Churches that Abuse #11
Discernment and Response
by Ronald Enroth (1992) DISCERNMENT AND RESPONSE Abusive Churches Present a Warning A central theme of this book is that spiritual abuse can take place in the context of doctrinally sound, Bible preaching, fundamental, conservative Christianity. All that is needed for abuse is a pastor accountable to no one and therefore beyond confrontation. Witness Bonnie Mason's fifteen-year experience in Midvale Bible Church (not the church's actual name), an independent, Midwestern, Baptist-oriented church with a pulpit-thumping, fire-and-brimstone preaching, fundamentalistic pastor who believed himself to be beyond question - until the day he died, which was the day Bonnie and her family were freed. Bonnie and Keith Mason came to know the Lord the day before they met Pastor Carl Plummer (the names of the pastor and his wife are pseudonyms). Although Keith had been raised in a Christian home, he had never made a commitment of faith and had spent his years becoming an accomplished rock musician. Bonnie, on the other hand, had had no exposure to Christianity whatsoever. Together they saw a Christian film so powerful in its impact that they wanted to commit their lives to Jesus Christ. The next day, on advice from friends, they called Carl, a new pastor in town. He came over immediately, and the Masons received Jesus as their Lord and Savior. Keith immediately asked Carl if he thought he should quit his career in music. Although Carl never came out and openly stated that Keith's career was ungodly, Keith felt from his statements that to remain in rock music would be to somehow "compromise his witness." Keith gave in to Carl's oblique suggestions and counsel. This type of indirect "wisdom" from Carl was to control the Masons' lives for the next fifteen years. Bonnie fell completely under Carl's influence. She felt she had been saved by Pastor Carl Plummer, and she began looking up to him as a father figure, one who could answer all of her questions about her new life. Carl responded, again with oblique comments, expressing general "concerns," preaching in pointed generalities from the pulpit, so that, without ever having to say so directly, he communicated to Bonnie, and to others, that his way of doing things was the right and godly way. Bonnie was never taught that there is diversity in the body of Christ, that differences of opinion are allowable and healthy, and that one can follow the Lord in a number of different contexts and different churches. This "missing ingredient," as Bonnie calls it, kept her doubting herself and in literal slavery to Carl and his family until he died. (I would agree but disagree here. Jesus said He was THE way, THE truth, THE LIGHT. To give ones self over to a man and become a none thinking clone of a man and/or an organization is one thing, but there are obvious jobs in life that a Christian cannot work in. Today's "rock music" world is one of them, as is the "strip club" work or working as a printer or any part of the magazine publishing world of "Playboy" and such like magazines. Such jobs right on the face of it should be obvious that a true Christian cannot work in such professions - it really should not have to take "going to the minister" to make such decisions to leave certain jobs. On the topic of "rock music" - it does not take a rocket-science mind to see that the 21st century "rock music world" is not the rock n' roll music of the 1950s or 1960s. Paul McCartney was asked a few years back why he though the music of the Beatles was still so popular today. He paused for a few seconds and then said, "Because we had MELODY in our music." And that is truly the correct answer. You compare the rock music world of today, with its screaming and shouting (and often profane words), screeching and over-amplification of guitars and eletronic whatevers, and the whole scene is utter confusion and noise that just about blows your ear-drums. It is also the scene of teens and young people drinking too much alcohol and often spaced-out on drugs of one kind or another, not to mention the moving up to illicit sex and fornication sex that often takes place after a "rock concert" - Keith Hunt) A wall began to form between Bonnie and Keith as they became more and more involved in the church in which Carl was serving as pastor. On one hand, Carl would tell Bonnie to love and obey her husband. On the other hand, Bonnie knew that if Keith did not do things exactly as Carl did them, he was obviously not being committed to God. He ought to be living his life exactly like Carl. The distance between them widened when the church split and Pastor Carl took those loyal to him to form Midvale Bible Church. Although Keith protested, Bonnie convinced him to go along. Up to that point, Carl Plummer had not served in any given church for more than two years without leaving for one reason or another. From the beginning, Carl preached on submission to authority. He told his people that a pastor is responsible to speak for God and should not be questioned. (This is where such pastors cross the line - when they brain-wash you to accept them as some "special" person with a unique phone line to God that nobody else has - Keith Hunt) As their pastor, he was extremely burdened because of the sins of God's people, and, when he fell ill from heart disease, he told them that it was their responsibility because of the great load he bore for them before God. Over time, this guilt and pressure mounted to intolerable levels. During the first few years, Midvale met in a series of motels and homes, never constructing a building of their own. Meanwhile, the Plummers were