The following portion of my journey is something that I had
no idea I would write and haven’t shared before because I was still afraid.
It’s about the church we left last year. It’s time for me to stop being in
total denial about that church and call a spade a spade. If you know me, you’ve
figured out that Parts 1-10 were written in the summer of 2012. I waited an
entire year before I was ready and felt safe enough to publish them to the
blog. This post is new, written this month. I still didn’t feel safe about this
subject until recently, and even then, this post and the next one make me just
as nervous as the others did, even though the abuse was not as prolonged and
wasn’t as severe.
I would like to add some reminders to the members of this
church before they go on reading. Again, this is where bad reactions come in.
If you feel like I shouldn’t have shared this publicly, trust me, I thought I
shouldn’t either. Chances are, I thought about this much longer than you.
However, what I am about to share is facts. If you don’t like the facts, do
something to change the church’s environment. I don’t like the phrase “airing
dirty laundry,” but I think it sums up how some will feel about me sharing
this. If you feel like I am airing someone’s dirty laundry, instead of feeling
negatively towards me for it, perhaps you should think about the following
instead: Feel negatively towards the people who made the laundry dirty. This is
my story. I shouldn’t be required to remain silent about things that have
influenced my life. Also, keep in mind that it is not my job to reconcile with
abusers. It is their job to change and I’m not responsible for them. I’m done
going above and beyond for people who know they have been hurtful and haven’t
made any attempts to meet me halfway. One more thing. This crushed me a lot
more than it did you. I lived this. These pastors and this congregation were
dear friends to me. I recognize that they had and still have good intentions
throughout my years at Redeemer Evangelical Free Church, but good intentions
amount to squat when it comes to abusers.
I started going to this church fresh out of high school as a Bible school student. I loved how healthy the church seemed to me. Looking back, that is highly questionable, considering my own condition. It felt healthy compared to the cults I had just traveled away from! There are good things about this church, and compared to what I knew, man that church is alive and kickin’! Having not known what spiritual abuse was as a college freshman, I wouldn’t have been able to catch the red flags like I can now. I also wondered for a while if it was just me—if all these religious organizations I had been a part of could be so wrong. It eventually made sense to me that I, being a toxic person, had put myself into toxic environments because health bothered me. My communities were reflective of who I was.
I started going to this church fresh out of high school as a Bible school student. I loved how healthy the church seemed to me. Looking back, that is highly questionable, considering my own condition. It felt healthy compared to the cults I had just traveled away from! There are good things about this church, and compared to what I knew, man that church is alive and kickin’! Having not known what spiritual abuse was as a college freshman, I wouldn’t have been able to catch the red flags like I can now. I also wondered for a while if it was just me—if all these religious organizations I had been a part of could be so wrong. It eventually made sense to me that I, being a toxic person, had put myself into toxic environments because health bothered me. My communities were reflective of who I was.
Soon before I started taking
control back and setting boundaries in my life, this church become more than I
could emotionally deal with. I felt frozen, utterly frozen, when I walked
through the doors. I was grateful to have a new baby that I could take out of
the service at any whim, and I often spent entire services outside of the
sanctuary simply because my heart was hurting too much. Speaking of having a
baby, I was sick of the breastfeeding criticism I faced from certain people at
the church. Multiple people at Redeemer have said publicly that it is immodest
and compared breastfeeding to urinating or defecating—“natural, but so is
urinating, so please do it behind closed doors.” While the overall congregation
was probably fine with it, a select few made me highly uncomfortable as a new
mother, so that even if I did want to sit in the service, I was often hiding in
a room that appears to be a former closet that was converted into a place for
mothers to breastfeed. I found it extremely hot sitting in there on that little
loveseat, with a cinder block wall a few feet from my face. To spruce it up,
someone had added a picture of Jesus welcoming the little children for me to
stare at while I hid the way God created my child to eat from his church. I
missed many a sermon because no audio or video of the service is provided in
that tiny space.
When the service was over, I couldn’t wait to leave, and upon arriving home, I was completely sapped and often needed to sleep the afternoon away to recover from the feelings I was burying. I didn’t know it, but I was being triggered. I had grown up being abused in a pew, and, much like a soldier could be triggered by the sound of fireworks after a dangerous deployment, being in that environment again set me off. Not going wasn’t an option to me, as that was accompanied by a heavy weight of guilt and shame. And tears. Lots, and lots of tears.
