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5 Simpsonville Area Open Houses Coming Up Soon
(Realtor)
SIMPSONVILLE, SC — House shopping on the internet can be a frustrating experience. To get a true feeling for a house, you really have to visit in person. That’s why you should always take advantage of a local open house: No more guessing!
Ready to see what’s out there? For your convenience, we’ve made a list of the five newest homes to hit the open-house circuit in the Simpsonville area. That way, you can get a feel for the current offerings prior to committing to anything.
Below is an address, photo, price, home size and open-house time for each property on our list — including one with 3 beds and 4 baths for $735,000, and another with 4 beds and 3 baths for $239,000.
Like what you see? Just click on any address in the list to get additional photos and details. Enjoy!
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Price: $239,000 Size: 4 beds, and 3 baths Open house: Saturday, April 13th at 2:00 pm
Price: $275,000 Size: 3 beds, and 3 baths Open house: Sunday, April 14th at 2:00 pm
Price: $325,500 Size: 3 beds, and 3 baths Open house: Sunday, April 14th at 1:00 pm
Price: $379,000 Size: 6 beds, and 4 baths Open house: Saturday, April 13th at 2:00 pm
Price: $735,000 Size: 3 beds, and 4 baths Open house: Thursday, April 11th at 11:30 am
Hungry for more? Keep scrolling for more listings. Or check out Patch’s Simpsonville area real-estate section for a full list of local open houses.
Photos courtesy of Realtor.com
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5 new business developments on the way in Simpsonville
Dirt is moving all over Simpsonville, with several developments that will be home to new businesses.
Here’s a look at what’s set to open in the coming months.
1. New headquarters for toy company
Simpsonville-based toy company Sunny Days Entertainment LLC is moving its headquarters to a new office space under construction on Southeast Main Street, less than a mile south from the Clock Tower downtown.
The company currently has its headquarters on nearby Richardson Street and also has offices in Hong Kong and China, CEO Melvin Wells said.
The Southeast Main Street office will be used for customer service, product development, accounting and human resources. Wells said they plan to hire a few additional employees there.
“It’s easily accessible – it helps with the growth of the downtown Simpsonville corridor and the city has been very nice to work with in developing the project," Wells said of the new location.
Construction of office space that will house the new headquarters of Simpsonville-based toy company Sunny Days Entertainment, LLC continues on March 6, 2019.
(Photo: Gabe Cavallaro/The Greenville News)
There will also be additional Class A office space available for lease in the new building, Wells said.
The toy company makes electronic vehicles, collectible action figures and dolls, Wells said. The company sells to retailers, not directly to consumers.
The new building should be complete by June 1, Wells said.
“We’re a South Carolina-based company and we’re excited to call Simpsonville our home," he said.
2. Eye care on Harrison Bridge Road This rendering depicts Clemson Eye’s planned new office on Harrison Bridge Road in Simpsonville.
(Photo: Submitted)
Clemson Eye is moving from its Simpsonville office on Northeast Main Street to a new, larger building on Harrison Bridge Road.
“We know that Simpsonville is a growing market, it’s really booming out there," said marketing director Courtney Mitchell.
The eye care practice offers comprehensive medical and surgical eye care, as well as medical aesthetics, such as custom facials, chemical peels and injections, she said.
The new location is projected to open sometime this fall, Mitchell said. Once it’s operational, Clemson Eye’s office on Northeast Main Street will close.
3. Car wash off Fairview Road
Waves Express Car Wash’s third location is planned near the corner of Fairview Road and Southeast Main Street in Simpsonville.
Its part of an expansion the company is planning with 10 to 15 new locations across the Greenville, Anderson and Spartanburg area, owner Jimmy Williams said.
A Waves Express Car Wash is planned on a lot at the intersection of Fairview Road and Southeast Main Street in Simpsonville. It’s pictured here on March 6, 2019.
He was interested in opening in Simpsonville because of the growth there.
The city is currently reviewing their plans, Williams said. Upon approval, he anticipates it will take nine months to get the operation up and running.
4. Learning center on West Georgia Road Kinder Care Learning Centers is planning to open a Simpsonville location.
Kinder Care Learning Centers is planning to open a location on West Georgia Road.
The early childhood education company has locations all across the country, according to its website.
The center is projected to open early this summer, said public relations manager Colleen Moran.
5. Downtown mixed-use space
A major mixed-use development is planned at the Burdette Building, breathing new life into the prominent site at the corner of Curtis and Main streets.
Called "Burdette Central," it will feature a mix of restaurant, retail and office space, including both new and current tenants, plus an outdoor gathering space for the community. There will be a lawn, stage and outdoor seating.
This rendering shows the outdoor space planned at the new Burdette Central development in downtown Simpsonville.
New tenants include Sidewall Pizza Company’s sixth location and Kaffeine Coffee Shop and Roastery.
The developers at Four Oaks Property Group chose Simpsonville because of its "excellent demographics," including a strong median household income, and the "very cool vibe" it’s developing with its restaurants, bars and coffee shops, said Doug Cross, managing principal at the company.
“We hope to be part of this growing culinary and entertainment scene," he said.
Site preparation, utility improvements and some demolition have begun at the property, Cross said. They’re aiming to have the development completed by summer 2020, though some new tenants will move in sooner.
The Sidewall open date is contingent upon construction, but co-owner Andy O’Mara said they’re tentatively hoping to be up and running this summer.
Kaffeine wants to open at the end of May, though that timeline is also at the mercy of construction, co-owner Debbie Goss said.
You can connect with reporter Gabe Cavallaro on Twitter @gabe_cavallaro or facebook.com/cavallarogabe or email him at [email protected].
More: ‘Not another deal like this’: A $120K, zero-interest-loan home near downtown Simpsonville
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Freeda Foreman, former Simpsonville resident and daughter of George Foreman, dies
Freeda Foreman, the daughter of former heavyweight champion George Foreman, has died near Houston, according to media reports. She was 42.
