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Texas Megachurch Pastor Pleads Guilty to Child Sex Abuse
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By The New York Times
Published 15 seconds ago on
October 8, 2025

Robert Morris, founding pastor of the megachurch Gateway, delivers a sermon at the church in Fort Worth, Texas, Feb. 3, 2018. Morris, a faith adviser to the Trump White House, has resigned from his job as the Texas megachurch’s senior pastor, the church said on Tuesday, June 18, 2024, days after he was accused of sexually abusing a child in the 1980s. (Ilana Panich-Linsman/The New York Times)

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Robert Morris, the founder of a Texas megachurch with one of the nation’s largest congregations, pleaded guilty Thursday to sexually abusing a girl in the 1980s, according to court documents.

According to prosecutors, Morris, 64, began abusing Cindy Clemishire, who was 12 at the time, in 1982. He used his hands and body to touch her private parts on multiple occasions, prosecutors said, and the abuse lasted until she was 14.

Clemishire told The Dallas Morning News in 2024 that he had begun abusing her when her family invited him to stay in their Oklahoma home over Christmas in 1982.

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Morris resigned from his role as the senior pastor of Gateway Church, based in Dallas, last year after Clemishire publicly accused him of abuse. In the interview with the Morning News, Clemishire said that it had taken decades for her to recognize what happened as abuse and as a crime.

Morris was indicted in March on five counts of lewd or indecent acts to a child.

He pleaded guilty in Osage County Courthouse in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. Under a plea agreement, Morris received a 10-year suspended sentence, with the first six months to be served in the Osage County Jail. According to the agreement, Morris will be supervised once released, and he will be required to register as a sex offender. He was ordered to pay Clemishire $270,000 in restitution.

According to the Morning News, Clemishire was in tears as she read a statement during Thursday’s hearing. She described how Morris’ abuse had affected her understanding of love and led her to believe her body “was not sacred.”

“I am not a victim; I am a survivor,” Clemishire said in a statement, according to the Morning News.

Morris did not look at Clemishire as she spoke, the Morning News reported. According to video footage posted by the publication, Morris was led out of court in handcuffs and flanked by court officers.

Bill Mateja, a lawyer for Morris, said in a statement that Morris “sincerely apologizes” to Clemishire and her family and “asks for their forgiveness.”

Mateja added, “While he believes that he long since accepted responsibility in the eyes of God — and that Gateway Church was a manifestation of that acceptance — he readily accepted responsibility in the eyes of the law by virtue of his guilty plea.”

Morris was a prominent figure in the American Christian community. He founded Gateway Church in 2000, and under his leadership, its congregation grew to more than 30,000 people.

He also served on a faith advisory council during President Donald Trump’s first term, and he hosted Trump at Gateway Church in June 2020.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Jin Yu Young and Alexandra E. Petri
c. 2025 The New York Times Company

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