Spiritual Abuse Masked as Spiritual Authority by Wade Burleson

by Velour/MtnShepherdess

*reblogged with permission from Wade Burleson ©, pastor in Enid, Oklahoma, author, Istoria Ministries blog http://www.wadeburleson.org/2009/03/spiritual-abuse-masked-as-spiritual.html

Today is part one of a seven part series on identifying the characteristics of spiritually abusive systems of religion. Future posts on the subject will be linked with this one to form a complete series when finished over the next several weeks. This subject is an important one in our day.

Spiritual abuse can be found in churches, non-profits, and denominational organizations. It is not limited to fundamentalists or liberals, Christians or cults, but may run the spectrum of theological ideologies. My friend, Jeff VanVonderen, has come up with a definition of spiritual abuse in his bestselling book, co-authored by David Johnson, entitled The Subtle Power of Spiritual Abuse. Using the book as a guide, the following is a descriptivedefinition of spiritual abuse.

Spiritual abuse is when a leader uses his or her religious position of authority to control, intimidate or dominate another person. It also occurs when a person in need of answers, help or support is denigrated for either questioning the “Lord’s anointed” or not being “spiritual” enough to submit to the decisions of the religious authority.

The First Characteristic of a Spiritually Abusive Religious System:

There is a preoccupation with the leader’s authority and the constant need to remind others of that authority.

Leaders will spend a great deal of time talking about their “authority” and reminding others of it. This posturing appears most frequently in ridiculing or shaming remarks toward those in the congregation, including demanding total attention and allegience to the leaders’ words.

The difference between real spiritual authority and abusive spiritual authority is that the former actually possesses it, the latter only postures it. When Jesus taught he possessed spiritual authority because his life and his character backed up what he was saying.

One of the best ways to identify abusive authority is to pay attention to how much time and effort is expended by the religious leader in reminding others of his authority and how everyone else is supposed to submit to it. Abusive leaders are eager to place people under them – under their word, under their “authority” – and it is the clearest indication that they are operating under their own authority and not the Spirit of God’s authority.

Part 4: My Story of Being A Member of The Abusive Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley

Part 4 of a 5-part series.

 “A Badge of Honor” – My Excommunication & Shunning from a NeoCalvinist Church  – by Velour/MtnShepherdess ©

Image result for david hayward naked pastor google images bully

TRIGGER WARNING: DISCUSSION OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE

             “Consider your excommunication as a badge of honor from a church like that!” –

Boz Tchividjian, Attorney/Law Professor/former sex crimes prosecutor/ advocate for child sex abuse victims/founder of Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment (G.R.A.C.E.), grandson of the Rev. Billy Graham,  words of encouragement to me on my excommunication/shunning from Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley (California)

 

  1. First Church Discipline Case: A Midde-Aged Woman Who Wouldn’t “Obey” and “Submit” To Her Husband According To The Senior Pastor

             The first church discipline meeting I witnessed at Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley, before Dr. Luke’s excommunication and shunning, was that of a godly, middle-aged professional woman and wife.  The senior pastor told church members to stay after the Sunday service for a closed door meeting. There were several hundred church members.  The woman was not there.

The senior pastor told church members that they had “worked with [the wife] for a very long period of time and she was now at Step 3 of the Church Discipline process.”

He said that she “hadn’t obeyed and submitted to her husband”, who was still a church member.

The senior pastor denigrated this dear Christian woman before all of us. She is a lovely, kind, generous person. She has a special gift in working with mentally ill adults who live in group homes and evangelizing them as well as with the elderly in convalescent hospitals.

The senior pastor told hundreds of church members to “pursue her”.  She responded by disconnecting her cell phone, her email, and moving out of the family home.

When I interviewed her she told me that there was something terribly wrong with Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley and that she refused to return. She went to another church in another denomination that had a solid church structure and outside accountability. She told me that the pastors/elders at our church had screamed and yelled at her, including coming to her home and screaming at her.

If they had done to me when she says they did to her, I would call the police and have them arrested.

The senior pastor told us at a members’ meeting later in the year that they had to “let her go”.  Ya think? It’s a free country.  She’s an adult and a tax payer.  It was unconscionable to me that she was ever treated this way.

TRIGGER WARNING: DISCUSSION OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE

  1. If You Want To Leave The Church You Have To Have An “Exit Interview” With Two Elders. Convicted Felons With Supervising Law Enforcement Agencies Aren’t Vetted When Joining The Church.

             The pastors/elders changed the By-Laws and if church members want to leave they are required to meet with two pastors/elders to have an “exit interview”. As the books on spiritual abuse have also said that abusive churches make leaving very difficult.

The pastors/elders at Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley however permitted their friend a Megan’s List sex offender who was convicted for child pornography to join the church, become a member, and they placed him in a leadership position over a team.  They gave him cart blanche access to all church activities.

He had served prison time and has a supervising law enforcement agency, the Sheriff’s sex offenders’ task force.

The pastors/elders told me that he was “coming off Megan’s List” because “he said so”. You have got to be kidding me? A convicted felon is on Megan’s List, was convicted for sex crimes, served time in prison has a supervising law enforcement agency and the pastors/elders take ‘his word’ instead of doing ‘due diligence’ with his supervising law enforcement agency?

The sheriff’s sex offenders’ task force and the California Attorney General’s Office called my ex-pastor’s and the elders’ stories “all lies” and “total lies”.  They said the sex offender is NOT coming off Megan’s List.  At this writing, he’s still on it.

 17.    The Rest Of The Story…A Bruising Meeting With Pastors/Elders About The Megan’s List Sex Offender

           As I said in the beginning of my story, the problems at this church – too many to count – came to a head over the issue of the Megan’s List sex offender at church that I had discovered by accident while doing a separate research project on a city’s sex offenders for a former sex crimes prosecutor.

