About: Bethel Church, Mansfield Woodhouse   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/Veyc38dzttCJNYNdya-uXw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

In 1999, Spademan had six children and over twelve grandchildren. She had children early in life and did not have much money. Her youngest daughter was adopted from Honduras – Spademan had the idea to begin a connection between Bethel Church and the Honduras orphanage Finca de los Niños. Spademan and the church had a goal to build a new orphanage, but they gave up on these plans in the mid-1980s. Spademan's residences on Ley Lane were owned by members of the church.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Bethel Church, Mansfield Woodhouse
rdfs:comment
  • In 1999, Spademan had six children and over twelve grandchildren. She had children early in life and did not have much money. Her youngest daughter was adopted from Honduras – Spademan had the idea to begin a connection between Bethel Church and the Honduras orphanage Finca de los Niños. Spademan and the church had a goal to build a new orphanage, but they gave up on these plans in the mid-1980s. Spademan's residences on Ley Lane were owned by members of the church.
sameAs
dbkwik:religion/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Country
  • England and The United States
Name
  • Bethel Interdenominational Church
Caption
  • King's Chapel in Norwich, Connecticut
Img size
  • 150(xsd:integer)
Address
  • Mansfield Woodhouse, England,
  • Norwich, Connecticut
Religion
Fullname
  • 'Bethel Interdenominational Church
founded date
  • 1999(xsd:integer)
seniorpastor
  • John Hibbert, Jean Spademan, Sam J. Wibberley
denomination
  • new christian movement
abstract
  • In 1999, Spademan had six children and over twelve grandchildren. She had children early in life and did not have much money. Her youngest daughter was adopted from Honduras – Spademan had the idea to begin a connection between Bethel Church and the Honduras orphanage Finca de los Niños. Spademan and the church had a goal to build a new orphanage, but they gave up on these plans in the mid-1980s. Spademan's residences on Ley Lane were owned by members of the church. In an interview with the Daily Express in 2000, Spademan commented on claims by others that she said she was a prophet: "I don't believe I'm a prophet. I never said ... once I may have verged on it." Hibbert acknowledged Spademan asserted she was a prophet, and said she made such statements "only once as a means to an end in a particular circumstance". Hibbert went on to note: "I would say she fits into the prophet category (of the ministry) but not in the way the press is making it out to be, but because she is behind the scenes and she communes with God a great deal." In 1999 Spademan ruled both churches, in England and in Connecticut, through constant contact with church pastors. She communicated either in person or by telephone with Sam J. Wibberley, a pastor at the church in Connecticut.
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