given a large parsonage on six acres. At this point, three years into this ministry, Carl began rebuking the women of the congregation from the pulpit for not befriending and reaching out to his wife, Eileen. Why had they not been meeting with her? Why had they not asked her to go shopping? Bonnie, by this time fully under Carl's influence, responded immediately. Up till now, she had been emulating Eileen and her children in every respect. Since Eileen wore no makeup or earrings, neither did Bonnie. Since her children wore a particular brand of clothing and had their hair styled a particular way (even though they were years older than Bonnie's kids), Bonnie had her children dressed and coiffed in like manner. Now the opportunity had arisen to do an even more godly thing. She began taking Eileen shopping (Eileen couldn't drive). And, she even begged the Plummers to allow her to help clean their home when they knew that Eileen's sister was coming to visit. The Plummers had been so good to her, had instructed her in the faith, and helped her to grow as a Christian. It was the least she could do. This was the beginning of Bonnie's becoming the "handmaid" to Eileen Plummer and her family. The onetime assistance grew into a daily ritual. She began to deceive her husband, who knew nothing of the extent of her bondage. Bonnie would go over to the Plummer's home at 11:30 A.M. and arrive back home in time to prepare dinner and meet Keith at the door. Her children became "latchkey kids," since Mom was away taking care of the Plummer children. Keith knew nothing, and Bonnie believed that she was serving God. She felt she was working out her salvation because she was not loving "son or daughter more than me ...." (Matt. 10:37). To be enslaved to the Plummer family was to love God. Meanwhile, because the children were getting older and because money was getting tight, Keith began talking to Bonnie about going to work to supplement their income. However, Carl would speak to her about how much her children needed her at home, even while knowing that she was at his house, caring for his children. He would praise her from the pulpit, holding her up as an example of servanthood. (Now of course any sane minded person should be able to see this kind of life-style was not only stupid, it was beyond stupid, it was drug abuse of the mind; the minister had become another Hitler dressed in Christian theology, now in control of a person's mind who had twisted that mind into believing such an abnormal way of living (neglecting her own husband and children, and/or trying to turn her children into clones of the minister's children) was "godly" and "serving the Lord" - Keith Hunt) Bonnie's confusion grew, and she began crying out to God each day, praying that Eileen would not have another task for her to carry out. She wondered why other women, with fewer responsibilities at home, were not offering assistance. She found out that two others had offered, but were turned down by Eileen, saying "Bonnie will do it." Her reputed example of spirituality caused the other women of the church to hate and envy her. Meanwhile, she was in emotional agony. Bonnie felt that she had to confide in Carl Plummer about every aspect of her life. Using Psalm 51, Carl had preached that not exposing one's sins to the world was trying to hide them from God. Consequently, Bonnie told all, including the most intimate details of her life. She knew that she had already told God herself, but Carl never said she didn't need an intermediary. When Bonnie's father was dying of cancer, she felt guilty when she would take time to go see him, only fifty miles away. She felt that she was putting her father before God, and putting her family's interests before her commitment to the Lord. Plummer did nothing to discourage such thinking. She knew it was a sin to visit her father on Sunday, and she asked her pastor if he would go visit him. He refused, saying he didn't want to infringe on another pastor's territory. When her father died, the Plummers comforted her by telling her to come back and throw herself into servanthood. It would be the best therapy for her. Bonnie became so confused that she stopped wanting to follow Carl Plummer, no longer wanted to listen to him preach, and stopped wanting to attend the mandatory meetings - even though she knew she would be castigated from the pulpit for lack of commitment. She began to realize that there was no consistency in what Carl taught. Why did he allow women to get permanents but not color their hair? Why did he allow necklaces and finger rings, but not earrings? What was wrong with open-toed shoes? Why were her daughters not allowed to share clothing since they were the same size, and how did such sharing cause jealousy? Why was the assistant-pastor's wife allowed to wear the same dress that Bonnie had bought for her daughter but had had to return because it was "inappropriate"? Why was Carl allowed to break every one of his own child-rearing mandates with his own grandchild? Why were the children not allowed to visit other churches, and why were families not allowed to visit relatives during the holidays? What was so wrong about missing one church service? Bonnie began realizing that Carl's interpretation and practice of doctrine were not consistent with the Scriptures. There was an extreme emphasis on attitudinal sins such as rebelliousness and pride, and an unhealthy dependence among the congregation on their pastor. There was a total lack of accountability to any elders on Carl's part, a defensiveness of his ministry that grew over time, and a strong attitude of superiority and exclusivity. "No one else