I recognized the man at church as being the man I had seen on Megan’s List of sex offenders.  I reported my findings to the church’s pastors/elders.  They called me to a meeting.

I thought that we were going to have an adult conversation about child safety.  It wasn’ “adult” at all.  It was like all of the other things that they had mishandled.

http://www.churchlawandtax.com/web/2016/august/top-5-reasons-religious-organizations-went-to-court-in-2015.html

17a.     “Child Porn Isn’t A Big Deal”

             The pastors/elders told me that “child porn wasn’t a big deal.”  I told them it was “a very big deal” and it’s a violation of federal and state laws, felony crimes. I went on to detail the differences between adult pornography which is legal and child pornography which is illegal. I discussed all of the crimes committed against children to make child pornography, including rape, sodomy, oral copulation, false imprisonment, kidnapping, and drugging, to name just some of the crimes.

The senior pastor blushed bright red when I tackled the subject of pornography without flinching.

17b.     “Why Are You Calling Him A Sex Offender?”

             The senior pastor was furious that I had called the man “a sex offender”.  He demanded to know why I was using that word.  I replied, “It’s not my term. It’s a legal term. A person convicted of sex offenses is called a sex offender in the criminal codes.”

17c.     Megan’s List Sex Offender Invited To Volunteer At Basketball Camp

             The pastors/elders told me that they had invited the Megan’s List sex offender to volunteer at the five-day basketball camp that the church puts on for children in the summer time. The pastors/elders did not tell all parents, both church members and non-church members that a Megan’s List sex offender who is sexually attracted to children, could show up at any time to work with their children. It was not posted on the enrollment forms and posters.

What parent in their right mind would trust their children to a church knowing that a sex offender was given access to them by the pastors/elders?

Additionally, the Seventh Day Adventists, who rented their school’s gym to our church, hadn’t been told that a Megan’s List sex offender had been invited to come on to their property.

The Seventh Day Adventists are self-insured, they can be sued for any criminal acts against children that occur on their property, and they have strict child safety policies. Their authority at their own property was not respected by my (ex) church’s pastors/elders.  I contacted the SDA school and I asked them.

17d.     Had I Prayed For The Sex Offender?

             The pastors/elders said that they sex offender was their friend, they had known him for years and they would entrust their children to him.  They demanded to know if I had “prayed for him”.  I told them that I was there to discuss the safety our church’s children, not prayer time.  You do not bet the safety of children with someone who has already shown that when he had a choice between adult porn and child porn that he chose child porn.

Someone who is sexually attracted to children shouldn’t be around them.

(Note: According to a research study by the F.B.I. and the District Attorneys’ Association of inmates in prison for child porn, the majority of them confessed to having gotten away with “on-contact” sexual abuse of children. That shouldn’t come as a surprise to most people.)

17e.     Pastors/Elders Said Mothers Aren’t Permitted To Protect Their Children

             The senior pastor said that mothers aren’t permitted to protect their children and that if a father determines that the sex offender can touch his children that his word “is final” over his family and that his wife is “to obey” and “to submit” to him.

I hit him back with, “Mothers are required by God and California law to protect their children! She is NOT off the legal hook of responsibility by obeying and submitting to her husband.  If it all goes wrong, she can be arrested and prosecuted for criminal negligence, child endangerment, child abuse, and a variety of other crimes. She can land in jail or state prison. Child Protective Services can take away her children and put them in foster care.”

17f.      Had I Confronted The Sex Offender Per Matthew 18:15-17?

“Jeff T on The Wartburg Watch blog”:
‘Matthew 18
God I’m sick of hearing this from fascist church leaders. They NEVER use it to engage in a Spirit-filled discussion of resolving differences. It’s ALWAYS used as an instrument of oppression. Whenever someone in their church raises an issue they don’t want discussed, they stand up and shout “Matthew 18!, Matthew 18!”, the person raising the issue is then hustled off to a backroom and subjected to a process worthy of a Chinese Communist reeducation camp. They are told they are wrong, not on the basis of anything having to do with the issue itself, but because they are refusing to submit to authority, they are being divisive, ergo they are sinners and must repent and if they don’t, they are subjected to “church discipline”, meaning they are shunned and harassed.’

           The pastors/elders were enraged that I had written the California Attorney General’s Office about the sex offender, beneath his picture on Megan’s List.  He had attended the Bible study that I go to and had whipped the entire Bible study into a frenzy of anger one night about all of the “bad people in prisons”, save me who was staring him down. He had omitted that he was a felon, had served prison time, was convicted of sex crimes, and was on Megan’s List.  I went home that  night, summarized the evening for the Attorney General and said, “Don’t EVER take him off Megan’s List. He is highly manipulative.”

The four pastors/elders said that I was supposed to confront him pursuant to Matthew 18:15-17 and they told me that I had failed. I shot back with, “It was YOUR job to protect all of us from him.  I’m NOT confronting a convicted felon, a sex offender who is more than 6’0” feet tall, when  I’m a woman. This is YOUR failing not mine.”

 17g.     Chairman of the Elder Board Closed The Meeting With A Threat To Me

            The chairman of the elder board of Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley, the church that I had belonged to for nearly eight years, closed the meeting about my concerns for our church’s safety about a Megan’s List sex offender at church, by opening his Bible to a pre-marked page and reading it to me in somber tones.  He read me a Scripture that I was basically not one of them and that I was destined for Hell.

He and the other three pastors/elders issued a threat to me that they intended to follow through on.

He then called me at home a few days later and told me that he and the other pastors/elders had made “a decision” and that I was to never contact law enforcement again about the  Megan’s List sex offender. He also told me that I was to never reveal the name to law enforcement of the church I was a member of, the names of the pastors/elders, or the church’s location.  The chairman of the elder board told me that I was “to obey” and “to submit” to them in “all things”.

