Colorado
Why Is This Colorado Church Putting Its Chapel On The Blockchain?
Thanks to a slick real estate broker, a network of churches in Northern Colorado is embracing blockchain technology to securitize their sanctuary. Pray for its investors.
By Nina Bambysheva, Forbes Staff
In the Middle Ages, the Church held sway over souls with the sale of indulgences—essentially, money in the form of silver or gold coins exchanged for a faster ticket out of purgatory. Fast forward to the 21st century in Northern Colorado, where a different kind of church token is being offered—one that doesn’t promise salvation but instead aims to purchase Fort Collins’ oldest church.
Move over, GoFundMe. Enter a modern twist on community investment, led by local pastor named Blake Bush, who is spearheading an effort to raise $2.5 million for the purchase of the Old Stone Church, a historic 19th-century stone building his community has been renting for the past two years.
Pastor Blake Bush Photo by Colorado House of Prayer
Bush, 57, is no ordinary clergyman. A former franchise salesman and a veteran of 34 years in ministry, he and his wife founded the non-denominational Third Day Church and later established One Hope of Northern Colorado, a nonprofit ministry leading the Colorado House of Prayer. “We’re not a church,” Bush explains. “We are the church, a network of churches working together to bless our community.” The Colorado House of Prayer, currently housed in the Old Stone Church, is a place where volunteers run the show, and anyone can lead a prayer at nearly any hour. Multiple denominations currently rent the space. For example, every Sunday at 2:30 p.m. the Korean High Mountain Church holds a service.
In the summer of 2022, Pastor Bush fell down the crypto rabbit hole when a friend introduced him to XRP cryptocurrency. Ripple Labs, the company that developed the token, once promised that its digital ledger would replace banks in facilitating trillions in global money transfers, but despite XRP being valued at $31 billion by crypto traders, Ripple has accomplished little in the last decade. Intrigued, Bush bought some XRP and soon found himself immersed in the possibilities of blockchain. “I just began to research and listen, trying to figure out what they’re doing, [Ripple’s] lawsuit with the SEC… who’s the SEC, what do they do, and what does blockchain accomplish? Where is this thing going?” He says the idea of tokenizing real estate “entered his thoughts” in February.
“I heard the Lord say ‘’tokenize the building,’”says Bush. “I was like, what? I didn’t even know what that meant. I’ve been interested in the technology, but I could not have formed that sentence because that’s just not in my vocabulary. I’ve been praying for this for years, and God said, ‘Son, go get my house.’”
Enter REtokens of Spokane, Washington, founded in 2022 by Tyler Vinson, 45, whose real estate brokerage firm Extant shares headquarters with the digital asset operation. Vinson, a local realtor who got his BA in Marketing from Eastern Washington University, boasts more than 20 years of experience and is the author of “Freedom Through Cash Flow.” Tokenizing properties like Bush’s Old Stone Church may be just the gimmick needed to inject new life into Vinson’s Spokane Valley real estate practice.
In late May 2024, REtokens and a Swiss-based private blockchain operator Polymesh announced that they would jointly tokenize $30 million in real estate, “delivering enhanced liquidity and a wider pool of investors to the real estate market.” Not mentioned in the press release was the pair’s only other asset tokenization—a $2.25 million preferred stock offering in August 2023 for REtokens itself. According to the private placement memorandum available to accredited investors, more than $150,000 of the proceeds would go toward paying off a loan to Vinson’s Extant, and ReToken’s payroll, which includes Vinson as CEO, would eat up nearly 24% of the funds annually. When you throw in marketing costs, blockchain fees and convention/travel expenses, “corporate costs” were projected to eat up to 40% of the tokenization proceeds in year one.
While there are no specifics in the offering statement about how investors will actually earn a return from their blockchain-based investment in REtokens, the shares were initially priced at 75 cents each, with a minimum investment of $5,000. Vinson’s new blockchain company intends to take $10,000 upfront for new tokenizations, plus up to 0.74% per year in an “equity fee” from new tokens minted. So far, REtokens has raised less than half of the $2.25 million in tokenized preferred stock it began offering a year ago.
Blake Bush’s Old Stone Church is Vinson’s first real estate tokenization. The first phase, launched on Friday, targets accredited investors with a minimum of $50,000 to invest, and is seeking to raise $2.5 million within the first year to buy the 11,457-square-foot stone building. The Old Stone Church is currently owned by one of Blake’s parishioners, Warren Yoder, owner of a Chevrolet dealership and auto body operations in Northern Colorado, who bought it in 2022 for $2.2 million.
Eventually, the Stone tokens will become available on the secondary market, presumably to non-accredited church congregants at $500 per token, with a minimum investment of $1,500. These tokens will trade indefinitely, or as the initiative’s website puts it, “until Jesus returns or the majority of investors and the board decide to sell.” Already, several locals have joined Old Stone’s board including the mayor of nearby Severance, Colorado, a mortgage broker and an insurance salesman.