Two Houston TV stations reported that Foreman was found in her home in Atascocita, Texas, which is northeast of Houston. News of her death was first reported by TMZ.com.
Freeda Foreman spent part of her childhood living in Simpsonville and had worked for UPS in Greenville as an adult.
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Freeda Foreman spent part of childhood living in Simpsonville and later worked in Greenville, according to Greenville News archives. She is pictured in this Associated Press photo that ran in The Greenville News in June 2000. She died in March 2019 at age 42. (Photo: Greenville News archives)
She was 23 when she started training to become a boxer, according to an article published in The Greenville News in 2000. She made the decision to turn pro after an encouraging telephone conversation with the daughter of former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier.
"I’ve been in boxing since I came into this world," Freeda Foreman said. "Anything that’s strong and tough, it’s what I want to do. It’s something I always really loved."
George Foreman, who was a two-time heavyweight champion, was not happy about his daughter’s decision at the time.
"I asked Freeda not to do it, but I think my mom did the same with me over 33 years ago," he wrote in response to a question on his website. He reportedly offered her $15,000 not to box professionally.
After leaving the Upstate to train in Denver, Freeda Foreman fought her first bout in Las Vegas against Milwaukee hairdresser LaQuanda Landers. She knocked out Landers in the second round.
"Happy Father’s Day, Daddy. This is for you. I love you," Freeda Foreman said after she floored her opponent, according to an Associated Press article that appeared in The Greenville News.
Freeda Foreman won her next four fights 2000 and 2001. She ended her career after her first and only loss.
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She was drawn to the Greenville area during several visits with her mother. Her parents had divorced when she was 12, and she initially remained in her father’s home after her mother remarried and moved to the Upstate.
As a child, Freeda Foreman lifted weights, played volleyball and ran track, according to a Greenville News article in April 2000. When she first flirted with boxing, she trained briefly under Greenville’s David Parks, whose son, Lamar Parks, was a top-ranked middleweight during the 1990s.
Freeda Foreman said in 2000 that she left Houston on an impulse and moved to teh Upstate because she liked the people, the weather and the opportunities for her and her young daughter.
"I just instantly connected with Greenville," she said.
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$1.6 billion lotto ticket sold in SC still unclaimed
SIMPSONVILLE, S.C. — Remember that $1.6 billion lottery ticket sold four months ago in upstate South Carolina?
The winner of the ticket has yet to come forward, and time is officially ticking. If the ticket goes unclaimed by Tuesday, April 23, then that person will no longer be entitled to the $1.6 billion (annuity) or (lump sum) $877 million prize.
The people of Simpsonville consider it an unsolved mystery, although some speculate the ticket is long gone.
"I think he lost it," a man said about the winner.
Unlike some other states, South Carolina law allows the winner to remain anonymous after claiming their prize. Tony Cooper with the South Carolina Education lottery commission said the problem is, no one’s claimed the money.
"I’ve seen people wait up until the last day," said Cooper, who added that he isn’t hitting the panic button just yet.
It’s not that anyone loses (albeit the winner) from not turning in their winning lotto ticket, it is more of an issue of what might have been.
The $1.6 billion prize was the largest Mega Millions jackpot, ever.
Cooper said the state will receive $70 million in total from the sale of the ticket, with more than $10 million going to education.
He also said C.J. Patel, owner of the KC Mart Convenience store #7 where the winning ticket was sold, will also receive $50,000.
NBC Charlotte tried to reach Patel, but we were unsuccessful. Cooper said with more than 50 days left, he would not be surprised if the winner still came forward.
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5 New Homes For Sale In The Simpsonville Area
SIMPSONVILLE, SC — Looking for a new home nearby, but tired of seeing the same old property listings over and over? With our weekly list of new homes in your area, you can stay on top of the scene.
Here’s a list of the five most recent homes to go up for sale in the Simpsonville area — including one with 4 beds and 3 baths for $199,900, and another with 5 beds and 5 baths for $407,940.
Like what you see? Simply click on any address in the list to get additional pics and details. Happy house hunting!
Price: $216,960 Size: 3 beds, and 3 baths
Price: $237,600 Size: 4 beds, and 3 baths
Price: $329,900 Size: 4 beds, and 3 baths
Price: $407,940 Size: 5 beds, and 5 baths
Price: $199,900 Size: 4 beds, and 3 baths
Want more options? Keep scrolling for more listings. Or you can always find a full list of nearby homes in our real-estate section for the Simpsonville area.
Photos courtesy of Realtor.com
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Relentless Church bought John Gray a $1.8M house in Simpsonville. Here’s why
Last month, Pastor John Gray drew national attention when he presented his wife, Aventer, with a Lamborghini that starts at $200,000 as an anniversary present. The Relentless Church pastor deflected criticism in part by emphasizing that the car was not paid for with any church money.
At the time, Gray was living in a $1.8 million home that was bought by the church in October. Church leaders said the Relentless-owned home was needed to attract a leader of Gray’s caliber.
The house in the Southampton community in Simpsonville is 7,247 square feet, consistent with the size and value of about 25 homes in the community.
The existence of the church-owned residence was brought to The Greenville News’ attention through a tip from a reader. The News verified the ownership of the home through property records and real estate transactions.
The residence shines light on housing arrangements that some churches include as part of the compensation packages for their pastors.
Pastor John Gray during the installation of pastors service at Relentless Church on Sunday, June 3, 2018.
"This is not anything new," Travis Hayes, chief financial officer for Relentless, said. "This is a practice that is done with every denomination in the nation. That’s what this is. This is an asset that belongs to the church."
Gray, through his marketing director, declined a request for comment regarding his church-funded home when The News contacted a spokeswoman.
