic arrangements. Notable releases include the Difference Maker EP in 2016, featuring tracks like "Love Me Like That" and an acoustic rendition of the "It Is Well"; Able in 2017; Salvation Rise around the same period; and the Spanish-language album Poderoso in 2018, which incorporated live and studio recordings with guest artists like Ingrid Rosario. These works emphasize themes of personal faith and divine capability, drawing from the church's weekly services across its campuses. The ministry's output has achieved measurable digital reach, with songs garnering hundreds of thousands of streams on platforms like ; for instance, "Love Me Like That" has exceeded 927,000 streams, "Desde El Principio" over 863,000, and "My God, My Father" more than 586,000 as of recent data. This accessibility supports broader CCM trends, where worship music from megachurches like NewSpring contributes to the genre's 60% global streaming growth over five years, facilitating congregational singing through singable melodies and production suited for large gatherings. Reviews have highlighted strengths in rhythmic diversity and harmonies that evoke communal response, as in the Difference Maker EP's fusion of electronic elements with reverence, earning a 4-out-of-5 rating for reflecting a growing, multifaceted Christian audience. However, reception includes critiques of conventionality, with some observers noting that tracks like "Now And Forever" and "Every Line" feel ordinary and lack standout creativity amid competition from other worship collectives, potentially limiting broader in CCM. Traditionalist perspectives on high-production contemporary styles, akin to NewSpring's, contend that such approaches risk prioritizing —through dynamic visuals, varied genres, and audience engagement—over scriptural reverence, as argued by commentators emphasizing 's substantive focus beyond stylistic enjoyment.

Critiques from Conservative Evangelical Perspectives

Conservative evangelicals have criticized NewSpring Church for its egalitarian stance on women in ministry, particularly allowing women to serve in pastoral roles and preach to mixed-gender audiences, which they view as a violation of biblical complementarianism outlined in passages such as 1 Timothy 2:12. This position contributed to the church's voluntary withdrawal from the Southern Baptist Convention in March 2025, amid debates over female teaching pastors, with critics arguing it prioritizes institutional autonomy and cultural accommodation over scriptural prohibitions on women exercising authority in the church. Proponents of strict complementarianism, including Southern Baptist leaders, contend that such practices erode doctrinal fidelity and invite division, as evidenced by the SBC's repeated efforts to enforce gender-distinct roles in church leadership. Further critiques target perceived doctrinal compromises in teaching, exemplified by former lead pastor Perry Noble's 2014 Christmas Eve sermon recharacterizing the Ten Commandments as "10 promises" receivable through faith in , rather than enduring moral imperatives. This interpretation drew rebuke from Baptist Convention President Tommy Kelly, who labeled it a problematic minimization of God's law, potentially fostering and undermining the role of Scripture in convicting sin. Conservative observers, including those from reformed evangelical circles, argue this reflects a broader seeker-sensitive that dilutes to appeal to unchurched audiences, favoring emotional experiences over rigorous exposition of . The model at NewSpring, with its multi-campus expansion and emphasis on numerical growth—reaching over 40,000 weekly attendees under Noble—has been faulted for cultivating a cult and superficial discipleship. Critics from conservative perspectives, such as those aligned with cessationist and Baptist traditions, link this entertainment-driven approach to empirical risks of institutional scandals, including failures, by prioritizing and metrics over elder plurality and rooted in elder-qualified ( 1:5-9). While acknowledging attendance gains as a potential evangelistic tool, they maintain that such success often masks shallow , where popularity supplants fidelity to Scripture, ultimately compromising long-term church health.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.