Obama’s Former Pastor Getting $1.6M Home in Retirement
The four- bedroom, 10,000-plus square foot home that Trinity United Church of Christ is building for Reverend Jeremiah Wright. (FNC Photo)
By Jeff Goldblatt
This was supposed to be the week that the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. returned to the pulpit to preach for the first time since his anti-American sermons generated nationwide outrage and drew condemnation from his longtime parishioner, Barack Obama.
But, citing security concerns, Wright canceled his speaking engagements in Florida and Texas. A spokeswoman at his former church in Chicago said his schedule is pending.
A two-week FOX News investigation, however, has uncovered where Wright will be spending a good deal of his time in retirement, and it is a far cry from the impoverished Chicago streets where the preacher led his ministry for 36 years.
FOX News has uncovered documents that indicate Wright is about to move to a 10,340-square-foot, four-bedroom home in suburban Chicago, currently under construction in a gated community.
While it is not uncommon for an accomplished clergyman to live in luxury, Wright’s retirement residence is raising some questions.
“Some people think deals like this are hypocritical. Jeremiah Wright himself criticizes people from the pulpit for middle classism, for too much materialism,” said Andrew Walsh, Associate Director of the Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life with Trinity College in Hartford, Conn.
“So he’s entitled to be tweaked here. So the question really is, how unusual is this? Somewhat unusual,” he said.
According to documents obtained from the Cook County Register of Deeds, Wright purchased two empty lots in Tinley Park, Ill., from Chicago restaurant chain owner Kenny Lewis for $345,000 in 2004.
Documents show Wright sold the property to his church, Trinity United, in December 2006, with the proceeds going to a living trust shared with his wife, Ramah.
The sale price for the land was just under $308,000, about $40,000 less than Wright’s original purchase two years earlier.
Public records of the sale show Trinity initially obtained a $10 million bank loan to purchase the property and build a new house on the land.
But further investigation with tax and real estate attorneys showed that the church had actually secured a $1.6 million mortgage for the home purchase, and attached a $10 million line of credit, for reasons unspecified in the paperwork.
There is apparently nothing wrong with that, according to non-profit tax expert Jack Siegel of Charity Governance Consulting, who examined public documents FOX News obtained from the Cook County Register of Deeds and the Village of Tinley Park.
“At least looking at it from a public document standpoint, there’s clearly not a problem that jumps out or some sort of wrongdoing,” Siegel said.
Siegel characterizes the transaction as unusual, however, because of the way Wright sold the property to Trinity and the way the deal was financed, with the attached $10 million line of credit.
Because churches are classified as private businesses, Trinity isn’t required to reveal its intended use for the line of credit. Nor, because it’s a non-profit entity, is it required to provide that information to the IRS.
A spokesman for ShoreBank, the Chicago-based financial institution that secured mortgages for the loans, said the deals were aboveboard.
Wright did not respond to repeated calls for comment, and Trinity United refused to discuss the specifics of the home it is building for him and the way the deal was financed.
The church referred FOX News to its denominational headquarters in Cleveland, which provided a statement of support:
“It is customary and appropriate in many Christian denominations, including the United Church of Christ, for local churches to offer housing provisions for retiring clergy, especially in cases where pastors have served long-term pastorates. We support efforts by our 5,700 local churches to ensure that retiring pastors and spouses have continuing housing, adequate pension and health care, as an expression of our continuing appreciation for their years of service. Each local UCC congregation is free to honor a retiring pastor in ways it feels most appropriate to address the needs of that clergyperson’s circumstances,” wrote the Rev. J. Bennett Guess, spokesman for UCC’s national office.
“This is about how these kinds of churches work,” notes Walsh. “These pastors who made big successful churches are real valuable commodities. Is it morally wrong? Well, Protestants don’t have the idea that their religious leaders should live modestly or aesthetically. We’re not talking Buddhist monks or Catholic priests here. There’s no tradition that says they have to live poor.”
Tradition at Trinity United centers on a congregation that’s unashamedly black and unapologetically Christian, according to the church’s website. There are also no apologies from the church for the home it’s building for its former senior pastor, who nurtured a religious empire that grew to have more than 8,000 congregants.




I have no problem with the church supporting clergy in their retirement years and providing a comfortable living, in fact they should. However, the question I ask is where is the balance? A 10,340 sq. ft. home for two people!! I’ve live in 4,000 sq. ft. and have 5 children and sometimes I think it’s to big.
What hacks me off are these so-called activists who preach that the “white man has kept the black man down” is ridiculous. For the past 25 years, my personal experience has been racisms on the part of blacks towards whites, not whites towards blacks. However many are quick to pull the race card to get what they want.
Who cares what Barack Obama’s former pastor is doing. He is NOT running for President. Barack Obama is not building the home for him. So why is this newsworthy?
Don’t you have better things to report on?
[...] community in Chicago. This is wrong on so many levels I wouldn’t no where to start. Obama’s Former Pastor Builds a Multimillion-Dollar Retirement Home - America’s Election … Attached Images __________________ "We sleep safe in our beds because rough [...]
Hmmm…rich white folks huh? Funny how he can look down his nose at wealthy white Christians and then build something like this!! Seems to smell of hypocrisy to me to stand in the pulpit & accuse rich WHITE folks of keeping him down when he lives better than most white folks in this country. Seems to me if the Lord and Savior, whom he claims to serve, can be born in a stable, then the good pastor could make it by in a house of oh about 2500 square feet…not 10,000!! I’ve seen stores smaller than that!!
Who cares? This is not news
You realize that he probably let the church pay himless than he paid for the land so he could write it off as a capital loss on his taxes every year.
Let it go!!!
another example of political clergy living the good life on the backs of the parishoners
WOW!! 10,400 Square Feet. Thats a big house for two People. Maybe Rev. Wright and his wife have invited the Obama family to move in with them.
However, on second thought, The size of the Rev’s ego as well as Michelle”s bigger than life aura and both of their apparant disdain for our country would make for a cramped lifestyle!!
Good Luck to Barak in living with these two. It is apparant that Mrs. Obama dislikes men, especially white ones. I hope that anger does not include men of color.
This is an outrage!!!! Typical missuse of funds by that radical “church” and all blacks thinks this is just fine.