In mid-December, Hayes and Gray promised newspaper editors that he would sit down for an interview after Christmas. Gray has since declined repeated requests to do so.
In an email, his spokeswoman, Holly Baird, said that "due to his schedule and prior obligations, (Gray) will not be available to sit down."
Gray also would not speak with a reporter before or in-between services at Relentless on Sunday, Jan. 6.
Relentless bought the property in the gated subdivision to serve as the church parsonage, meaning the house is a church asset and stays with the church if Gray were to leave, Hayes said.
Hayes said it’s common for churches to provide housing for pastors and referenced a 200-member Baptist church in his neighborhood that owns a small house next to the church where its pastor lives.
Gray’s house in Simpsonville is about 10 miles from Relentless Church.
The Greenville megachurch has about 15,000 members, and more than 200,000 people viewed the sermon online during a recent Sunday, Hayes said.
Controversies over how some pastors use their income and status has become more common in recent years.
Georgia televangelist Creflo Dollar made headlines in 2018 when he asked his congregation of 200,000 to donate $300 dollars each to pay for a Gulfstream G650 jet. He told his congregation he needed the new jet to bring his ministry to all parts of the world, according to USA TODAY.
Controversial Atlanta-based megachurch pastor Eddie Long, who died in 2017, also had a private jet and drove a $350,000 Bentley, according to media reports.
Joel Osteen, notably one of the richest pastors in America, owns a $10.5 million mansion in a gated community in the Houston area, according to media reports.
According to property records, Hayes himself lives in a home that is owned by Redemption World Outreach, the church that became Relentless when Gray took over. Relentless confirmed through a spokesperson that Hayes lives in a Redemption-owned home, but Hayes has not returned calls or emails seeking comment about the arrangement.
On Jan. 6, when Gray again refused to speak with a reporter who was at his church that day, he referenced recent media coverage during his sermon.
"It occurred to me that many people still do not know me, don’t know my heart, don’t know me and my wife and because many news outlets are trying to define who we are, may God bless them. I’m going to take the power back and let y’all know who we are. We love Jesus. We serve Jesus,” Gray said at the start of his message titled "Through the Fire."
In Gray’s livestream video on social media in response to the Lamborghini news last month, he spoke about growing up wanting to live in the suburbs and enduring hardship by living out of hotels when first coming to Greenville. He told his followers, "Nobody knows the sacrifices that go with ministry."
"We were staying in different hotels in Greenville for months, preaching the gospel, so that everybody else could get established, because we believed in the vision," he said in his social media video.
Baird did not respond to questions about who paid for the hotel and Airbnb expenses when Gray first relocated to Greenville. She also did not respond to questions about the amount of Gray’s salary or the church’s operating budget.
The ‘caliber’ of John Gray
Hayes said the board agreed to buy the $1.8 million home because it was needed to entice a pastor of Gray’s "caliber" to relocate to Greenville. The cost of the home is more than 10 times the $165,600 median home value in Greenville County, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
"With anything, it’s about offering and attracting a senior pastor of Pastor John’s caliber with his presence on the world stage," Hayes said. "This was a board decision that was made at the highest level and absolutely in line with bringing in a John Gray-level pastor to come and minister and work here and live here."
People who have attended Relentless have differing opinions on the house in Simpsonville.
"I’m not concerned about how much someone else’s house cost," said Sarah Giwa, a Relentless Church member. "I hope no one is concerned about how much mine cost. I think they have a right to live among their peers. People in their own income bracket."
Jazzi Bush attended Relentless Church for about two months after moving to Greenville from Georgia. She said she moved to escape a domestic violence situation and became homeless in Greenville with her 8-year-old daughter. She’s now being helped by a Greenville-area nonprofit but said she didn’t feel comforted by the church when she asked for help. She no longer attends Relentless.
Relentless leadership doesn’t remember Bush and couldn’t speak to her situation, Baird, the Relentless spokeswoman, said. She said typically when someone comes to them homeless, the church purchases a week’s stay for them in an extended-stay hotel next to Relentless while assisting them with food and clothing or finds housing accommodations at a shelter.
The outreach ministry for Relentless services hundreds of people per month through food and clothing distributions, Baird said in an email. Relentless has served more than 5,000 people in various ways since forming, Baird said, and recently provided more than 1,000 children in the community with Christmas toys and supplies.
Bush said she got the sense the church was more interested in bringing celebrities to Greenville rather than helping those within the community.
Bush said she was shocked to hear about Gray’s parsonage after already feeling uneasy with his Lamborghini purchase.
"You’re supposed to be helping people, not to be all about yourself and into material things," she said. "I’m not saying they can’t live the way they should, but I’d have more respect for them if it was people in community that they would reach out to and help."
Gray was an associate pastor at Osteen’s Lakewood Church in Houston before coming to Greenville. He is also the focus of the reality TV series "The Book of John Gray," in its fourth season on the Oprah Winfrey Network.
Gray, who has published two books, has been touring nationwide to promote his second book, "Win from Within."
He also maintains a role as a teaching pastor at Lakewood. The church’s website shows him on the speaking schedule regularly, primarily for Wednesday services.
Prosperity gospel
Elizabeth Jemison, an assistant professor of American religious history at Clemson University, said church-funded homes for pastors have been common historically, but primarily for housing pastors next to their congregations as a means to offset their cost of living.
"It’s provided in a way for them to live in an area," she said. "That’s still sort of the case today with a variety of denominations, but most historically with more established churches, not evangelical, independent megachurches."
She said recently some have been more open to the "prosperity gospel," or at least a broader movement that sees displays of wealth or being established as evidence of God’s favor.
"That broader set of ideas has become very popular in American evangelicalism," she said. "If some see that a church is doing the right thing, is growing, is building a church and is providing housing for a pastor, it’s further evidence of being in the right line."
