Jay Bakker walks the campus of the Minneapolis school where his famous televangelist parents Jim and Tammy Faye first met and fell in love.
Bundled in a black leather jacket and hat, he sits on a bench in the park next to North Central University where his parents stole kisses. From the campus bookstore, he buys a pendant bearing the school's insignia to give to his father.
"I wouldn't be here if not for that school," said Bakker, 37, over a cup of coffee. "I do feel a kindred spirit here."
Bakker is not just here for the memories. After nearly seven years as pastor of a popular New York church, Bakker has moved to Minneapolis to start a new congregation — in a bar.
His move here reflects Minnesota's growing prominence in the Emerging Church movement, an unconventional, broad-minded brand of Christianity that questions traditional religious labels and practices.
Covered in tattoos and piercings, Bakker looks more like a hipster than a minister — quite different in style and beliefs from his evangelical parents, who made headlines in the 1980s for their PTL ministry and subsequent fall from grace amid scandal and fraud. Bakker is liberal-leaning on social issues and a fervent gay rights supporter. He has married same-sex couples in New York where the practice is legal.
Keeps in touch with father
While Bakker spent his early youth in North Carolina where the PTL ministry was based, he has strong roots in Minnesota. His mother was from International Falls. His parents met at what was then North Central Bible College. His father served nearly four years in federal prison in Rochester for his part in the PTL fraud, and Jay visited him there as a teen.
He keeps in touch with his father, who leads a church in Branson, Mo. His mother died from cancer in 2007.