According to the pastors/elders the Membership Covenant entitles them to control every aspect of members’ lives.  In the United States and in my state (California) you can’t “contract” for illegal acts and that is not enforceable.

The “orders” of the pastors/elders can constitute Criminal Conspiracy (an agreement between two or more persons), Aiding and Abetting, Accessory After the Fact (if a crime has already occurred that is being covered up), Obstruction of Justice, Intimidating a Witness, and a Failure to Report as a Mandated Child Abuse Reporter, to name just a few crimes. The pastors/elders can face arrest and prosecution for their conduct.

  1. Sick, and Finally Sick and Tired Of An Authoritarian, Abusive Church

            In 2014, the Chairman of the Elder Board demanded meetings from me about the accusations made about me by the woman Dyslexic.  I refused.

I had been acutely ill for five weeks with a serious lung condition, I had been in and out of the hospital, and I was tired.  I was tired of their controlling every aspect of my life. I stood my ground with him and told him I wanted an apology for their prior threat to me. Enraged, he told me that I owed them an apology and I was banned from church and church property until I made “it right with them”.  I refused.           .

  1. Excommunicated And Shunned…Mine.

            Hundreds of church members were told to never speak to me again. That I was under Church Discipline. You know the usual story that the pastors/elders  had “worked with me for years” (you mean screamed at me and threatened me) and that it had all been “to no avail”.

The pastors/elders told such a manipulative story about me that friends who had been close to me for years, that said I was one of the only people at church to support them, refused to ever speak to me again.

None of what the pastors/elders told about me was true.  It was all lies. Like all of the other lies they told about the middle-aged professional woman who left and Dr. Luke.

“As Stephen Arteburn and Jack Felton [authors of Toxic Faith] remind us, it is often the case that ‘anyone who rebels against the system must be personally attacked so people will think the problem is the person, not the system.” Ronald Enroth, Recovering from Churches That Abuse,  (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1994), 153., FREE here:

 http://www.reveal.org/development/Churches_that_Abuse.pdf

[Note: This book and Dr. Enroth’s other book Churches That Abuse are available for FREE online, here: http://www.reveal.org/development/Recovering_from_Churches_that_Abuse.pdf I recommend them.]

  1. First Christmas…Empty Mail Box

            My mail box used to be full of Christmas cards and gifts. I didn’t get anything from friends I had at church for nearly eight years. I would open  up my mail box every day from around Thanksgiving to  New Year’s. I did not receive one card or  gift. Some members emailed me and told me they would never have anything to do with me again. They told me that they hated me.

And none of what the pastors/elders told them about me was true. The pastors/elders had intentionally withheld what the pastors/elders did to me.

“In his [Ronald Enroth] study of authoritarian groups, public discipline, ridicule, and humiliation become the common experience of participants. The fact that there is little or no feedback available to members from the outside provides an unhindered environment where leaders can demand corporate obedience to them with unquestioning loyalty to the group. The damage created in these groups is that true freedom in Christ is forfeited for human power. Leaders who practice spiritual abuse exceed the bounds of legitimate authority by lording it over the flock. All too often these leaders have the audacity to intrude into the personal lives of members. As many people regrettably find out, abusive leaders are self-centered and adversarial and there is little chance for any type of reconciliation or restoration.” Barbara M. Orlowski, Spiritual Abuse Recovery (Eugene: Wipf & Stock, 2010), 43.

 

Related articles in 5-part series

Part 1: https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/19/part-1-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

Part 2: https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/20/part-2-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

Part 3:  https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/20/part-3-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

Part 5: https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/20/part-5-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

Part 2 – My Story of Being A Member of The Abusive Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley

Part 2 of a 5-part series.  by Velour/MtnShepherdess ©

Image result for david hayward naked pastor restrained

 

TRIGGER WARNING: DISCUSSION OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE

 “A Badge of Honor” – My Excommunication & Shunning from a NeoCalvinist Church  – by Velour/MtnShepherdess ©

             “Consider your excommunication as a badge of honor from a church like that!” –

Boz Tchividjian, Attorney/Law Professor/former sex crimes prosecutor/ advocate for child sex abuse victims/founder of Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment (G.R.A.C.E.), grandson of the Rev. Billy Graham,  words of encouragement to me on my excommunication/shunning from Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley (California)

  1.  Nouthetic Counseling

            I had never heard of this counseling before.  I was told that it was “Biblical”.  It was invented by Jay E. Adams, Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church theologian, and author of Competent to Counsel which was published in 1970. He has a degree in theology.  He is the founder of The Institute for Nouthetic Counseling.

I believe that this form of counseling should be called what it is: malpractice.  I saw it do an incredible amount of damage at my former church.  Untrained pastors/elders who had no training in the big issues that Christians struggle with – alcoholism, depression, mental illness, substance abuse, domestic violence, and sexual abuse issues to name just a few – had meetings about serious topics, quoted Scripture verses, and got it wrong, wrong, wrong.  They diagnosed problems as “sin” problems.

Many times the pastors/elders crossed over the line into the Unauthorized Practice of Medicine, a crime in my state (California) that can be prosecuted as a misdemeanor or a felony. I can now appreciate why my state heavily regulates the medical profession and forbids people without licenses to practice medicine.  I got to see the enormous damage done by this form of “counseling” by people with no education, training, and licensing.

7a.       Alcoholism

I and other church members were required to have months of meetings with the pastors/elders about an older woman church member who caused a lot of drama, chaos, and problems at church.  Two pastors/elders spent months drawing pictures on the black board of Scripture verses and quoted me Scriptures about “gossip”.

Some church members were required to go to the woman’s home and to apologize to her for problems she had caused.  She was constantly telling stories about people that weren’t true and caused lots of problems.

