Lakewood Church is a non-denominational evangelical Christian megachurch located in Houston, Texas. It is among the largest congregations in the United States, averaging about 45,000 attendees per week.[1] The 16,800-seat Lakewood Church building, home to four English-language services and two Spanish-language services per week,[2] is located at the former Compaq Center.[3] Joel Osteen is the senior pastor of Lakewood Church with his wife, Victoria, who serves as co-pastor.

Lakewood Church, originally called "Lakewood Baptist Church", was founded by John Osteen and his second wife, Dolores (Dodie) on Mother's Day, May 10, 1959 in a tent. The church then moved to an abandoned feed store in northeast Houston.[4] John was a Southern Baptist minister, but after experiencing baptism in the Holy Spirit, he founded Lakewood as a church for charismatic Baptists. The church soon dropped "Baptist" from its name and became non-denominational. In 1961, John Osteen left the church and was called to missions, Martin Crow would become the pastor in his absence until John returned in 1969. In 1972, Lakewood broke ground for a new building that seated 700 people. By 1979, attendance was over five thousand, and the church was becoming prominent among Pentecostals and Charismatics. John and Dodie created and hosted Lakewood's weekly television program, which could be seen in 100 countries worldwide. On February 15, 1987, A groundbreaking was held for a new 8,000-seat sanctuary which would be completed in April 1988. Upon John Osteen's death on January 23, 1999, his youngest son, Joel Osteen, became the pastor that October.[5]


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Under Joel Osteen, Lakewood's congregation increased almost fivefold.[9] Attendance increased to 30,000 weekly, prompting a move from its location at 7317 East Houston Road[10][11] to a larger facility.[3] In late 2003, the church signed a long-term lease with the city of Houston to acquire the Compaq Center, a 29-year-old former sports arena.[12]

Lakewood Church relocated to the Compaq Center on July 16, 2005. It is a 16,800-seat facility in southwest downtown Houston along U.S. Highway 59, that has twice the capacity of its former sanctuary.[3][13] The church was required to pay $11.8 million in rent in advance for the first 30 years of the lease.[12] Lakewood renovated the new campus at an estimated cost of $100 million.[9]

Lakewood Church believes that the entire Bible is inspired by God, and the church bases its teachings on this belief. The church also believes in the Trinity, and recognizes the death of Christ on the cross and resurrection.

The church's weekly services are broadcast on Trinity Broadcasting Network and Daystar Television Network,[20] as well as local channels in most major U.S. markets. Lakewood also appears on secular networks, such as Fox Network, Freeform, and USA Network. In 2007, Lakewood reported spending nearly $30 million every year on its television ministry.[21] Osteen's sermons are also televised in more than 100 countries, with an estimated 7 million viewers each week.[22] Lakewood also hosts a Night of Hope every month. This is when the church hosts a Christian service event in one of the arenas or stadiums all across America.

Since 2016, Lakewood Church organizes an annual Mobilizing Medical Missions Conference to equip doctors for on-field medical missions.[25] The church has been active during natural disasters by organizing food distribution programs and blood donation drives during COVID 19,[26] providing shelter services during Hurricane Ida and 2021 Texas Freeze,[27][28] and serving as a distribution center for essential supplies during Hurricane Harvey.[29]

My wife Aimee and I have been married for 20 years. As self-professed foodies and residents of the Houston area, finding great Tex-Mex is one of our all-time favorite hobbies. Being dad to our five amazing boys is the greatest blessing. All of our children are musical, love playing basketball, and enjoy serving in church.

Beard: I was raised in a musical family. My dad, my uncle and my grandfather all played in bands and at church. I started playing drums at 10 years old and then became interested in the audio and production side of things. I was fortunate to have a great mentor, Reed Hall and at the age of 12 he took me under his wing and really taught me the foundations of audio. I spent the next 4-5 years learning as much as I could about audio and getting my hands on the console as often as possible.

For anyone who thinks a church sound department means a Mackie mixer with two knobs missing, four pockmarked SM58s, two Samson wireless mics and a 17- year-old volunteer, Lakewood Church in Houston may be something of a revelation.

Supporting the theory that everything's bigger in Texas, Lakewood is a 16,000 seat arena-sized facility whose list of gear, musicians and crew reads like an attempt at a Guinness Book entry: 11 piece band, 200- voice choir, four Nuendo rigs recording 135 tracks of audio, four Euphonix consoles and five full-time sound crew professionals, all under the supervision of one Reed Hall, director of audio and technical production. I caught up with Hall during his vacation, a cross-country road trip involving motorcycles, 18-wheel flatbed trucks and an eventual gig in Sacramento. He appeared to be having the time of his life. He painted a picture of an unusual church model, a close-knit group of hardworking people and a tremendous drive for excellence. Here's what he had to say.

The band guys just totally dig the Aviom system and really, we don't get complaints from them any longer. The biggest problem I get from the choir with the open wedges is that Joel Osteen, our church pastor, will not wear a headset mic. Getting enough headroom out of him without creating feedback rolling his lav back into the choir field. He's wearing an omni element.

In the news: New Light, a Word of Faith church, was founded in 1984. Pastor Irishea Hilliard took over from her father, who founded the church with her mother when she was 7. "Was I capable? Did I have all the wisdom? Did I feel like I was ready? Absolutely not," Hilliard told the Houston Chronicle in 2018. "But I had a peace, that this was the assignment and purpose for my life."

Broadcasting it for the world to see, Gray shared a now-deleted video of occasion on social media in a post that went viral. Gray has since apologized via social media and addressed the matter with his Redemption church members.

The church uses the displays for IMAG (Image Magnification) shots and to show inspirational images and stories during the services as well as live video of the sermon and song lyrics for the congregation to follow along. The feed shown on television is the same video shown on the video displays inside the church.

Mile Hi Church of Lakewood has formed the International Animal Ministry, or I AM, to offer animals and their human companions education, hospice services, visiting-pet therapy, pet-loss grief counseling and support. The ministry is there to bless and celebrate all pets in all phases of their lives, church officials say.

The Animal Care Affair Vendor Event and Pet Blessing will take place from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday in the church parking lot. A pet parade is set for noon. All pets are welcome, and all events are free. Electa Draper, The Denver Post

To some extent, Democrats could help themselves with evangelicals simply by showing up -- at the megachurches, on Christian radio and in other venues where Democrats have been scarce. Whether the Democrats are deploying the right messengers is more questionable: a liberal San Francisco Democrat and a civil union-signing Vermont governor may not be the party's best bet with evangelicals. More important, occasional drop-bys and clunky dropping of biblical references aren't going to do the trick. These voters weren't born again yesterday. e24fc04721

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