Potential investors don’t need a special crypto wallet; instead they will have to create an account with REtokens and complete a know-your-customer process, much like buying stocks on Fidelity, says REtokens’ Vinson. In fact, purchasers are buying securities, not cryptos. The tokens won’t be traded on exchanges like Coinbase or Binance but only marketable through REtokens. And since the small offering falls under regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933, Old Stone Church will be exempt from most disclosure requirements. Tokenholders won’t get a say in how the church is managed, either.
When Bush was asked the consequences of, say, a Satanist scooping up the majority of tokens, his response was, “I’d be like ‘great, thank you, let’s introduce you to Jesus.’” The Old Stone Church will be governed by its board and an operating agreement, he explains, so even a majority owner won’t be able to decide how to use the building. Tokenholders will only be able to vote for a president of the board and for or against the sale of the building.
Bush’s Colorado House Of Prayer is non denominational: “All churches who belong to Jesus are welcome to participate, regardless of their theological background.”
Photo by Colorado House of Prayer
Unlike traditional church and synagogue fundraisings, offered by not-for-profits and therefore tax-exempt, congregants wishing to “invest” in their church will not be getting any tax deductions. Tokenholders will be subject to normal income and capital gains taxes, which will come in the form of K-1 partnership distributions. “Even Jesus had to pay taxes and have a treasury,” says Bush.
As for returns, the pitch deck projects “a 2-3% yearly increase on each token in accordance with the rise in real estate value in downtown Fort Collins. In addition, each year, there will also be a small dividend based on the modest rent the LLC receives.” Pastor Bush is serious about managing investor expectations. “You’re not in this to make profits. You’re in this to do good in the community,” he says. The pitch deck notes that investors will be using their money to “advance the kingdom.”
The Old Stone Church is the first tokenized church, according to Graeme Moore, head of tokenization at Polymesh, but it may not be the last. Mark Elsdon, a minister and developer from Madison, Wisconsin, and author of Gone for Good?, writes that as many as 100,000 Christian church properties—a quarter to a third of all churches in the U.S.—are expected to be sold or repurposed in the next decade.
Already, hundreds of these properties are being acquired by businesses for use as offices, restaurants, co-working spaces, and hotels. New Yorkers may recall the 1983 transformation of the Gothic Revival-style Episcopal Church of the Holy Communion, built in 1844, into the Limelight nightclub, notorious for its drug-fueled parties. A more recent example is the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church on Lake Opeka in Des Plaines, Illinois, reborn as an upscale Mediterranean restaurant.
Pastor Bush’s vision stretches far beyond Fort Collins. He dreams of forming a foundation to help others tokenize their historic buildings. He may be onto something. Considering each communities’ zealotry, religion and blockchain may be a match made in heaven.
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Colorado
Outgoing Colorado Buffaloes Sebastian Rancik, Bangot Dak Make Transfer Portal Moves
Former Colorado Buffaloes stars Sebastian Rancik and Bangot Dak announced their transfer portal decisions on Sunday with Rancik committing to Florida State and Dak committing to Vanderbilt, per On3’s Joe Tipton. They join former Buffs guard Isaiah Johnson (now at Texas) as the third former Colorado player to leave the Big 12 conference as Rancik opts for the ACC and Dak heads to the SEC.
The trio of Johnson, Rancik, and Dak make up three of Colorado’s four most productive players with rising senior guard Barrington Hargress, and the Buffs are now tasked with replacing such production with Hargress as the only returner.
Rancik’s season ended prematurely with an injury, but he averaged 12.3 points and 5.6 rebounds per game for the Buffs. Dak was Colorado’s leading rebounder with 6.5 boards per game, scoring 11.5 points per contest as well.
While each player has his respective reasons for transferring, the most expected ones are for seeking better NIL deals or more development on a better team in a better league. The Buffs finished 12th in the Big 12, and the allure of the SEC was too strong for the program to hold onto key talent like Johnson and Dak.
Still, Colorado coach Tad Boyle proved his ability to recruit and build up a solid core, one that saw its headliners of Johnson, Dak, and Rancik all depart in the portal. Can he do it again?
Colorado Buffaloes Roster Outlook
Boyle and the Buffaloes did retain Hargress as well as three freshmen guards: Jalin Holland, Ian Inman, and Josiah Sanders.
As a freshman, Holland averaged 4.9 points and 2.7 rebounds per game as one of Colorado’s key pieces coming off of the bench. Meanwhile, Sanders appeared in 33 games as a constant presence in the Buffs backcourt, averaging 4.4 points and 1.7 assists per game.
Inman played the fewest minutes of the returning trio, but he flashed with a couple of double-digit scoring performances as a true freshman.
“When I think of those three together, I think of toughness. I think of the improvement they made over the course of the season and the togetherness they have. They’re great friends and have formed a bond during their freshman year. Their toughness, energy and work ethic, when you have those attributes to go along with talent, which they all have, you get a chance to have three really good sophomores next year that will take the next step,” Boyle said in a release announcing the return of the three freshmen.