The pastors/elders kept demanding “unity”.  The real issue – she’s an alcoholic – the pastors/elders were not competent or trained to diagnosis.  She should have been referred to a physician to supervise her treatment for alcoholism. (Licensed professionals have pages of questions they have people fill out, and ask the questions a variety of ways, to determine if a person is a substance abuser.)

It was not possible for us to have “unity” with an untreated substance abuser.

The pastors/elders required more than six months of meetings from me about this woman. It was pointless.  I had to act appreciative and grateful to escape the “counseling” sessions from these two pastors/elders.

7b.       I Didn’t Cause Another Person’s Problems, I Can’t Control Them, And I Can’t Cure Them

Perhaps one of the biggest failings of Nouthetic Counseling that I saw was that it promotes Co-Dependency and a lack of healthy boundaries.  Church members with serious problems, who should be seeing licensed professionals and referred to appropriate groups that deal with specific problems, instead were enabled to stay in their unhealthy behaviors by pastors/elders who demanded other members’ time, like mine, in meetings about “unity”.

I didn’t cause these other members’ serious problems, I couldn’t control their problems, and I couldn’t cure their problems.

Verbally Abusive Member Should Have Been In Licensed Therapy

The pastors/elders required that I have nearly eight years’ of meetings with them about another church member, a retired woman known for her stunning level of verbal abuse to church members and attenders.  Former members, including men, called her “grossly immature for her age” and everyone said they went out of their way to avoid her because of how verbally abusive she was to people.

Ridiculing Men Who’d Been Laid Off

When men had been laid off during The Great Recession, men with high-paying jobs, she told them not to come to the fellowship meal any more “until they could contribute” and “had a job”.  They always contributed. But she enjoyed humiliating people.  Some men never returned to the church at all or to the meal after being humiliated.  She told one person that they would “probably become homeless” and laughed.

Ridiculing Christian Women From Other Cultures

She told women who were from cultures that did not bake to not come to the ladies Christmas event and cookie exchange because she “wanted good cookies”.  I had told the women for several months not to worry, to buy something, or don’t participate in that part, or that I would teach them how to bake.  Humiliated that she demanded perfection, they looked down at their plates at the fellowship meal and knew that my invitation that they were invited wasn’t true because to the older woman a plate of “good cookies” was more important than welcoming sisters in Christ from countries around the world at Christmas time. None of those women came to the event.

Ridiculing Me For Helping A Mom With Cancer

Her breathtaking hostility included ridiculing me for receiving an academic award and telling me that I “didn’t deserve it”, ridiculing me for helping a neighbor mom with cancer on a Saturday and going on a tirade because I did my laundry on Sunday and I had “violated The Sabbath” (which we don’t even believe).

Ridiculing Me For Respecting The Wishes Of Church Members With Allergies

When I decided to bake cookies for several hundred church members for the annual members’ meeting, the older woman found fault with my home made brownies. I hadn’t put nuts in the brownies because church members with nut allergies could die from eating nuts and asked me to not put in nuts.  As she ate a brownie she criticized me and said, “Brownies should ALWAYS have nuts. Who cares about people with nut allergies?” I care, because I loved those members.

Demanding Me To Use Hate Speech Against Gays

She hates gays and was constantly attacking them. She ordered me to use hate speech against gays.  I refused. She repeatedly me ordered me, in person, to use hate speech against gays. I refused.

It is vile to talk that way and rude. I also work at a job with a diverse group of employees, including gays, in a state (California) with strict anti-discrimination laws.  I can be fired for using that speech and my employer could be sued.  I have wonderful colleagues who are gay. I also had a gay boss.

My Christian walk is about me living out my faith, not coercing other people to live by the rules of my faith and being uncivil to them for not being a certain way.

[A story I previously posted about how God called me to live out my faith to visit a young man who was dying of AIDS in the hospital right before Christmas:

https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/01/the-royal-law-of-love-includes-loving-a-gay-neighbor-and-not-shunning-him-when-hes-dying/comment-page-1/ ]

Woman Demands That I Get Rid Of Italian Cross In My Home And Senior Pastor Agreed

When she saw an Italian cross in my living room, she went on another tirade about how “offended” she was that I had it, that I shouldn’t “have it”.  I later asked the senior pastor the best way to handle her since he had known her longer than I had.  He took her side, told me that he would be offended by the Italian cross too, that I shouldn’t have it, and that she was “right”. Both of them are former Catholics.

Under a great deal of pressure from the senior pastor, I got rid of the Italian cross.  It was my birthday gift, I’d had it for years, and it cost hundreds of dollars.  I wish I had walked out of that church then.  I’d never walked in to their homes, criticized their belongings, and told them to get rid of them, including their own birthday gifts.

Pastors/Elders Demands For “Unity” Wrecked My Birthday Dinner

The pastors/elders demanded “unity” and against my better judgment I let her be at my birthday dinner at a restaurant.  We weren’t able to make it through that night either. She ruined my birthday dinner by ridiculing a wife/mother’s beautiful white blouse and skin color to a woman sitting to my right.  The older woman looked the mom up and down and whispered “how terrible she looked” and “all washed out” and that her “white blouse was ‘all wrong’”.  I almost burst into tears and got up and walked out as I watched her ridicule another guest.

A Non-Apology Is Tendered

The chairman of the elder board then required another six months of meetings from me about the woman.  He finally brought us together at a restaurant in the interest of “unity”. Her apology consisted of “I didn’t do it and she acts like God.”  The chairman of the elder board was satisfied with her rude non-apology.  I wasn’t.  He said everything was all better. It wasn’t.

The second woman never apologized to me.  I wish I had gone to the drive-thru by myself for my birthday.  It would have saved my birthday and more than six months of my life spent in insulting meetings.

Each woman should have given a real amends and completely owned what she did.

According to the pastors/elders something was wrong with me for not wanting to be friends with this woman.