My own worldview was rapidly changing, and I began to
understand that certain people there loved to bash people like me. It had (wrongly)
never bothered me before because I was yet to move outside of their fences of
acceptable opinions and feelings. But as my list of disagreements with the
general congregation grew longer and longer, I began to feel like I could no
longer use my voice without fearing the backlash. My Facebook posts got
comments about how I was focusing too much on love (and how worldly that
apparently is) and when someone told me I was turning to the devil (for saying
the American church needed to show love to homosexuals better), instead of
being called out, his comment got supporting likes from a few church members. Then
I would be back in the pew with the same people the next week, who never said
anything to me in person about their or my behavior on social media. It made me
wonder if they knew it was me they were talking to, a human being, not a
keyboard or a computer monitor or a phone. When I tried to set boundaries with
one woman, she protested that she was concerned for the people who read my
posts. Overall, whenever I used my voice on social media, the shaming caused me
to never dare use it when I went in to the church fellowship.
The church’s attitude towards women
was positive on the surface, but the underlying sexism eventually became very
obvious to my free self. The senior pastor recently (a year after I left) gave
a sermon on the role of women in the church, stating that women cannot
challenge men in an upfront way, like a man could challenge a man, because men
have fragile masculinity. He openly said that he, like all men, cannot handle
it when a woman boldly approaches them with a disagreement. It’s somehow
hurtful to them and crushes them. I asked my husband after listening to the
sermon if he felt that way when I woman approaches him and he said no. I think
that means my husband must be female. But in all seriousness, if that were
true, I think the more important issue there is that I am not responsible to
maintain someone else’s weakness, nor am I required to be silent when something
important needs to be said. He also explained that the church let women teach
in Sunday School, but they were not permitted to speak from the pulpit because,
in the SS context, the woman can be quickly corrected by a man if she’s wrong,
whereas in a sermon, they don’t want anyone calling out the speaker during the
service. Is it just me, or does that kind of imply that all women are less
likely to speak truth than all men? I also do not believe that it makes sense
to the culture of Jesus’ day, so it doesn’t seem to be the intent of the
original manuscripts. The worst part for me, though, was the opening to the
sermon. The prayer, led by the youth pastor, was full of phrases like, “There
are a number of passages of your word that are challenging to us. And God I
know that there are some of us, even in this midst of a family who want to
refuse that these words even exist from Paul. Or perhaps we are squeamish…And I
pray that your Spirit would lay on our heart a spirit of submission. I pray
that each of us today would not hear what we want to hear, but hear what you
want to say. Lord not every passage is easy…and so we ask for open ears and
open hearts…” implying that people who disagreed only disagreed because, though
they knew God was teaching something else, they were squeamish and couldn’t
swallow it, so they went ahead and made up their own theology outside of God’s
teaching. Then the senior pastor came out wearing soldier’s gear and staged
this little introduction with the message, “Don’t shoot the messenger!” Then he
went on to pepper the sermon with phrases like, “God’s word is absolutely clear
on this.” He wouldn’t say it was just his interpretation and he did not
encourage people to go to other resources and see for themselves. My personal
opinion is that pastors are not God’s messengers and need to present their
interpretations as their own, not God’s. Anything more is spiritual abuse. When
I finished listening, I was glad that someone had finally and blatantly
articulated all underlying the sexism I had felt under the surface, as well as
the attitude of bullying towards Christians with different beliefs.
At the end of the day, especially when I added my son and daughter into the equation, my husband and I agreed that it was best to leave. But what I’ve described here was only the tip of the iceberg of hurt. More abuse was occurring behind the scenes, in counseling sessions with the senior pastor, as I sorted through the abuse I received from the hands of my parents.
To be continued…
No comments:
Post a Comment
I won't ever delete based on your thoughts alone, but if you are not brave or kind, your comments will be deleted. All are invited to my table, but disrespecting my boundaries means your comments won't make it past my approval for everyone to see. If your comment doesn't make it through, ask "How can I communicate with more courage and kindness?" and try again. I don't want this to turn into a place for trolls, so I'm not letting it.