With eight outgoing transfers to replace, the Buffaloes will certainly have a new look to them for the 2026-27 season.
Colorado has landed one transfer portal prospect so far in former North Dakota State foward Noah Feddersen. On the recruiting trail, Boyle and company are bringing in four-star forward Rider Portela as well as two prospects from the NBL in Australia: forward Goc Malual and guard Alex Dickeson.
The transfer portal for men’s college basketball closes on Tuesday, April 21, meaning players have to enter their names by then. Transfer athletes do not have to commit before the portal closes, though, so Colorado is expected to continue hosting prospects on visits while building out the roster.
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Colorado faces LA in first round as Kings captain Anze Kopitar embarks on final Stanley Cup chase
DENVER — Anze Kopitar wrapped up the last regular season of his storied career. The Los Angeles Kings captain wants to prolong his final playoff run for as long as possible.
Kopitar, who announced in September his plans to retire, instantly becomes a postseason rallying point for the Kings. They have a tall task ahead of them against the Colorado Avalanche, the top team in the league, with the top goal scorer in Nathan MacKinnon and one of the best defensemen in the game in Cale Makar. Game 1 is Sunday at Ball Arena, where the Avalanche are 26-9-6.
“Playoffs,” said the 38-year-old Kopitar, a two-time Stanley Cup winner with the Kings. “I’m not going to say anything can happen, but we’ll go in and we’ll play hard and we’ll see where that takes us.”
This will be the third postseason series between the two teams and the first in 24 years. Colorado won in seven games during both the 2002 conference quarterfinals and the 2001 conference semifinals.
It’s been a record season for the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Avalanche as they amassed the most points (121) in franchise history. That broke the mark set by the 2022 team, which went on to win the Stanley Cup title. MacKinnon had a career-best 53 goals.
Goaltenders Scott Wedgewood and Mackenzie Blackwood shared the net this season and surrendered a league low in goals. They earned the William M. Jennings Trophy, which is presented to the goalies who have played a minimum of 25 games — Wedgewood suited up in 45 and Blackwood 39 — for the team with the fewest goals allowed. The other goaltender to win that honor for Colorado was Hall of Famer Patrick Roy (2001-02).
“We’re in a good spot,” Colorado forward Brock Nelson said. “The mentality of this group throughout the year, right from the start of training camp, (was) set on a mission to be the best team.”
Colorado Avalanche’s Nathan MacKinnon (29) celebrates the goal against Edmonton Oilers goalie Connor Ingram (39) during shoot-out NHL action, in Edmonton on Monday, April 13, 2026. Credit: AP/JASON FRANSON
Record against each other
The Kings went 0-3 against Colorado this season and were outscored by a 13-5 margin.
“You hear the hype. They have good players,” Kings defenseman Brandt Clarke said. “We’re a scrappy team. We keep it close with everybody. That can really frustrate them.”
Leading after two
The Avalanche were 41-0-0 when leading after two periods. They’re the first squad to have a lead after two periods on 40 or more instances and capture each one, according to team research.
“Even though we’ve been smart, we’ve been committed, we’ve been relentless at times, it’s going to have to go to a whole new level now,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. “I have faith in our guys.”
Los Angeles Kings’ Anze Kopitar, who is retiring after this season, acknowledges the crowd after being recognized after losing to the Vancouver Canucks during overtime NHL hockey action in Vancouver, on Tuesday, April 14, 2026. Credit: AP/DARRYL DYCK
Remember the season opener?
Six grueling months ago, the Avalanche and Kings opened the season against each other. The Avalanche won 4-1 in Los Angeles behind a pair of goals from Martin Necas, who would go on to register his first 100-point season (38 goals, 62 assists).
The two teams join an exclusive club by becoming the fifth pair since 2015-16 to open the regular season and the playoffs against each other, according to NHL Stats. The other pairs to do so were Montreal and Toronto (2020-21); Colorado and St. Louis (2020-21); St. Louis and Winnipeg (2018-19); and Los Angeles and San Jose (2015-16).
Of those teams that won the season opener only San Jose went on to win the series. It’s a trend Kopitar and the Kings wouldn’t mind joining.
Kopitar and the playoffs
Kopitar helped the Kings to the Stanley Cup title in 2011-12 and 2013-14 along with goaltender Jonathan Quick, who now is with the New York Rangers and recently said he’s retiring. Kopitar has played in 103 postseason games with 27 goals and 62 assists.
“The intensity ramps up, everything ramps up,” Kopitar said of the postseason. “Every mistake, every little play, magnifies now.”
Familiar faces
Kings goaltender Darcy Kuemper was in net for the Avalanche when they won the Stanley Cup in 2022. In addition, Kuemper and Drew Doughty were teammates with MacKinnon, Makar and Devon Toews when Canada won silver at the Milan Cortina Olympics.
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