A woman I know, married to a recovering alcoholic, told me once before she got help for dealing with an alcoholic, “I wasn’t just a doormat with the word “WELCOME” written on me, I was wall-to-wall carpeting!” She learned how to take care of herself, how to respect herself and demand it from others, even if the alcoholic never came around.  He did come around and their marriage was saved.

But the NeoCalvinist church’s pastors/elders demanded that I be “wall-to-wall carpeting” with no respect and demanded that I engrave “WELCOME” to abusive conduct directed at me.

7c.       Blamed By Pastors/Elders For A Dyslexic Church Member’s Memory Problems

            Right before my excommunication and shunning the chairman of the elder board and the senior pastor demanded more meetings from me about my supposed “sin” toward a Dyslexic woman church member.

The woman church member repeatedly told church members that I was “lying” and that “the truth about me would come out”.  She couldn’t remember entire events and conversations and accused me of lying. She has been medically diagnosed with this disability since childhood.

Dyslexia is a genetically inherited brain disorder.  It’s not just a reading problem but a memory problem. She has short-term memory problems, working memory problems, and auditory memory problems.  She failed school because of the seriousness of her Dyslexia. She also can’t work because of it and receives a monthly disability check from the federal government.  She has received that for more than thirty years.

She refuses to get medical care for her memory problems and be in special support groups. She says that Jesus could “cure her if He wanted to.” Yes, He could, but He hasn’t.

The pastors/elders were enraged with me and demanded more meetings of me. I am not responsible for someone else’s genetically inherited brain disorder and memory problems, I can’t control it, and I can’t cure it.

She had also been angry with me that we weren’t close friends. I can’t change her and I didn’t see her as “friendship material”. She, like the other women, hated gays, said nasty things about them, boycotted her own family’s holiday events because of a gay relative (who works in a respected profession), demanded my personal business and threw temper tantrums when she didn’t get it, demanded other peoples’ personal business, and lacked basic boundaries with others.

She also volunteered my time to other church members to do free childcare and got them angry with me when I had to say “no” as I had no free time. And finally she had the bizarre habit of starting fights with people who were divorced and she told them that they weren’t “really divorced” and that their ex-spouse was their “current spouse” and she demanded that they call that ex-spouse their current spouse. She caused many fights by her bizarre, inappropriate demands and her inability to deal with reality. Apparently our courts and laws don’t exist either, because she “says so”.

7d.       Self-Confrontation book by John C. Croger

            My pastors/elders, church members, and Bible Study leader studied this book. The theme was again about using the Bible to counsel people about all problems in life.

I found it very unhelpful and very dangerous advice. To me it crossed the line into malpractice and the Unauthorized Practice of Medicine. I love Scripture. And it is helpful in many situations. But I am opposed to putting a Scripture verse on every problem and calling it “solved”.

We have trained, licensed professionals to deal with serious problems. The Bible also tells us that in many counselors there is wisdom.

It is dangerous and frankly unconscionable that these “pastors”/”elders” and others like them are not being trained in the big problems that people will face and how to handle them.

7e.       A Diploma Mill “Ph.D.” Was “Counseling” Me?

            My former pastor claimed a variety of credentials to church members that we  later checked since so many of us had problems with him. A job he claimed that he had, a credential he claimed that he had, and two advanced degrees that he claimed that he had including a Ph.D. turned out not to be true when I and other former church members checked.

My ex-pastor’s “Ph.D.” was not from a accredited university that takes eight years to earn. Instead my ex-pastor’s “Ph.D.”  was from the Bible College in Independence, Missouri, a diploma mill. http://faithcollege.org/degrees/ The cost is $299.  According to the U.S. Department of Education the Bible College is not accredited.  The one “accrediting agency” for the Bible College was brought up on fraud charges by the Missouri Attorney General’s Office and was banned from operating in Missouri.  I recently advised the Missouri Attorney General that they are operating in Missouri despite the ban.

The chairman of the elder board at my church works for a computer company in sales. He has a university degree, but no training in all of these “big topics” that would truly render him “competent to counsel”.

Other pastors/elders likewise had college degrees of some kind, but no training in serious problems and viable education. “Counseling” consisted of listening to their opinions, and a few Scripture verses and threats for good measure.

They were all incompetent to counsel. I have never seen so much harm done to so many lives as the skill set they claimed to have and are horrible at. I have had more training and education about these “big subjects” than they have had. I know more than they do.

  1. Young Earth Creation

            My senior pastor believed in a Young Earth Creation story and he constantly told us that the earth was only 6,000 years old and “isn’t it a miracle”.  I thought it was “a miracle” how proud he was of his lack of education.  I felt like I was surrounded by a group of people who said “2+2 =5”.  As long as they all said “5” enough times, everyone else is supposed to believe it. If we don’t, according to the Young Earthers we weren’t really Christians and didn’t really believe The Bible.  That’s nonsense.

My grandmother died at 102 years of age. She graduated from a famous university with a degree in science, as did her sister, when it was unheard of for women in the 1920’s. My grandmother and other women worked on the teams of Nobel Prize-winning researchers at the university.  My grandmother, a Presbyterian, believed in an Old Earth.  Science and faith were not a contradiction for her or for the other award-winning scientists on their teams who were Christians.

I know many young people who have turned away from the Christian faith because these Reformers are insisting on a Young Earth. If a young person accepts science, and that the earth is far older, than they are taught to reject the faith as the only alternative.

And I believe in an Old Earth and I am still a Christian. I look at the mountains and I know they are more than 6,000 years old.  And I think they are a miracle of God.  Like my grandmother, believing in an old Earth and being a Christian are perfectly acceptable to me.

  1. Council on Biblical Manhood Womanhood’s Teachings

            I had never heard of the Council on Biblical Manhood Womanhood and its dangers. I never knew that seeing it on a church website was a warning sign of an abusive church and an authoritarian structure, just like seeing the names 9Marks or Acts 29.

