Gateway Church is a non-denominational, evangelical Christian multi-site megachurch based in Southlake, Texas, near Fort Worth.[1] As of 2023, it was ranked as the 9th largest in the United States, with attendance of 25,805.[2] In 2024, its founding pastor, Robert Morris, resigned after allegations of past sexual abuse of a minor.[3][4] His son, James Morris, is the Associate Senior Pastor and was set to take over next year.[5][6]
History
On September 16, 1999, Pastor Robert Morris began to plan an evangelistic church in Southlake, Texas. Gateway Church's first service was held on Easter morning, April 23, 2000, at the Hilton Hotel in Grapevine. Approximately 180 people attended the service. The church grew, and moved to an old movie theater in Grapevine.
In June 2003 the church moved into its first permanent building, a 600-seat, 64,000-square-foot (5,900 m2) facility on Southlake Blvd. In 2010 Gateway opened its current facility, a 64-acre (26 ha) property with a 4,000-seat sanctuary.
In 2017, Gateway Church downsized their staff by 10-15 percent.[7]
Campuses
Worship in 2010, old Southlake Campus
In 2008, the church began work on a new main campus located along State Highway 114. The project included a 4,000-seat sanctuary. It opened on November 13, 2010. [8] Mark Jobe, father of contemporary Christian singer Kari Jobe, serves as the Campus Pastor.[9]
In early 2019, Gateway Church announced it was starting a ministry inside the Coffield Unit, the largest prison in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. It is open to minimum security inmates (and, with special permission, medium security inmates) but all inmates may obtain church materials.[10] The church also ministers at the Estes Unit outside of Venus.[11] Stephen Wilson, who earned his masters from Liberty University[12] and has ministered in prisons previously,[13] serves as the leader of both of these prison efforts. The church uses the term 'campus' in describing each prison outreach program.
Robert Morris allegations
On June 15, 2024, Robert Morris admitted to what he characterized as a "moral failure" involving a pre-teen girl (described by Morris only as a "young lady"[14]) that is alleged to have occurred from 1982 through 1987 when he was a young minister. This alleged serial sexual abuse occurred over a five-year period, beginning when the child was 12 years old and ending when the child was 17.[15] This admission appeared shortly after his accuser, Cindy Clemishire, accused Morris of molesting her for four and a half years dating to December 1982, when Clemishire was 12 years old.[16][17] Morris described his behavior as mere "petting" while the victim alleges eventual "rape by instrumentation"[18] (penetration that is not intercourse). The alleged victim is now in her 50s. In a statement reportedly sent to church staff by the elders of the church, the elders said that: “Since the resolution of this 35-year-old matter, there have been no other moral failures ... Pastor Robert has walked in purity, and he has placed accountability measures and people in his life. The matter has been properly disclosed to church leadership.”[19]
Shortly after the church elders learned additional details of the allegations, including the alleged victim's age and length of the supposed abuse, Robert Morris tendered his resignation, which was accepted.[20] However, according to Cindy Clemishire, "Gateway received actual notice of this crime in 2005 when I sent an email directly to Robert Morris’ Gateway email address. Former Gateway elder, Tom Lane, received and responded to my email, acknowledging that the sexual abuse began on December 25, 1982, when I was 12 years old". [21]
Evangelical Daystar Television Network announced it was removing all Robert Morris programming from its broadcast schedule.[22][23] Morris programs were broadcast every day except Saturday.[24]
Gateway Church utilizes its worship band to lead worship services and create original music that it sells on a commercial record label. Its Live albumGod Be Praised was released on November 9, 2010,[27] with Japanese, Korean and Portuguese versions released in 2012.[citation needed] The live album, Walls, which was released on October 2, 2015, reached No. 1 on Billboard's Top Christian Albums Chart.[27]