teaches the whole counsel of God like this." "Carl Plummer is our Apostle Paul." (Well, I will say it sounds like Bonnie was "wising up" to the situation. It is sad to say that many do not wise up and can never come to admit they were brain-washed and had given themselves over to a man, his clones, and an organization. Thousands today who have left the old WCG to be part of the large off-shoots, still have not admitted that under HWA the WCG was turned into a cult, and that they had given their mind over to a man, his clone ministers and to the organization, and to the often teaching of such groups that THEIR head minister was THE "apostle" of God - Keith Hunt) Finally, shortly after Carl Plummer died, Keith and Bonnie Mason took their family out of Midvale Bible Church. The Masons have suffered much. Keith had written a secular song shortly before meeting Plummer. His pastor had told him to get rid of the "worldly" song, and Keith sold his rights for thirty-four dollars. To date, it has been recorded by three groups and has sold over three million copies. Fortunately, after a fifteen-year hiatus, Keith's music career is again on the rise. (Hopefully not the modern rock scene - Keith Hunt) Keith and Bonnie have been shunned by their former friends. Longtime associates of fifteen years turn their heads when they walk down the street. Bonnie says she does not care. She is glad to be free. She is, however, feeling very badly about her children. Both daughters became extremely rebellious when they moved away to college. They are doing things that she knows are wrong. Bonnie regrets not having had the opportunity to raise her children in a normal, healthy, Christian home, free of condemnation and the competition fostered by Plummer's teachings. She is jealous of others who have lived normal, Christian lives. She would like to regain the lost years. Although Bonnie is not angry at God, she cannot yet forgive the Christians who have hurt her. The Plummer family has denied any wrongdoing and any manipulation or inappropriate actions on Carl's part. Bonnie blames them for the rebelliousness that her children are experiencing. (Yes of course such ministers and their die-hard followers will never admit they did wrong, for them it is always "God was working in a special way through them." It is very hard indeed for people to admit they were duped and had turned their mind over to a man and his organization - Keith Hunt) Bonnie knows that there is still much residual confusion and doubt to work through. She doesn't understand why God allowed the experiences of the past fifteen years. She is desperately looking for God to show her a way to go on with her life and to put the past behind her. As she says, she earnestly desires to "forget what is behind and strain toward what is ahead, to press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus." (It was also for Jesse, my co-worker for 5 years till her untimely death. She was able to come out of an abusive church that the WCG had become, but it took her many years to work through it all. When I met her she had worked through it all and was back serving the Lord in spirit and in truth. Her Website [what she was able to accomplish with it before her death] is here on my Website, and her story is there for all to read and learn from - Keith Hunt) Bonnie's story, as well as the other case histories presented in this book, points to the need on the part of Christians for discernment. At what point does biblical authority turn into spiritual violence? When does a church cross the line between conventional-church status and abusive-church status? What are some signals or indicators that a given group is headed for the margins? It goes without saying that the pastoral leaders we have examined here are power-seeking individuals. In their attempts to control and manipulate others, they reveal much about their own personality and identity. Behavioral scientists view the desire for power as the result of a deep-seated insecurity or need. It is my impression that abusive pastors often come from troubled backgrounds and are very insecure persons despite the "take charge" image they may project. They are power-hungry people who crave visibility. Leaders who inflict spiritual violence often hide behind the smoke screen of authority to gain power. However, as Cheryl Forbes correctly points out, the words power and authority are not synonymous. Power means insistence on what we want for no other reason than that we want it; it means making other people follow us despite their own wishes. Power is assumed, insensitive, dehumanizing, and ultimately destructive. Authority, on the other hand, is positive, and usually involves a conferred right within strictly controlled bounds. Although she is not addressing specifically the topic of abusive churches, Forbes' analysis is directly applicable to the material I have presented in this book. Note this insightful observation: The exercise of power always implies coercion and violence because the purpose of power is to reproduce itself. Whatever tries to prevent this reproduction must be disposed of. An exercise of authority, however, should have nothing to do with coercion, violence, or manipulation. Yet in our zeal for God's work we decide that if someone won't recognize our authority, we will force him with our power. Jesus is our ultimate role model when it comes to the exercise of power and authority. Even though unlimited power and authority in heaven and on earth were at his disposal, the Scripture clearly demonstrates that he was never on a power trip. "You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them," he