My ex-pastor repeatedly told women to “obey” and “submit”.  They were treated like second-class citizens. I was shocked when I first heard him say it.   We were told that it was “Biblical”, which I’ve just learned means, “Do it our way and don’t question. If you question us you’re un-Biblical.”

The pastor taught us women a book about being Biblical women. We met on one night a week at the church for several months.

We were told that women couldn’t be teachers. I really began to question Complementarian teachings, which I have since learned from Wartburg Watch readers like Gram3 that it started being heavily taught in the late 1990’s.

My Presbyterian grandmother had women medical missionary friends who were doctors and provided medical care and taught The Gospel in remote parts of the world. I grew up seeing their slide shows and seeing changed lives and villages.

I began to question the Comp teaching that women “couldn’t”, “shouldn’t” teach or employ their other gifts from God, when I thought about all of those women that I had seen further the kingdom.  I knew it wasn’t true. I had met Christian women teachers, missionaries, and pastors since I was a child.

At the NeoCalvinist, Complementarian promoting church we had strictly segregated events.  Women weren’t allowed to go fishing, to ball games, or to do trips in the mountains.  Those were for the men. We were strictly segregated from the men and did things like ladies teas with a speaker and crafts projects.  While they were nice events, many of us gals just wanted to be tom-boys and do fun stuff, without dressing up.

Related articles in 5-part series

Part 1: https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/19/part-1-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

Part 3: https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/20/part-3-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

Part 4: https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/20/part-4-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

Part 5: https://gbfsvchurchabuse.org/2016/09/20/part-5-my-story-of-being-a-member-of-the-abusive-grace-bible-fellowship-of-silicon-valley/

“Imaginary Conversions” C.S. Lewis

“If conversion to Christianity makes no improvement in a man’s outward actions – if he continues to be just a snobbish or spiteful or envious or ambitious as he was before – then I think we must suspect that his ‘conversion’ was largely imaginary; and after one’s original conversion, every time one thinks one has made an advance, that is the test to apply. Fine feelings, new insights, greater interest in ‘religion’ mean nothing unless they make our actual behavior better; just as in an illness ‘feeling better’ is not much good if the thermometer shows that your temperature is still going up. In that sense the outer world is quite right to judge Christianity by its results. Christ told us to judge by results. A tree is known by its fruit; or, as we say, the proof of the pudding is in the eating. When we Christians behave badly, or fail to behave well, we are making Christianity unbelievable to the outside world. The war-time posters told us that Careless Talk costs Lives. It is equally true that Careless Lives cost Talk. Our careless lives set the outer world talking; and we give them grounds for talking in a way that throws doubt on the truth of Christianity itself.” – C.S. Lewis

John Calvin Klein’s “Irresistible Grace For Elect Men”

Bless the wit who designed this! Great job. We’re all laughing.

Image result for John Calvin Klein’s “Irresistible Grace For Elect Men”

A – Part 1: My Story of Being A Member of The Abusive Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley

Part 1 of a 5-part series.

"Not My Idea" cartoon by nakedpastor David Hayward

Cartoon used by permission. David Hayward. Canada.

TRIGGER WARNING: DISCUSSION OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE

 “A Badge of Honor” – My Excommunication & Shunning from a NeoCalvinist Church  – by Velour/MtnShepherdess ©

             “Consider your excommunication as a badge of honor from a church like that!” –

Boz Tchividjian, Attorney/Law Professor/former sex crimes prosecutor/ advocate for child sex abuse victims/founder of Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment (G.R.A.C.E.), grandson of the Rev. Billy Graham,  words of encouragement to me on my excommunication/shunning from Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley (California)

 1.Excommunication & Shunning. Threatened by pastors/elders for discovering a Megan’s List sex offender convicted for child pornography at church.

            Nearly two years ago the Chairman of the Elder Board of Grace Bible Fellowship of

Silicon Valley (“GBFSV” http://www.gbfsv.org/) banned me from attending Sunday church services, banned me from attending any church events, banned me from having any communication with any church members (including my friends whom I’d known for nearly eight years), and told the Seventh Day Adventists who rent to GBFSV in Sunnyvale, California, (Silicon Valley) that I was banned from stepping foot on church property.  I was then excommunicated and ordered to be shunned before hundreds of church members.

My “crime”? I had not committed any act of immorality.  I would not bow to the authoritarian dictates of the chairman of the elder board who demanded that I apologize to all of the pastors/elders for their repeated threats to me about a Megan’s List sex offender at church whom I had discovered while doing a research project for a former sex crimes prosecutor.  (I will discuss that in greater detail further in my story.)

My name joined the “banned from church property” list with the wonderful Dr. Luke (not his real name), a godly doctor in his 70’s, loving husband to his wife Mrs. Luke (not her real name). The Lukes have been  married for nearly fifty years. Dr. Luke is also a loving father to grown children and a faithful evangelist at his office.

Dr. Luke had generously bought expensive books and DVD’s to start the church lendin library.  Dr. Luke also invited and paid for the senior pastor to join Dr. Luke, pastor John MacArthur (Grace Community Church in Southern California, president of The Master’s College and The Master’s Seminary) on a trip to North Carolina a few years ago to meet the Rev. Billy Graham in person at his log cabin home in North Carolina.  For all that Dr. Luke did for GBFSV, for all of his kindnesses to the senior pastor, for the stand-up Christian that I know him to be, the GBFSV pastors/elders told hundreds of church members, including members who work for well-known high-tech companies in Silicon Valley and members who are undergraduate and graduate students at the elite Stanford University, in a closed door Sunday meeting after the church service to NEVER speak to Dr. Luke again.  The senior pastor said they had “worked with Dr. Luke for years” to no avail.  The senior pastor said that Dr. Luke “wasn’t one of us” and if you had anything to do with him to “call him to repent”.

