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SUNDAY, NOV. 16
Secrets inside the revival
text
Church budget is $6.6 million
text
On the road: Pleas for money intensify
text
Give at least $100 revival leaders urge
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Brownsville Revival costly, figures are vague
text
Revival maestro's money, business is no secret
text
Ministry fails to meet watchdog's guidelines
text
Revival for sale through merchandise
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3 top ministers fail to pay state sales tax
text

MONDAY, NOV. 17
Kilpatrick rules over revival
text
Pastor's visions launched his career
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New lifestyle includes a $310,000 coach
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Kilpatrick takes hard line against dissenters
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Pastor's homes raise financial questions
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Authors: Prophecies aim to silence critics
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Kilpatrick: History shows revivals
are divisive
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Sadness, fear fill members who left Brownsville
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TUESDAY, NOV. 18
Hill's bio fraught with fallacies
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Hill's boasts often exaggerate the facts
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Money for missions fails to add up
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Hill's criminal record not what he says it is
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Revival's leader touts 'Son of Sam' conversion
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Hill settles down on 40 acres in South Alabama
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Teen Challenge is Hill's longtime favorite
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WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19
Pastor orchestrated first revival
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Brownsville Revival similar to one in Toronto
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Critics attack tactics, theological basis
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THURSDAY, NOV. 20
Revival benefits: Fact or fiction?
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Escambia sheriff disputes claims of crime reduction
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Neighborhood sees no benefit from revival
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No medical proof of 'miraculous healings'
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Confused? Question, reason, consult the Bible
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Addicts may be getting false hope, experts say
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Dad says church was no help
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Other churches reach out to community
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9. Public Service in Journalism
CIRCULATION LESS THAN 100,000

PUBLISHED SUNDAY NOVEMBER 20, 1997
Copyright 1997 The Pensacola News Journal. All rights reserved

Other churches
reach out to community

By Kimberly Blair
staff writer

What do other area churches do to directly help the needy?

Some examples:

Olive Baptist, Pensacola 's largest church with a membership of 7,726 and an annual budget of $4 million, makes helping the needy of the community a high priority. The church devotes at least $85,000 a year to local outreach, and Olive Baptist members repair roofs, clean yards or paint houses for people who can 't afford it otherwise, said Dave Corson, church administrator.

Circle Baptist Church in Warrington, one of Pensacola 's smallest churches with a membership of 40 and an annual budget of $39,000, makes a strong commitment to charity and outreach in its own way: It maintains a food bank and opens it to anyone in need. If the church can 't help, it refers people to agencies.

Brownsville Baptist Church, a few blocks from Brownsville Assembly of God, has a membership of 700 and an annual budget of $288,972. It spends $7,200 a year on direct local outreach and an additional $4,424 to other area ministries such as Fellowship of Christian Athletes.

"We have some responsibility to the community but no church is a cure-all," Pastor John Pavelus said.

Many people in the neighborhood live below or at poverty level, he said. "I do think Brownsville Assembly of God needs to be a leading major part in the community, not only physically, but spiritually minister to the total person. That goes for any church and every church," he said.

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