once told his disciples, "and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be your slave - just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many" (Matt. 20:2528). John White and Ken Blue in their book, "Healing the Wounded," address the problem of the spiritual tyranny that results when leaders abuse their authority and seek to subjugate Christians. There is a tension among Christians that arises from what might be called a high view of the church and a high view of Scripture. Both have their dangers. The first emphasizes the authority of the church over the lives of God's people. Similarly a high view of Scripture emphasizes the need for Scripture to control the behavior of Christians. Both emphases are found in Scripture. There is no tension between them. The tension arises in the minds of leaders who try to use either church or Bible or both to control God's people. Church leaders are themselves under the authority of Scripture, but its authority is never to be coercive: it does not make leaders into rulers. "Ruler" is the right term to describe the kind of people in authoritarian leadership roles who are a focus of this book. They are spiritual tyrants who take unholy pleasure in requiring obedience and subordination of their followers. It is important to recognize that leadership depends on followership, and from a truly Christian perspective, that means cooperation with the leader rather than domination and control by the leader. The source of legitimate Christian leadership therefore lies in "entrusted authority." The spiritual autocrat, the religious dictator, attempts to "compel" subordination; the true Christian leader can legitimately only " elicit" followership.
Bruce Hogan says that he has been "recovering nicely" after six terrible years in the very militant Potter's House, also variously known as La Puerta (or, The Door), Victory Chapel, or Christian Fellowship Church, based in Prescott, Arizona. His involvement came about as the result of a spiritual quest he undertook after dropping out of high school. Having been brought up in what he terms a "traditional multidivorce family," with a father who left when he was three, Bruce says that he was searching for a real father. He has finally found his heavenly Father, but not before experiencing a great deal of pain and suffering at the hands of an abusive church. "I had no prior Christian experience or training and I didn't know how to spot a counterfeit. My home life was typical of the divorce and MTV generation, and I suppose I was looking for something like an artificial, ready-made family. Ignorance coupled with desire always results in trouble." Bruce, now "twenty-eight and looking like forty," had just left his job as a nightclub entertainer when he first encountered the Potter's House. He had found God on his eighteenth birthday while using "recreational chemical substances," and was "supernaturally saved" after years of delving into the occult, like his father before him. He believes that God did a real miracle to save him because the occult influence of his father had been passed down generationally. Bruce, with no grounding in the Bible, had decided that he had better quit his wild life-style and go to college. He had passed the GED, and was just beginning Southeast Missouri State University when members of the Potter's House first arrived in town. Impressed by their zealousness, and influenced by their concern, he joined their ranks in 1984. Being a very intelligent and discerning person, Bruce was concerned, even at the beginning of his involvement, about the emphasis on authority, submission, and spiritual headship. But he also thought that they might help him overcome his terribly rebellious nature. Bruce was self-supporting while at Southeast Missouri State. Not only did he work full-time and take a full course load, he also became involved in all the fellowship activities, outreaches, revival meetings, and regular services of the church. After a few months of little sleep and failing grades, he landed in the hospital from sheer exhaustion. The attending physician told him to stop the whirlwind of activity or he would be dead in weeks. However, with his salvation at stake, Bruce continued, and, as he puts it, "sacrificed my higher critical thinking faculties" to the leadership of the Potter's House. Week after week of meetings and revivals that lasted late into the night had done their job and caused him to "just stop thinking." "I had surrendered the lordship over my life to a reprobate mind" [that of the Potter's House leadership], and came to recognize that "even the elect can be deceived." (Well for a time maybe the elect can be deceived, but the true elect cannot be deceived but only for a relative short time. Yes Jesus said that before He came again deception would be so great that IF it was possible even the elect would be deceived [Mat.24:24], but the elect will know the truth and the truth will set them free - Keith Hunt) Bruce believes that at its peak the Potter's House had a network of hundreds of congregations. Committing very little to paper, the leadership limits access to information to a select few. Run by Wayland Mitchell out of Prescott, Arizona, local congregations have no say as to who will lead them. Bruce's local fellowship had three different pastors during his stay, all of whom were sent from Prescott. He describes the Potter's House movement as very aggressive, strong on church planting, militantly committed, and very anti-intellectual. He was called an "educated idiot with a high IQ," and was told, "You obviously have a call on your life, son. You should be pursuing ministry