Florida Megachurch's Ex-pastor Never Shy About Cocaine-filled Past

The leader of a Florida megachurch who resigned last week after confessing to an unspecified "moral failing" was a self-proclaimed sinner who said he ditched sex, drugs and rock '-n' roll for a pious life behind the pulpit, according to parishioners.
Bob Coy, 58, the former head of Calvary Chapel Fort Lauderdale, was never shy about his raunchy, rowdy misadventures in Las Vegas, where he once partied hard, battled addictions and later found Jesus, parishioners said.

"He's always said from the pulpit: 'Don't follow me. I'm just a person like you,'" said Mitch Guertler, a parishioner for 17 years who lives in the Fort Lauderdale area.
"You could relate to his struggles, to his past," Guertler said. "He's human. He's made a bad decision — or a few."
When reached for comment Tuesday, church spokesman Mike Miller declined to elaborate on Coy’s resignation and said the pastor was not granting interviews. Coy did not immediately respond to an email request for comment Tuesday afternoon.
In sermons recalled by parishioners and published interviews, the magnetic pastor spoke candidly about his misspent youth and destructive appetites.
The Royal Oak, Mich., native says he started abusing cocaine while working in the music industry in Detroit and later worked at a Sin City casino with a glitzy nude-girl show, according to a December 2000 profile in The Miami Herald.
But in the early 1980s, Coy says he began attending services and later joined the staff at the Calvary Chapel in Las Vegas, an affiliate of the Calvary Chapel evangelical movement. He has said that's when he cleaned up his act, the Herald reported.
"I'm not the same cocaine-addicted alcoholic womanizer I used to be," Coy told the Herald in 2000. "I'm a pastor."

Coy's long road to redemption is well known to his congregation.
"He got saved and accepted Christ," said Kevin McCloskey, a parishioner for 18 years who lives in the Fort Lauderdale area.
http://www.believersworld.net/2014/04/florida-megachurchs-ex-pastor-never-shy.html
 
While God does redeem, this guy may not be well suited for such a huge leadership role. I am glad he never hid his past from his flock.

The previous pastor of my church aired some of his failings while on the platform. I know it made some uncomfortable, but I do know it helped make him more human. Incidentally, those who didn't appreciate hearing him speak of his weaknesses mostly came from backgrounds where the pastor/priest was deemed perfect (Catholic).
 
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