The senior pastor also accused Dr. Luke of false teaching, even though Dr. Luke had never taught any Bible classes at GBFSV, had never held Bible studies, and I knew that he wasn’t a false teacher.

The senior pastor told us to “pray” for Dr. Luke’s wife, and delivered this admonishment in serious tones, as though she was in some kind of hostage situation with her husband. When I interviewed Mrs. Luke, after my own excommunication, she told me that she’d always hated the senior pastor, the elders, and the church and that she thought something was terribly wrong with the church.  She repeatedly warned her husband that they should not go to this church.  She told me that she thought many of the church members were emotionally unhealthy because healthy people wouldn’t tolerate this treatment.  She told me that she hoped this incredibly destructive, abusive church “implodes”.  Me too.

Many church members secretly taped on their cell phones the excommunication and shunning of Dr. Luke, who was not present.  Those individuals and families also left GBFSV after that.

After I was ordered to be excommunicated and shunned from the church on a trumped up charge by the pastors/elders, I contacted The Lukes.  It turns out that the pastors/elders had invited Dr. Luke to a meeting at church.  He went to the meeting thinking that they were going to ask him to be a church officer.  Much to Dr. Luke’s surprise, the pastors/elders screamed at him and falsely accused him.

  1. How Had I Gotten In To A NeoCalvinist, 9Marks, Abusive, Authoritarian Church?

            I missed all of the signs in an abusive church.  In point of fact, I didn’t know what to look for in an abusive church.

I had tried a number of churches in various Silicon Valley cities that I had been invited to by friends. There was something wrong with them, but I couldn’t articulate the problems, many of which I have since learned about on The Wartburg Watch.

My most recent church had been a mega church that I had been invited to by a friend. It was independent with a hip pastor who had a large following and a radio program.  While I liked the choir, I did not care for the irreverent sermons, the anonymity, and that constant demands for money.  Taking a class at church meant having to come up with a lot of money to pay for it. Those without funds simply could not take classes.

A godly Christian woman I knew warned me that my mega church did not practice “Biblical Church Discipline” and that was one of their serious problems. She said that a husband from their church (Calvary Chapel) had an affair with a woman from the mega church. They disciplined their member (the husband) but that the mega church had refused to discipline their woman church member even when the smaller church’s elders had asked.

I had never heard the term “Biblical Church Discipline” and so I looked it up.  I found Mark Dever’s 9Marks of a Healthy Church organization in Washington, D.C.  He founded that organization.  He is also the pastor of Capitol Hill Baptist Church. I read the 9 Marks of a Healthy church that were “missing” from so many of today’s churches.  I thought surely I had found my answer to the churches that I’d attended that seemed so off.  9 Marks promised church health, stability, and a vibrant, growing church membership.

I did not know anything about the 1970’s heavy Shepherding Movement, some of the Florida founders later repented for its un-Biblicalness, authoritarianism, and abuses.  I didn’t know that Mark Dever, and others, were simply using the Shepherding techniques again with the same disastrous results.

Comment from Todd Wilhelm on The Wartburg Watch on May 17, 2016:

“I think it was Brad the futurist guy that recommended a book to me titled “The Shepherding Movement: Controversy and Charismatic Eccliesiolgy” by S. David Moore.

I am currently reading the book and the similarity between 9Marx and the Shepherding movement is eerie. It is almost as if Dever has lifted all the Shepherding concepts and repackaged them for our day.”

  1. Finding a 9Marks Church On The Locator Map Near My Home

            On the 9 Marks locator map I found a church near my home, Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley.

Church Search

https://www.google.com/maps?daddr=653+W+Fremont+Ave%0D%0ASunnyvale,+CA+94087

I read the church website and they seemed to have all of the  “marks” of a “healthy” church that Mark Dever talked about.

Yes, it all seemed there. What a relief, I thought, to find a bedrock of stability in a church world that had gone insane.

I went to the church. The church was new, started by a group of families from a Baptist church, and they were renting space from the Seventh Day Adventists.

The members seemed nice. There were slightly less than one hundred people.  That seemed promising, that we could get to know each other.  My needs in a church were simple and in retrospect naïve. I wanted to know other Christians, be known, hear the Word of God taught, grow as a Christian, and serve.

The music was reverent. The sermon seemed much more serious than the hip mega church pastor.  The church members and attenders were an intelligent crowd, many working for high-tech firms in Silicon Valley.  There was also a large contingent of students from the near by Stanford University.  And another group of University of California at Los Angeles (U.C.L.A.) who had come to work for Silicon Valley tech companies.

The church also had a fellowship meal after the service, a potluck on most Sundays. This was, I was told, to follow the pattern of the early church and to eat together.  It seemed fun and nice.

Jack on The Wartburg Watch:

            “Just went to the website of this church [Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley]. The membership contract is a vague rip from Purpose Driven Life but the bylaws are the meat & potatoes!

            In short, this corporation has no members. Members abrogate their rights upon signing the contract.

            Just reading the bylaws lights up every warning alarm on the TWW checklist of what to look for in an abusive church. http://www.gbfsv.org/by-laws

            No doubt new attendees are love bombed before they read the fine print.

            You should write this up as a case study of churches to stay away from.

            It would be interesting to know how you became involved.”

 Statement of Faith

http://www.gbfsv.org/gbf-statement-of-faith

  • Church Distinctives

http://www.gbfsv.org/our-ministry-distinctives

  •  Membership Covenant

http://www.gbfsv.org/becoming-a-member-of-grace-bible-fellowship

  • By Laws

http://www.gbfsv.org/by-laws

 Bill M:

“BTW, I looked over the website of your former church [Grace Bible Fellowship of Silicon Valley], their resources page reads as a veritable who’s who of nefarious organizations discussed here. I also note that least half the elders are staff, this inverts the accountability and put way too much power in the hands of the pastor. The preface of their statement of faith gives me the shivers and don’t get me started on their membership covenant.”