and submitting yourself to our discipleship." Bruce's inquisitive nature and analytical mind were always considered a manifestation of rebellion. When he attempted to show one of the elders that his teaching was not in line with the Scriptures, he was violently rebuked and told, "I am the shepherd. You are the sheep. God is my head covering, and I am answerable only to Him. And don't you forget it." Bruce says, "I wished John the Apostle were there. He'd be kicking some butt... Pardon me. He would be setting things in theologically correct order." It is Bruce's opinion that the Potter's House attracts those with altruistic natures who know little or nothing about God and the Scriptures but who are on a spiritual quest. It reaches "those strata and segments of society that no one else can touch." The problem is, Bruce says, that when people join, "they kill them," and if they ever leave the Potter's House, it is unlikely that they will ever serve the Lord again. The majority of the membership come to know God while in the fellowship - there is no Christian foundation outside of their Potter's House experience. Bruce believes that his involvement in the Potter's House is his own fault. He has no excuse. "I had the Bible. I had the witness of the Holy Spirit. I knew something was wrong, but I thought it was just my own rebelliousness.... I fired the little lawyer inside me that tried to save me." After six years of pastoral and psychological abuse, Bruce and his new wife left the Potter's House. He was "rescued" by George Orwell's "Animal Farm," a book about totalitarianism, that Bruce also feels accurately describes the Prescott-based fellowship. He admits that this was a unique aid to his exit, but reading the book sparked his abilities to think critically and independently. (And my friends that's where the rubber meets the road - you must ever keep your nose and eyes in the Bible. Yes you need an open mind to prove all things, but not so open that your brains fall out - Keith Hunt) The Potter's House, "first to condemn, first to judge, and last to show any mercy," shunned the Hogans. They were told that they were going to hell and that they had never been saved. They were also slandered by the leadership. "I was sacrificing babies in my basement or was a homosexual, or whatever." Eventually they left everything and moved away. Having no church to go to that he felt he could trust, Bruce said, "The heck with it. I'm going to stay at home and read my Bible. "Every man to his tent." Over six month's time, primarily because of being laid up from a severe, work-related back injury, Bruce came to know the truth in Scripture. Feeling very old now, he says, "God's people are destroyed for a lack of knowledge. I would have become a heretic if God had not put me on my back for six months. All I did was read the Bible." (Oh, I do not know what truths Bruce found, but reading the Bible is sure the start to find the pathway to God's truth...keep your eyes and mind in the Bible friends, keep it in the Bible; I'll say it over and over again, your defense for not being deceived is KNOWING what's in the Bible - Keith Hunt) Bruce, understandably, had difficulty with forgiveness. "In order to survive the ordeal of withdrawing from an authoritarian church, you have to admit that you have been taken and forgive from the heart. Otherwise, in the words of our Lord, you will be 'delivered to the tormentors.' When I finally forgave from my heart, I began to recover." His wit, though not as acerbic as a year ago, is still sharp. Paraphrasing Luther, he says, "If there be a hell, Prescott is built over it." As Bruce indicated, the membership of authoritarian churches is frequently comprised of young, spiritually immature Christians. This kind of church is successful because it is meeting basic human needs - the need to belong, the need to be affirmed, to be accepted, and to be part of a family. It is not unusual for the leaders to assume the role of surrogate parents, especially for those young adults who come from dysfunctional- family backgrounds. Speaking of the woman who was pastor of the Church of Jesus Christ Forever, a small, authoritarian con- gregation in the Midwest, one ex-member says this: "She really cared about us. We were young, looking for something, and she really took us under her wing." Echoing similar sentiments, a former member of an east coast group sums up the appeal of the abusive church she joined: "I never felt I had a family until I became part of this church. Never before had I felt so loved and cared for in every way. They were the first family I ever had." Although they may be on the fringe of mainstream evangelicalism, spiritually abusive churches usually are closer to biblical orthodoxy than they are to outright heresy. Yet, there is often a subtle distortion of biblical teaching. Looking back at her experience at the Community of Jesus on Cape Cod, a former member relates an all-too-common realization. You allow yourself to be blinded, and you bend over backwards to believe it's for your own good .... I think for me and a lot of other people who were perhaps recently converted Christians, they have taken biblical truths, and the twist isn't very great, but they are twisted, all twisted. Somehow you're not aware of the twisting so that you accept it as being from God because you see them [the leaders] as speaking the truth that God's given us in the Bible .... everything they say makes a good deal of sense. But there's something in the application of it - and it's so subtle it's hard to put into words - something in the way they apply it that turns it the wrong way. A key element of