COLORADO SPRINGS (CO)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]
July 23, 2025
By Julie Roys
A month after being forced to resign from a Colorado megachurch for “inaccurate” statements about his knowledge of Robert Morris’s child sexual abuse, Brady Boyd has launched a new ministry—and is taking donations.
Boyd announced the ministry, called Psalm 68 Ministries, in a post to a private “Support Brady Boyd” Facebook group on Monday. The group was founded on June 21, soon after Boyd resigned as senior pastor of New Life Church in Colorado Springs.
According to Boyd’s post, Psalm 68 Ministries is named after “a Psalm that has been a life verse for us the past 36 years of marriage and ministry.”
Psalm 68:5-6 talks about God being a “father to the fatherless, a defender of widows,” Boyd wrote, “We want to complete our ministry careers caring for the people Jesus always sees but are often forgotten by society.”
This includes pastors “who have been wounded by the rigors of ministry”; kids in developing countries, like Guatemala and the Dominican Republic; and those needing clean drinking water, education, and medical services in Central and South America.”
Psalm 68 Ministries will also “allow me to continue preaching at churches around the world,” Boyd added. His wife, Pam, will co-lead it.

However, it was Boyd’s alleged failure to act on behalf of Cindy Clemishire whom his friend, Robert Morris, had sexually molested as a child — and then lying about it — that cost Boyd his job.
As The Roys Report (TRR) first reported, court documents filed by Morris—the disgraced founder of Dallas-based Gateway Church—indicate that Boyd knew about Morris’s sexual abuse by at least 2007. Prior to coming to New Life, Boyd was the senior associate pastor at Gateway, under Morris.
Despite his alleged knowledge of Morris’s abuse, Boyd made Morris an overseer at New Life and frequently invited Morris to speak at the church.
After our report published, Boyd characterized the allegation as an “attack of the enemy” and insisted he didn’t know until 2024 that Morris had sexually abused Clemishire, beginning when she was just 12 years old.
“I would never ever put a known pedophile in a place of authority in this church. Never, would I ever do that to you—ever!” Boyd told the congregation on June 8.
But soon after Boyd made those statements, New Life’s elders were given information that Boyd “was party to at least 20 emails relating to Ms. Clemishire’s abuse,” a church document stated. It added that Boyd “interacted extensively with those emails, and that many of the emails stated in the subject line the allegation that Ms. Clemishire was 12 at the time.”
The document also stated that meeting notes and email records confirm that Boyd met with the New Life pastoral search committee in 2007 and discussed the accusations made by Clemishire’s sister for weeks. Clemishire’s sister, Karen Black, confirmed to TRR that she had informed that same search committee in 2007 that Morris had molested her sister from the time she was 12 to 17.
Soon after this information came to light, the elders demanded that Boyd resign. A few weeks later, two church executives who hired Boyd were also forced out.
TRR reached out to Black for comment on Boyd’s new ministry venture.
She replied, “According to Psalm 68 (which talks about God scattering and crushing His enemies), I’m curious to know whom Brady considers his enemies. Is it those of us who speak truth?”
“Perhaps ‘his’ ministry should be John 8:44,” she added. (John 8:44 talks about belonging to the devil, “the father of lies.”)
“Psalm 68 seems inaccurate. Allowing a pedophile to be an overseer is never ever, never ever, never considered a protector of orphans and widows!” Black stated.
Trinity Fellowship and Jimmy Wichter support Boyd
Boyd says his new ministry will be based in his Colorado Springs home but will operate “under the authority of the elders of Trinity Fellowship Church in Amarillo, TX.”
Boyd was on staff at Trinity in the 1990s and remains an apostolic elder there. Trinity also is where Jimmy Evans, who previously served as an elder at Gateway with Boyd, pastored for three decades. Evans also serves as an apostolic elder at Trinity.
As reported earlier by TRR, court documents filed by Morris indicate that Jimmy Evans also knew about Morris’s abuse of Clemishire by 2007. According to a 2007 email from then-Gateway elder Tom Lane to other elders, Evans attended a meeting in 2007 with Morris and other elders and pastors to discuss the allegations Black made to New Life’s search committee.
Evans also went with Morris in 2007 to speak with Clemishire’s Oklahoma pastor after Clemishire informed her pastor about Morris’s abuse.
Despite these facts, Trinity Fellowship Senior Pastor Jimmy Wichter seems unfazed. At a question-and-answer time with his congregation a few weeks ago, Wichter stated, “We can find . . . no disqualifying conduct that Brady committed. Therefore, Brady continues to be a friend and an apostolic elder of Trinity Fellowship. I’m proud to call him a friend and I’m proud to call him an apostolic elder.”
Wichter also said he had spoken to the overseers at New Life about the situation with Boyd. These overseers are Greg Surratt, president of the scandal-plagued Association of Related Churches (ARC), and Larry Stockstill, founder of Bethany Church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Stockstill was also an overseer at New Life in 2007, and documents suggest he too was informed about Morris’s abuse of Clemishire at that time.
Wichter told his congregation: “I reached out to them in this process, as well—just basically saying, ‘Hey, is there—you know, just as a matter of due diligence—is there something I’m not seeing?’ and ‘Are we missing something?’ And both of them said ‘Absolutely not.’”
TRR reached out to Trinity and Wichter for comment but did not hear back prior to publication.
In addition to providing oversight, Trinity Fellowship is receiving donations for Boyd’s ministry, so all gifts are tax-deductible.
A search of both Colorado and Texas businesses did not find a listing for Psalm 68 Ministries. Psalm 68 Ministries also is not listed with the IRS as a tax-exempt organization.