I didn’t know that researching a church to attend would involve as much research, or more, as buying a car.

I didn’t understand the implications of everything that I had missed on the church’s website, and that they were advertising authoritarianism and hierarchy, from the church to the family.

  1. Becoming A Member And Signing A Church Membership Covenant

            I met with an elder and found out the process to become a church member.  I had to write up my testimony, have several meetings with him, sign some church documents including a Membership Covenant, and meet with the pastors/elders as a group.  I did all of those steps with another Christian woman.  We were introduced as new church members to the church one Sunday morning.

  1. I Immersed Myself In Church Activities And Everything Seemed “Fine”

            I immersed myself in church activities.  I attended Adult Sunday School on Sunday mornings before church, I attended church services, and I volunteered to assist with the fellowship meal.  Since I love to cook, I also cooked for the fellowship meal.

I attended Bible Studies when I could on Friday nights.  The Bible Study leader, an engineer, took a great deal of time to prepare for the weekly Bible studies.  He would sometimes spend forty hours a week preparing for the Friday night Bible Study in his and his wife’s home. They were gracious people and we had a fun time.

  1. If Everything Was “Fine” Why Were Good And Godly Families Leaving The Church To Never Be Seen Again?

After my first year of church attendance, I noticed that good and godly families, left the church never to be seen again.  It was very odd. They were strong Christians, in the Word, wonderful, intelligent people.  Kind, generous, funny.  And they were leaving and going to other churches, never to be seen from or heard from again.

I asked the pastors/elders and other long-time members where these solid church members had gone.  I was shut down from any answers.  I was told it was “their time to leave” or they had “been called by God to another church” or given no answers.  It was odd.

Families that had helped found the church, including an elder, were leaving. If they were called away by God, why didn’t we all say a proper “good bye” to them? After all they were “family”. Our church family.

I made a mental note.  As the years went by, I noticed the pattern and grew alarmed by it. People left and would not give an answer as to why they were leaving.  They gave furtive glances. Uneasy looks.

When I was no longer a member, after my excommunication and shunning, I called former church members and I  asked why they had left for other churches.  They all told me the same thing: They were alarmed by the authoritarianism that the pastors/elders claimed to have over church members’ lives, the demands that we “obey and submit” to their authority, and that it was “un-Biblical.”  These solid Christians, most were conservatives, said that the pastors/elders were doing an incredible amount of damage to Christians’ lives and seemed blinded to it.

Many former church members described the same kinds of meetings that I had been subjected to by the pastors/elders: Being invited to a meeting, not being told what it was about, and then being screamed and yelled at, falsely accused and threatened.

They also described the insufferable control that the pastors/elders expected to dictate over our lives.

Many people also said that they had been warned not to join the church by family members who were long-time Christians, friends, and others who spotted the signs of an abusive, authoritarian church.  Others had spouses who refused to join and thought there was something wrong with the church.  One husband said that the Holy Spirit came to him very strongly during a prayer time and said “no” don’t join.  He, his wife, and children had a family meeting. The children said that they hated the church and what a cold, unloving place it was and they weren’t welcomed there and they didn’t want to return.  After a family discussion they were all in agreement and they went to another church.

Max, on Wartburg Watch, posted this comment:

“This is actually quite common in New Calvinist churches, particularly church plants. Here’s the usual cycle based on observations in my area: (1) a young reformer rolls into town with church planting seed money from a parent church or denominational support, (2) someone in the community is approached to serve as the host for a home meeting to discuss the church plant (usually someone who is disgruntled from doing traditional church or who has noble aspirations to start a new work to reach the unchurched), (3) the host invites his friends and others from the community to a “Bible study” (= core group), (4) the group grows as the young reformer passionately talks about hills he would die on and a message that sort of sounds like the gospel, (5) after a few months, the group out-grows the host home and they look for a store-front to rent, school gym, off-hour meeting at another church (most commonly in yuppie areas), (6) the young reformer recruits a cool band and singers, (7) free coffee/donuts and the cool music begin to draw a larger and younger crowd, (8) the flock keeps growing (mostly 20s-40s), (9) the young reformer selects like-minded elders (young ones), (10) the original host of the core group gradually becomes less important to the young reformer – he gets wise to the scheme and leaves, (11) other core group members begin to feel left out as they become distanced from the cool pastor while others take their place as the new core – they, too, begin to see the deception and exit, (12) the old core group members are shunned in the community.
All sounds like God, doesn’t it.”

Covenants, Contracts, Community, Catholicism, Communism and Extra-biblical Visions (or The Shepherding Movement: Alive and Well in 2014)

fiveonly's avatarsolafivereformed

Pope-and-Swiss-GuardThere is a growing trend among evangelical churches to require members to sign a church covenant. In most of these churches, there is a legitimate desire to see the regular attenders, or members, engage in meaningful fellowship or community in order to maximize their potential for the greater glory of God. The leaders of these churches see the membership covenant as an effective tool to combat the apathy and narcissism which is so prevalent in Western culture.  They would argue that biblical community is the antithesis of radicalindividualism and this individualism will continue to dominate the mindset of most churchgoers without a tangible tool like a membership covenant.

Not only does this narcissistic individualism undermine biblical community, advocates of membership covenants would contend that it undermines the vision that is cast by God-appointed leadership in the church. Vision casting is a concept advocated by Peter Drucker, (a noted Harvard…

View original post 3,249 more words

Truth Always Rests With The Minority.

by Maria Popova/Brain Pickings ©

https://www.brainpickings.org/2014/11/26/kierkegaard-individual-crowd-conformity-minority/