discernment, then, is the recognition that potentially abusive churches foster an unhealthy form of dependency, spiritually and otherwise, by focusing on themes of submission and obedience to those in authority. They create the impression that people just aren't going to find their way through life's maze without a lot of firm directives from those at the top. They promote what MacDonald called a form of "learned helplessness." In 1985 he wrote, "Remarkably, many intelligent Christians actually enjoy being told what to do. In GCI churches, people seek the elders for permission to go home and see their parents or friends, and to inquire for how long they may stay; they go to them for permission to go to a party with unbelievers. ..." The disquieting truth is that many Christians do indeed fall into the trap of authoritarianism because of an inclination toward the black-and-white mentality that abusive churches cater to. If you have the type of personality that is drawn toward groups that offer wraparound security and solutions to all your problems, you are vulnerable to spiritual abuse. If you value your spiritual autonomy, you must resist any teaching that brings into question Christ's role as the sole mediator (go-between) between God and humankind. No Christian is ever called upon to give unquestioning obedience to anyone. Only Jesus Christ deserves disciples. If you are a new convert, reaffirm the freedom that characterizes the new life in Christ. Ironically, exmembers of Set Free Fellowship have an expression: "We've cut loose from Set Free." They found themselves in bondage rather than true freedom, subjected to spiritual infantilism and dependency rather than growth. However attractive and upbeat the group in question may at first appear to be, follow the example of the diligent Bereans who "examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true" (Acts 17:11). (Oh friends around the world. What a blessing [used rightly] you have today in the Internet. You can read your Bible, study your Bible right there in your chair, on a rock, sitting in the sand, under a tree, out in a boat on a lake, at the top of a mountain, wherever. Then you can go to the Internet and find who is teaching and preaching the truth of God's word. You have my Website and others that are co-workers with me, their Websites, and you never have to meet me or them. You are free in every way today, free to find God's truth, free to live it, and free from organizations of men. You are free from ever having to email me, phone me, write to me, just free to be fully free from contact in any way with God's true servants. You can, if you like, just live your Christian life and God's way, all alone. And I know some of you have no choice but to be alone, as there are few true Christians near you. But you can still be just as much a part of the body of Christ as those who are in a position to fellowship with others in a personal way - Keith Hunt) The discerning Christian must also beware of the trap of legalism. We have seen numerous examples throughout this book of how life-style rigidity and the keeping of a set of rules can stifle spiritual liberty and encourage abuse. Preoccupation with keeping Christian rules enhances guilt feelings in members, and it acts as an effective control mechanism for power abusers. "Legalism is never corrective church discipline. For legalism pulls us away from following Christ toward another gospel, another gospel that says the cross is not enough." (Now, if those who say "the cross is enough" mean you are free to "do your own thing" - free to NOT keep the commandments of God, then they like maybe you are NOT reading the Bible, not reading every word of it; not doing as Jesus said we should: living by every word that comes from the mouth of God [Mat.4:4]. - Keith Hunt) Another quality that can lead to abusive behavior in a church is the tendency toward isolationism, a conscious effort to limit input from outside the church - in other words, information control. Beware of the church where outside speakers are consistently denied access to the pulpit, and where other Christian churches are regularly denounced, belittled, or ridiculed. Competing authority figures, whether from within or without the church walls, are rarely welcomed in abusive churches. No one can measure up to their exalted standards. In the words of Marie Kolasinski (see chapter 6), "Ninety-nine percent of the people who profess to be Christians are really enemies of the cross." (Wow, and that is quite the true statement, though Marie Kolasinski probably does not realize the full truth of the matter as she stated it. Jesus said His flock would be the "very little flock" as the Greek has it, and they would be the salt of the earth, scattered here and there. Truly I say to you, true Christianity is as the salt on a meal, and that should relate how little there is of it in the world - Keith Hunt) It is my opinion, based on extensive research and informal observation, that authoritarian leaders are ecclesiastical loners. That is, they do not function well or willingly in the context of systematic checks and balances. They are fiercely independent and refuse to be part of a structure of accountability. To put it crudely, they operate a one-man (or one-woman) spiritual show. And God help the person who gets in the way or makes waves. Yes, sometimes they will point to a board of elders or its equivalent, but more likely than not, this turns out to be a faithful inner circle of clones that implicitly accepts all that the leader sets forth. (My oh, my what a truth! One man shows like HWA had and even his son Garner Ted [whem he