Gray, his wife and his two children moved to Greenville to start Relentless before the church "found the right home" for the family, Hayes said. There were no pre-agreements made as to Gray’s housing prior to him moving, Baird said in an email, contradicting Hayes’ initial comments regarding needing a certain quality of home to attract a Gray-caliber pastor.
Ron Carpenter, who moved his ministry to California, asked Gray to succeed him as head pastor to lead the Greenville congregation. The church ceased as Redemption and reformed under Gray’s Relentless using the same building, Baird said.
Carpenter founded Redemption Outreach Center in 1991, using a small warehouse for a gathering place for a few people. By 1994, he built a 300-seat sanctuary near Greenville Downtown Airport and a few years later began broadcasting services, renaming the ministry to Redemption World Outreach Center.
The church grew through the years and by 2018, the church operated five campuses with roughly 22,000 active members before Carpenter said he felt called to move his ministry to California.
Property records list the taxable market value of the Relentless parsonage Gray lives in at $1.1 million but as a church-owned home, the parsonage is eligible to be exempt from property tax, according to the South Carolina Department of Revenue.
More: With tears, John Gray defends gift to wife: No Relentless Church money used to buy Lamborghini
Redemption to Relentless
While some church leaders say Relentless is a different entity from Redemption, property tax records are less clear about whether that’s the case.
Hayes, the CFO of Relentless, currently lives in a home owned by Redemption World Outreach, even though Hayes has said Relentless has no stake in those properties.
Hayes was the CFO of Redemption while Redemption was still in Greenville. Hayes’ home is one of three in Greenville County owned by Redemption and valued at a total of around $1.3 million.
In 2013, Redemption World Outreach bought one home in the gated Plantation on Pelham subdivision in Greenville for $750,000, property records show.
That same year, Redemption bought another home in the Chandler Lake subdivision in Simpsonville for $401,000. That is the home where Hayes lives, according to property records. Baird confirmed that Redemption bought the home for Hayes in 2013 and still has ownership of the property.
In 2016, a third property, a vacant 3.4-acre residential lot in The Cliffs community in Landrum, sold to Redemption for $189,500.
A fourth property sold to Redemption for $217,900 in 2012 in the Pennbrooke At Ashby Park subdivision in Simpsonville. That home was sold to a private owner last year, according to property records, while the others are still listed as being owned by Redemption.
Property records show Redemption also still owns a warehouse and other buildings on the Relentless church property that cost Redemption $950,000.
Hayes said Relentless owns no other properties apart from Gray’s $1.8 million parsonage and the church building on Haywood Road.
Carpenter has not responded to multiple requests for comment via phone messages, emails and Facebook messages.
Baird, the spokeswoman for Relentless, said in an email that the homes still owned by Redemption in Greenville County are for the Carpenters’ "personal use."
When Gray came to Greenville, Carpenter left the congregation in Gray’s hands, though the name change — Redemption to Relentless — signified two separate churches.
"Pastor John never ‘took over’ Redemption. Most likely it was meant in a way to state Pastor Ron was leaving the community he established in Pastor John’s care," Baird said in an email. "Pastors Ron and Hope Carpenter completely picked up Redemption and moved to San Jose."
Charitable organizations must register with the South Carolina Secretary of State and provide annual financial reports through IRS 990 forms, which are public documents. Churches, however, are exempt from having to file 990s based on their religious classification.
A charity search through the Secretary of State shows that neither Relentless nor Redemption has filed 990s, which would show salaries of church leadership.
Not all churches have parsonages
In Cincinnati, Crossroads Church is one of the largest congregations in the metro area with about 30,000 attendees. Pastor Brian Tome, the Crossroads pastor who baptized Gray, wrote an opinion column in The News defending Gray’s purchase of the Lamborghini for his wife.
Rather than parsonages, Tome and the rest of the church’s 30 commissioned pastors are eligible for a housing allowance in accordance with IRS rules, said church spokeswoman Jenn Sperry.
According to property records, Tome lives in a housing community valued at $2 million, but the properties are split into about 27 different homes and each is owned by a different family, Sperry said.
No money from Crossroads is specifically given to pastors for housing, Sperry said. The IRS rule that applies to ministers essentially allows the yearly cost of a minister’s housing to be exempt from income tax.
According to Al Hodges, a Greenville-based accountant, the IRS has not established a maximum amount. However, compensation must be "reasonable" and the housing allowance exclusion is limited to "the smallest of the following: The amount actually used to provide a home, the amount officially designated as a rental allowance or the fair rental value of the home."
At Brookwood Church in Simpsonville, there are about 3,800 weekly attendees, according to its website. The church does not own a parsonage for its senior pastor, said Lora Catoe, a spokeswoman for the church. She said Brookwood’s senior pastor is eligible to exempt housing from income tax filings.
"The church works with the pastor according to the IRS guidelines to determine their housing allowance based on past expenses, expected expenses, and/or the fair market rental value of the home," Brookwood’s human resources director, Nina Mitchell, said in an email. "So, as there is no flat percentage or amount dictated by the IRS, the housing allowance number may change from year to year depending on housing costs."
NewSpring is the largest church in South Carolina with about 20,000 weekly attendees across 15 campuses. The church does not own any parsonages for its pastors, said NewSpring spokeswoman Suzanne Swift, nor does it provide additional housing allowances for pastors outside of salary.
No set standard
Many churches operate autonomously so there are no set rules or guidelines as to how churches should accommodate or pay their pastors.
Bert Ross, of the South Carolina Baptist Convention, said the convention does not provide oversight or approval for such issues.
He’s found more recently that fewer churches have parsonages, he said.
"There is not a set standard for cost, size (or) proximity for the housing of pastors," he said. "What churches do with their pastors is a local church decision, we do not weigh in if it is normal or understandable."
In an interview with The News in December 2017, Gray defended pastors with large houses and nice cars.
