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NBA Players often bestow gifts upon
their parents--cars, houses, jewels--but Michael Redd really found that
special something for his dad. Shortly after signing a six-year, $90 million+
contract with the Bucks last summer, the 6'6'' guard bought his father,
James, a 500-seat church in Columbus, Ohio.
"That was his heart's desire," says Michael,
26, who as a kid played countless hours of basketball with his father,
a former point guard at Columbus's Capital University. "When you
get, " says the younger Redd, "it's always good to give".
James Redd, 50, worked in a Pepsi bottling plant in Columbus where Michael
grew up with his parents, (his mother, Haji, was a schoolteacher) and
his younger sister, Michelle. Shortly before Michael was born, James began
studying to become a minister.
In 1991, four years after he was ordained, James founded the Philadelphia
Deliverance Church of Christ (so named because Philadelphia means brotherly
love inGreek) in a storefront in a poor neighborhood on the west side
of town. There, James preached to about 25 congregants on Sundays.
At age 12 Michael began playing drums in the church band, and he later
promised his father that he would make the NBA and buy him a proper church
building.
When he actually did it, James says, " I was shocked." Since
the church moved in June to its new location in a middle-class residential
area, about 20 miles from the old storefront., Sunday attendance has risen
to 300.
Michael has visted and drummed at Philedelphia Deliverance three times
this season. ("He has to go out the back or side door," to avoid
being mobbed by fans, James says) and he has used his celebrity to book
three time Grammy winning gospel singer Kirk Franklin to perform at the
church later this year.
Michael says he may want to take over for his father after retiring from
the NBA--"Preaching and teaching is something I want to do."
For now, James invokes Michael's journey from second round draft pick
to All-Star to inspire his congregants. Says James, "We use Michael
as an example for the young people, to show them that if you strive for
your dreams and put God first, anyone can make it. "
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