founded his organization] had puppet "boards" who really were the "yes men" the "rubber stamp" men of the one man in charge - Keith Hunt) As we have seen, another sign of impending trouble in a church is an obsession with discipline and excommunication. Beware of churches that warn of certain doom if you leave their "covering," or if you "break covenant." Once banished from the group, little compassion is shown the wayward one. An overwhelming majority of the ex-members I have interviewed expressed the opinion that abusive leaders are cold, almost cruel, in their treatment of people who leave - whether that departure was voluntary or involuntary. Almost without exception they report that the leadership made no attempt at reconciliation and made no effort to heal the wounds inflicted. Instead, defectors are held up to the congregation as warnings to potential "sowers of discord." As the leader of one small group in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, the Church of Our First Love, was quoted as saying, "Anyone who hinders the work I do, God will remove him." Once he had decided to seek his spiritual food outside the Boston Movement, a former member of that group says he experienced the full force of friendly persuasion, peer pressure, righteous indignation, and eventually a form of "shunning," where one exists, but for all intents and purposes is "dead" in the eyes of the brothers and sisters. To leave the Boston Church of Christ - even to leave for another congregation of the Church of Christ - was not a recognized option; to leave was a weak, sinful thing to do, tantamount to opting for perdition. He adds, "Not once did I ever hear from a member of the Boston Church of Christ again." (And sad to say, this is very true of abusive churches. This should be ringing bells loud and hard in the minds of those who went through the WCG experience under HWA, from about after 1967, when Armstrong's wife Loma died, and there was no longer a check on the man's vanity and ego. The practice of WRONG "marking" and WRONG "disfellowshipping" was brutally carried out with more power as each year went on till the death of HWA. For the truth on the subject of "Disfellowshipping" see my study on this blog - Keith Hunt) A sure sign that a church is headed for the fringe is when family relationships are significantly disrupted and the leadership encourages the severing of ties with relatives outside of the group. "Be prepared to switch your loyalty from your natural family to God's family," advises Marie Kolasinski of the Body of Christ Fellowship. "Those blood ties are filthy rags unto God. So if you are experiencing great upheaval in your well-ordered natural family, BE OF GOOD CHEER." When a Christian is asked to sacrifice family relationships for church loyalty, it's time to bail out. In abusive-church situations, the "spiritual family" often displaces the biological family, and church leaders assume the role of surrogate parents. Prior to his departure from the Great Commission International in 1988, Jim McCotter, the group's founder, is said to have usurped "the very authority of parents over these young people" by allowing youthful "elders" to exercise greater influence in the lives of the young adults than did their own parents. On the day after Mother's Day, 1991, two young members of Set Free Christian Fellowship, one of them the pastor's daughter-in-law, telephoned their Christian mothers to tell them they never wanted to see or hear from them again, in part because they (the mothers) had expressed their concerns about Set Free to newspaper reporters and to the author of this book. When one of those mothers and her husband later dropped off presents for grandchildren they were not permitted to visit, Pastor Phil Aguilar's son filed charges of trespassing with the local police - against his own in-laws. The gifts were returned to the grandparents in a large carton along with a note that read, "No thanks!" (Let me be as BLUNT as I can be: You NEVER have to break ties with your family members when you become a true Christian. Oh they may not like your way of life and your practices and customs you have now moved into as you see the truth of God's word. But YOU can still do it right; YOU can explain with LOVE, why you have become this follower of Christ and what the Bible teaches. You do not have to preach or write a sermon to them. In loving and kind words, you can explain to them your new life. You can tell them you still love them dearly; you can tell them you still want them in your life; you still want to visit them, and they visit you. Be loving and tender, as you do this, be as Jesus said as wise as a serpent but as harmless as a dove. As the apostle Paul was inspired to write as much as is in YOU, you try to live peaceably with everyone. And if indeed anyone tells you differently, you need to pack your Bible under your arm and get as far away from them as possible - Keith Hunt) When an evangelical church institutes a surveillance system and encourages its members to keep close tabs on one another, it's time to look for another church. A former member of the Boston Movement describes a scenario common to most abusive churches. Everyone's Christian life was under scrutiny by someone, assigned by some level of authority; each member was confronted with observed faults, issued counsel, and followed up; each was encouraged to know the true state of his own soul, its sins and weaknesses, and to confess these openly and honestly to others who have ministry and authority over him. (Yes again, you ex WCGers should well know what this was all about, as it became everyday practice to "keep an