"My thing is this: If you work hard and pay your taxes, then you should be able to live where you are able to afford. I think that pastors do have a responsibility to be wise with the things that they have," he said in 2017.
Relentless is not affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention.
However, the convention suggests that churches should designate their housing allowances in writing before the beginning of the calendar year. For pastors living rent-free in parsonages, the convention suggests that churches can still designate housing allowances if pastors pay for utilities, repairs, furniture or other housing expenses.
"We don’t mandate these procedures; SBC churches are autonomous and so the actual implementing of the housing allowance is at the local church level," said Roy Hayhurst, a spokesman for GuideStone, a financial service company that works with the Convention.
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This South Carolina megachurch bought its pastor a $1.8M house. Here’s why
Last month, Pastor John Gray drew national attention when he presented his wife, Aventer, with a Lamborghini that starts at $200,000 as an anniversary present. The Relentless Church pastor deflected criticism in part by emphasizing that the car was not paid for with any church money.
At the time, Gray was living in a $1.8 million home that was bought by the church in October. Church leaders said the Relentless-owned home was needed to attract a leader of Gray’s caliber.
The house in the Southampton community in Simpsonville is 7,247 square feet, consistent with the size and value of about 25 homes in the community.
More: Megachurch pastor receives rousing support from congregation after giving $200K Lamborghini to wife
The existence of the church-owned residence was brought to The Greenville News’ attention through a tip from a reader. The News verified the ownership of the home through property records and real estate transactions.
The residence shines light on housing arrangements that some churches include as part of the compensation packages for their pastors.
Pastor John Gray during the installation of pastors service at Relentless Church on Sunday, June 3, 2018.
"This is not anything new," Travis Hayes, chief financial officer for Relentless, said. "This is a practice that is done with every denomination in the nation. That’s what this is. This is an asset that belongs to the church."
Gray, through his marketing director, declined a request for comment regarding his church-funded home when The News contacted a spokeswoman.
In mid-December, Hayes and Gray promised newspaper editors that he would sit down for an interview after Christmas. Gray has since declined repeated requests to do so.
In an email, his spokeswoman, Holly Baird, said that "due to his schedule and prior obligations, (Gray) will not be available to sit down."
Gray also would not speak with a reporter before or in-between services at Relentless on Sunday, Jan. 6.
Relentless bought the property in the gated subdivision to serve as the church parsonage, meaning the house is a church asset and stays with the church if Gray were to leave, Hayes said.
Hayes said it’s common for churches to provide housing for pastors and referenced a 200-member Baptist church in his neighborhood that owns a small house next to the church where its pastor lives.
Gray’s house in Simpsonville is about 10 miles from Relentless Church.
The Greenville megachurch has about 15,000 members, and more than 200,000 people viewed the sermon online during a recent Sunday, Hayes said.
Controversies over how some pastors use their income and status has become more common in recent years.
Georgia televangelist Creflo Dollar made headlines in 2018 when he asked his congregation of 200,000 to donate $300 dollars each to pay for a Gulfstream G650 jet. He told his congregation he needed the new jet to bring his ministry to all parts of the world, according to USA TODAY.
Controversial Atlanta-based megachurch pastor Eddie Long, who died in 2017, also had a private jet and drove a $350,000 Bentley, according to media reports.
Joel Osteen, notably one of the richest pastors in America, owns a $10.5 million mansion in a gated community in the Houston area, according to media reports.
According to property records, Hayes himself lives in a home that is owned by Redemption World Outreach, the church that became Relentless when Gray took over. Relentless confirmed through a spokesperson that Hayes lives in a Redemption-owned home, but Hayes has not returned calls or emails seeking comment about the arrangement.
On Jan. 6, when Gray again refused to speak with a reporter who was at his church that day, he referenced recent media coverage during his sermon.
"It occurred to me that many people still do not know me, don’t know my heart, don’t know me and my wife and because many news outlets are trying to define who we are, may God bless them. I’m going to take the power back and let y’all know who we are. We love Jesus. We serve Jesus,” Gray said at the start of his message titled "Through the Fire."
In Gray’s livestream video on social media in response to the Lamborghini news last month, he spoke about growing up wanting to live in the suburbs and enduring hardship by living out of hotels when first coming to Greenville. He told his followers, "Nobody knows the sacrifices that go with ministry."
"We were staying in different hotels in Greenville for months, preaching the gospel, so that everybody else could get established, because we believed in the vision," he said in his social media video.
Baird did not respond to questions about who paid for the hotel and Airbnb expenses when Gray first relocated to Greenville. She also did not respond to questions about the amount of Gray’s salary or the church’s operating budget.
More: ‘Men of God hid it all’: Church protected more than 300 ‘predator priests’ in Pa., grand jury says
The ‘caliber’ of John Gray
Hayes said the board agreed to buy the $1.8 million home because it was needed to entice a pastor of Gray’s "caliber" to relocate to Greenville. The cost of the home is more than 10 times the $165,600 median home value in Greenville County, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
"With anything, it’s about offering and attracting a senior pastor of Pastor John’s caliber with his presence on the world stage," Hayes said. "This was a board decision that was made at the highest level and absolutely in line with bringing in a John Gray-level pastor to come and minister and work here and live here."
People who have attended Relentless have differing opinions on the house in Simpsonville.
"I’m not concerned about how much someone else’s house cost," said Sarah Giwa, a Relentless Church member. "I hope no one is concerned about how much mine cost. I think they have a right to live among their peers. People in their own income bracket."
Jazzi Bush attended Relentless Church for about two months after moving to Greenville from Georgia. She said she moved to escape a domestic violence situation and became homeless in Greenville with her 8-year-old daughter. She’s now being helped by a Greenville-area nonprofit but said she didn’t feel comforted by the church when she asked for help. She no longer attends Relentless.
Relentless leadership doesn’t remember Bush and couldn’t speak to her situation, Baird, the Relentless spokeswoman, said. She said typically when someone comes to them homeless, the church purchases a week’s stay for them in an extended-stay hotel next to Relentless while assisting them with food and clothing or finds housing accommodations at a shelter.
The outreach ministry for Relentless services hundreds of people per month through food and clothing distributions, Baird said in an email. Relentless has served more than 5,000 people in various ways since forming, Baird said, and recently provided more than 1,000 children in the community with Christmas toys and supplies.
Bush said she got the sense the church was more interested in bringing celebrities to Greenville rather than helping those within the community.
Bush said she was shocked to hear about Gray’s parsonage after already feeling uneasy with his Lamborghini purchase.
"You’re supposed to be helping people, not to be all about yourself and into material things," she said. "I’m not saying they can’t live the way they should, but I’d have more respect for them if it was people in community that they would reach out to and help."
Gray was an associate pastor at Osteen’s Lakewood Church in Houston before coming to Greenville. He is also the focus of the reality TV series "The Book of John Gray," in its fourth season on the Oprah Winfrey Network.
Gray, who has published two books, has been touring nationwide to promote his second book, "Win from Within."
He also maintains a role as a teaching pastor at Lakewood. The church’s website shows him on the speaking schedule regularly, primarily for Wednesday services.
Prosperity gospel
Elizabeth Jemison, an assistant professor of American religious history at Clemson University, said church-funded homes for pastors have been common historically, but primarily for housing pastors next to their congregations as a means to offset their cost of living.
"It’s provided in a way for them to live in an area," she said. "That’s still sort of the case today with a variety of denominations, but most historically with more established churches, not evangelical, independent megachurches."
She said recently some have been more open to the "prosperity gospel," or at least a broader movement that sees displays of wealth or being established as evidence of God’s favor.
"That broader set of ideas has become very popular in American evangelicalism," she said. "If some see that a church is doing the right thing, is growing, is building a church and is providing housing for a pastor, it’s further evidence of being in the right line."
Gray, his wife and his two children moved to Greenville to start Relentless before the church "found the right home" for the family, Hayes said. There were no pre-agreements made as to Gray’s housing prior to him moving, Baird said in an email, contradicting Hayes’ initial comments regarding needing a certain quality of home to attract a Gray-caliber pastor.
More: Christian churches still struggle with race, how to discuss it, what to do
Ron Carpenter, who moved his ministry to California, asked Gray to succeed him as head pastor to lead the Greenville congregation. The church ceased as Redemption and reformed under Gray’s Relentless using the same building, Baird said.
Carpenter founded Redemption Outreach Center in 1991, using a small warehouse for a gathering place for a few people. By 1994, he built a 300-seat sanctuary near Greenville Downtown Airport and a few years later began broadcasting services, renaming the ministry to Redemption World Outreach Center.
The church grew through the years and by 2018, the church operated five campuses with roughly 22,000 active members before Carpenter said he felt called to move his ministry to California.
Property records list the taxable market value of the Relentless parsonage Gray lives in at $1.1 million but as a church-owned home, the parsonage is eligible to be exempt from property tax, according to the South Carolina Department of Revenue.
Redemption to Relentless
While some church leaders say Relentless is a different entity from Redemption, property tax records are less clear about whether that’s the case.
Hayes, the CFO of Relentless, currently lives in a home owned by Redemption World Outreach, even though Hayes has said Relentless has no stake in those properties.
Hayes was the CFO of Redemption while Redemption was still in Greenville. Hayes’ home is one of three in Greenville County owned by Redemption and valued at a total of around $1.3 million.
In 2013, Redemption World Outreach bought one home in the gated Plantation on Pelham subdivision in Greenville for $750,000, property records show.
That same year, Redemption bought another home in the Chandler Lake subdivision in Simpsonville for $401,000. That is the home where Hayes lives, according to property records. Baird confirmed that Redemption bought the home for Hayes in 2013 and still has ownership of the property.
In 2016, a third property, a vacant 3.4-acre residential lot in The Cliffs community in Landrum, sold to Redemption for $189,500.
A fourth property sold to Redemption for $217,900 in 2012 in the Pennbrooke At Ashby Park subdivision in Simpsonville. That home was sold to a private owner last year, according to property records, while the others are still listed as being owned by Redemption.
Property records show Redemption also still owns a warehouse and other buildings on the Relentless church property that cost Redemption $950,000.
Hayes said Relentless owns no other properties apart from Gray’s $1.8 million parsonage and the church building on Haywood Road.
Carpenter has not responded to multiple requests for comment via phone messages, emails and Facebook messages.
Baird, the spokeswoman for Relentless, said in an email that the homes still owned by Redemption in Greenville County are for the Carpenters’ "personal use."
When Gray came to Greenville, Carpenter left the congregation in Gray’s hands, though the name change — Redemption to Relentless — signified two separate churches.
"Pastor John never ‘took over’ Redemption. Most likely it was meant in a way to state Pastor Ron was leaving the community he established in Pastor John’s care," Baird said in an email. "Pastors Ron and Hope Carpenter completely picked up Redemption and moved to San Jose."
Charitable organizations must register with the South Carolina Secretary of State and provide annual financial reports through IRS 990 forms, which are public documents. Churches, however, are exempt from having to file 990s based on their religious classification.
A charity search through the Secretary of State shows that neither Relentless nor Redemption has filed 990s, which would show salaries of church leadership.
Not all churches have parsonages
In Cincinnati, Crossroads Church is one of the largest congregations in the metro area with about 30,000 attendees. Pastor Brian Tome, the Crossroads pastor who baptized Gray, wrote an opinion column in The News defending Gray’s purchase of the Lamborghini for his wife.
Rather than parsonages, Tome and the rest of the church’s 30 commissioned pastors are eligible for a housing allowance in accordance with IRS rules, said church spokeswoman Jenn Sperry.