eye on others" and "report concerns" - an open but secret spy-agency, where everyone was spying on everyone. It all started from about 1967 and forward in the WCG under HWA. I was there I speak from being one of the leading men in our local congregation. I speak from first hand experience. And such an attitude in any church organization is not only DISGUSSING it is SATANTIC!! - Keith Hunt) The warning lights should register when a mainstream Christian church begins to show signs of an unhealthy elitism. This characteristic is related to the isolationist attitude I discussed earlier and is well illustrated by another example from the Boston Movement. A former member speaks of the Boston Church of Christ: setting itself in bold, confrontational opposition to everyone not directly affiliated with itself ... Access to this elite community is through the narrow gate of a baptism that is at once the product of an intensive "cost counting" process that results in a fully conscious subjection of one's entire self, as a repentant sinner, to Jesus' Lordship, a lifelong commitment to needs of the Body, and absolute obedience to the leaders of the movement. (I've related to you how, years afer leaving the WCG, God led me to turn on the TV on a Sunday [which I rarely do until evening] and flip the channels, and at that very time of flipping I hit a station that was carrying HWA and the WCG TV program; and it was at that second the WCG threw up a chart for worldwide viewers to see - the name at the top was "God the Father" the name underneath was "Jesus Christ" and the name under Jesus' name was "Herbert W. Armstrong." The pinical of elitism blasphemy. God the Father wanted me to see this with my own eyes - Keith Hunt.) To the average Christian person reading this book, the examples of pastoral abuse and spiritual exploitation should represent a patent breach of biblical teaching. You may even feel that the abusive practices described in these pages appear to be far removed from the world of conventional churchgoers, and, it is hoped, they are. Yet, I am convinced that tendencies toward abusive styles of leadership are more prevalent than most Christians realize. If we are honest with ourselves, we might admit that at least the potential for authoritarianism may exist in some of our own backyards. I will discuss the problem and the challenge that this represents in the concluding chapter, but allow me to comment briefly here on a troublesome trend I see in the evangelical community today. It seems that we have a need to create evangelical gurus, Christian celebrities, super-pastors in megachurches, and miscellaneous other "teachers" and "experts" that we place on pastoral pedestals. What is it about people, including evangelicals, that explains this apparent need for authority figures, the need to have someone cosign for our lives? As David Gill noted years ago: We want heroes! We want reassurance that someone knows what is going on in this mad world. We want a father or a mother to lean on. We want revolutionary folk heroes who will tell us what to do until the rapture. We massage the egos of these demagogues and canonize their every opinion. We accept without a whimper their rationalizations of their errors and deviations. Christians, as well as other members of society, live in a culture that is rapidly changing and confusing. Many experience real insecurities and are attracted to organizations and churches that offer systematic approaches and clear-cut answers to life's problems. For people who come from dysfunctional families, or who have lacked structure in their lives, authoritarian churches are a haven, a womb of security. It is sometimes comforting to have others make decisions for you, tell you how to live, and tell you what to believe. As James I. Packer reminds us in "Christianity Today," the evangelical world is plagued by "the personality cult." We, the mainstream evangelical public, elevate certain individuals to virtual infallibility. "On issue after issue people reason thus: Billy Graham / Martyn Lloyd-Jones / John Wimber / John Stott / Chuck Swindoll / Elisabeth Elliot / R. C. Sproul / (write in here your own preferred authority) says it; I believe it; that settles it. " In our homes, in our churches, and in our programs of Christian education, we must strive to cultivate critical, discerning minds if we are to avoid the tragedy of churches that abuse. .......... Note: It is so true, the human mind, human nature likes to have a hero, and when it comes to Christian religion, and Bible study and reading, human nature tends also to be LAZY! "Oh let the full time paid minister/priest tell me what God says, that's their work, that's what we pay them to do is it not." That attitude is all too common. And so personal Bible reading and study .... "Well, I've got too much to do, my work, my family, my sports club activities, my favorite TV program, my surfing the Internet, my emailing to friends and family, this appointment, and that appointment .... oh just way too busy to stop and study my Bible. And to take a day of rest and worship God and study His word ... my that was for the dark ages; I'll go to church, but after that I'm just too busy once more, ain't got enough hours in the week to do all I want and need to do." This is another modern attitude of our fast-space-age world. So it's no wonder Jesus said that religious DECEPTION would be so STRONG in the last days before He returned, that IF it was possible even the elect would be deceived. But thank the Lord the elect cannot be deceived. I pray you are one of those elect. Keith Hunt |
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