According to property records, Tome lives in a housing community valued at $2 million, but the properties are split into about 27 different homes and each is owned by a different family, Sperry said.
No money from Crossroads is specifically given to pastors for housing, Sperry said. The IRS rule that applies to ministers essentially allows the yearly cost of a minister’s housing to be exempt from income tax.
According to Al Hodges, a Greenville-based accountant, the IRS has not established a maximum amount. However, compensation must be "reasonable" and the housing allowance exclusion is limited to "the smallest of the following: The amount actually used to provide a home, the amount officially designated as a rental allowance or the fair rental value of the home."
At Brookwood Church in Simpsonville, there are about 3,800 weekly attendees, according to its website. The church does not own a parsonage for its senior pastor, said Lora Catoe, a spokeswoman for the church. She said Brookwood’s senior pastor is eligible to exempt housing from income tax filings.
"The church works with the pastor according to the IRS guidelines to determine their housing allowance based on past expenses, expected expenses, and/or the fair market rental value of the home," Brookwood’s human resources director, Nina Mitchell, said in an email. "So, as there is no flat percentage or amount dictated by the IRS, the housing allowance number may change from year to year depending on housing costs."
NewSpring is the largest church in South Carolina with about 20,000 weekly attendees across 15 campuses. The church does not own any parsonages for its pastors, said NewSpring spokeswoman Suzanne Swift, nor does it provide additional housing allowances for pastors outside of salary.
No set standard
Many churches operate autonomously so there are no set rules or guidelines as to how churches should accommodate or pay their pastors.
Bert Ross, of the South Carolina Baptist Convention, said the convention does not provide oversight or approval for such issues.
He’s found more recently that fewer churches have parsonages, he said.
"There is not a set standard for cost, size (or) proximity for the housing of pastors," he said. "What churches do with their pastors is a local church decision, we do not weigh in if it is normal or understandable."
In an interview with The News in December 2017, Gray defended pastors with large houses and nice cars.
"My thing is this: If you work hard and pay your taxes, then you should be able to live where you are able to afford. I think that pastors do have a responsibility to be wise with the things that they have," he said in 2017.
Relentless is not affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention.
However, the convention suggests that churches should designate their housing allowances in writing before the beginning of the calendar year. For pastors living rent-free in parsonages, the convention suggests that churches can still designate housing allowances if pastors pay for utilities, repairs, furniture or other housing expenses.
"We don’t mandate these procedures; SBC churches are autonomous and so the actual implementing of the housing allowance is at the local church level," said Roy Hayhurst, a spokesman for GuideStone, a financial service company that works with the Convention.
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The winners and losers in SC stocks last year
Ray August is CEO for Benefitfocus Inc. The Daniel Island company’s stock jumped more than 70 percent in 2018. File/Staff/Brad Nettles
South Carolina stocks couldn’t sidestep the turbulence that rattled Wall Street last year, but they closed 2018 slightly ahead of broader market indicators.
While the widely followed S&P 500 shed more than 6 percent in value — its worst showing since the financial crisis a decade earlier — the 18 publicly traded companies based in the state gave up 3.7 percent. That’s based on the changing price of the shares over the course of a year that started out promising but was upended by unresolved trade tensions, rising interest rates and signs of a slowing global economy.
Put another way, an investor who bought 10 shares in each of those businesses on the first trading day last January would have paid roughly $7,240 for the entire lot. The value of the eclectic “Palmetto State Index” would have slipped to about $6,969 when the markets closed Dec. 31, not including dividends.
It was an equally grim year for Wall Street’s other yardsticks. The narrowly focused, blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 5.6 percent, while the technology-heavy Nasdaq composite slid nearly 4 percent. Europe’s major indexes also were in the red as of Monday.
Of the 18 South Carolina stocks that are bought and sold on a major exchange, just seven managed to ride into the new year with their heads above water.
Leading the pack by several lengths was Daniel Island-based Benefitfocus Inc., which makes software that workers use to sign up for and manage their health insurance and other job-related perks.
Its shares began their latest rally in November, after the Charleston firm reported 8 percent revenue growth and a smaller loss for the third quarter. While it surrendered some ground afterward, the stock notched a 71 percent increase when the books were closed for 2018.
Blackbaud Inc. moved into its new headquarters in mid-2018, but its stock would take a hit later in the year, after the software company cut its sales and profit forecast. File/Wade Spees/Staff
On the flip side, the biggest decliner is another big Daniel Island tech business that was among the biggest standouts in 2017: Blackbaud Inc., which sells software and services to nonprofit organizations.
That was then. Blackbaud’s once-lofty shares, which peaked north of $120 in July, tumbled by about one-third for the calendar year. Much of the damage came in October, when management cut the company’s 2018 sales and profit forecast.
Between the extremes, it was largely a mixed bag, ranging from a modest 1.4 dip at Pee Dee packaging giant Sonoco to a 25 percent jump at Upstate-based payday lender World Acceptance Corp.
Investors in all but one of South Carolina’s six publicly traded banks licked their wounds, a common theme for the lending industry in 2018. Columbia-based South State Corp. suffered the biggest hit, with its stock skidding about 31 percent. The sole gainer was also the smallest of the bunch: Charleston’s Bank of South Carolina Inc. added nearly 6 percent.
The hits and misses weren’t limited to stock prices in 2018. South Carolina lost another publicly traded company early last year, when electronic-parts maker Kemet Corp. moved its headquarters to south Florida from Simpsonville.
Another is being scratched from the list in 2019, courtesy of the sale of Cayce-based SCANA Corp. to Dominion Energy of Richmond, Va. The $13.4 billion deal was finalized last week.
The buyout offer announced last January did wonders for the stock of the South Carolina Electric & Gas parent, which was one of the worst performers of 2017, when the nearly fatal financial disaster known as the V.C. Summer nuclear project came to a head.
Shares of SCANA, which stopped trading Monday afternoon, climbed by about 23 percent over the past 12 months, better than most.
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Additional Information About 223 Clairhill Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29680
223 Clairhill Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29680 223 Clairhill Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29680
223 Clairhill Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29680 is a single family home for sale listed on the market for 10 days. The median listing price for Simpsonville at $268,200, is 17% greater than SC at $229,900. The schools near 223 Clairhill Ct include Word of Life Ministries/ School, Bryson Middle School and Brashier Middle College Charter School, which are all in the School District: Greenville 01 School District. There are similar and nearby single family homes for sale at 232 Fremont Dr, 319 Rio Grande Pl and 421 Rio Grande Pl.
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2 Greenville Co. Schools administrators named South Carolina’s Asst. Principal of the Year, Principal of the Year
SIMPSONVILLE, SC (FOX Carolina) – Two Greenville County Schools administrators were honored Friday by the South Carolina Association of School Administrators. One was named South Carolina Elementary Assistant Principal of the Year and the other as South Carolina Elementary Principal of the Year.
Simpsonville Elementary Assistant Principal Leah Stafford received the South Carolina Elementary Assistant Principal of the Year honor.
Taylors Elementary Principal Rhonda Rhodes received the South Carolina Elementary Principal of the Year honor.
Representatives from the SCASA visited both schools to present the awards.
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Man with name of candidate faces child porn charges
Fred Wall, a Simpsonville man running for the South Carolina House District 27 seat, denies facing charges of sexual exploitation of a minor. Man with name, age, address of candidate faces child pornography charges, records show Fred Wall, a Simpsonville man running for the South Carolina House District 27 seat, denies facing charges of sexual exploitation of a minor.
Start the conversation, or Read more at The Greenville News.
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Additional Information About 410 Capewood Dr, Simpsonville, SC 29680
410 Capewood Dr, Simpsonville, SC 29680 410 Capewood Dr, Simpsonville, SC 29680 Master Bedroom Features: Half Bath, Master on 2nd Lvl Full Bathrooms: 1 Breakfast Room Size: 9×9
*School data provided by National Center for Education Statistics, Pitney Bowes, and GreatSchools. Intended for reference only. GreatSchools Ratings compare a school’s test performance to statewide results. To verify enrollment eligibility, contact the school or district directly.
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Additional Information About 1013 Louvale Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29681
1013 Louvale Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29681 1013 Louvale Ct, Simpsonville, SC 296811013 Louvale Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29681 1013 Louvale Ct, Simpsonville, SC 29681
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Additional Information About 303 Harness Trl, Simpsonville, SC 29681
303 Harness Trl, Simpsonville, SC 29681 303 Harness Trl, Simpsonville, SC 29681
303 Harness Trl, Simpsonville, SC 29681 is a single family home for sale. Browse realtor.com® for nearby schools and neighborhood information. Find homes similar to 303 Harness Trl within your price range.
Get the basic details about the property at 303 Harness Trl. Located in Simpsonville, SC, this home is listed currently at $$249,900. It has 0.81 square feet, including 3 beds and 2 baths.
Use realtor.com® to find great properties, and then save your searches by registering with the site and signing in. Set e-mail notifications to find out right away if a new property that meets your search criteria has been added or if there is a change to one of your listings. When you’ve narrowed down your search options, you can find a local REALTOR® to help you the rest of the way.
Start and end your property search with realtor.com®. First, use the search tools to find homes for sale like the one at 303 Harness Trl. Read all the detailed and information provided, along with the maps, graphs and neighborhood statistics, to narrow down your search. Then let a qualified local REALTOR® take you the rest of the way.
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Property Details for 108 Holland Trace Cir
108 Holland Trace Cir, Simpsonville, SC 29681 108 Holland Trace Cir, Simpsonville, SC 29681
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Send Flowers
Donald Kredensor
Greenville
Donald Kredensor, 79, of Greenville, husband of Emma Clark Kredensor of 52 years, died Wednesday, May 29, 2013.
Born in Philadelphia, PA, he was a son of the late Peter and Lillian Kredensor.
In addition to his wife, he is survived by two children; Donald P. Kredensor and wife Julie, and Diane C. Kredensor and spouse Heidi Kilgras; Three Grandchildren: Caroline Kredensor, Benjamin Kredensor, and Charlie Kilgras; and a brother, Charles Kredensor and partner Fred Saunders.
Mr. Kredensor served in the US Army and retired from Gulf Oil Corp. He was of the Catholic Faith.
Funeral Services will be held on Sunday, June 2, 2013 at 3:00 p.m. in the Chapel at Thomas McAfee Funeral Home, Southeast. Visitation will follow the service. Burial will be in West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia, PA. at a later date.
Memorials may be made to Hospice Care of South Carolina, 1 Caledon Ct., Suite 1 A, Greenville, SC 29615.
Condolences may be made to the family by visiting www.thomasmcafee.com.
Funeral etiquette and advice
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Tractor-trailer barrels into front of school bus with special needs students on board
SIMPSONVILLE, SC (WHDH) — A tractor-trailer barreled across the road and into the front of a school bus with kids on board in South Carolina.
The bus driver, Tammy Cummings, who has worked for the school district for 16 years, saw the tractor-trailer lose control and head straight for the bus.
“I knew he was gonna lose control then. I had no where to go because there was rail guards on both sides of me,” she said.
The entire crash was caught on surveillance cameras installed on the school bus. She was driving four special needs students and an aide at the time.
“I just watched the bed of that truck come towards me, and I held up my arms to cover my face because I knew that bed was gonna hit us,” Cummings explained.
She called for help, stating that everybody on the bus was okay.
Video shows her trying to keep the students calm as they waited for officials to arrive.
The school district said the video of the crash will be used in training sessions to show future bus drivers how they should act in case of a crash.
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