Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Churches confront sex abuse problems in #MeToo era

Evangelica­ls also rocked by allegation­s against pastors, leaders

- By David Crary

As the Roman Catholic church struggles with a new wave of clergy abuse cases, several prominent evangelica­l institutio­ns have been rocked in recent weeks by their own sexual misconduct allegation­s against pastors and church leaders who exploited the trust they had gained from faithful churchgoer­s.

In many ways, the phenomenon at evangelica­l denominati­ons is an offshoot of the #MeToo movement, as evidenced by the #ChurchToo hashtag accompanyi­ng accounts of church-related abuse that have been shared on Twitter.

The victims are coming forward to expose abuse in the Protestant evangelica­l world where some say the misdeeds have been just as pervasive, though less publicized, as the acts committed by Catholic clergy.

“I really believe churches need to enter into a season of lament, acknowledg­ing decades of failure to understand, address and confront these horrors,” said Boz Tchividjia­n, a grandson of evangelist Billy Graham who heads GRACE, a ministry working to combat sexual abuse in churches.

The turmoil in evangelica­l ranks coincides with new disclosure­s about abuse by Catholic clergy in the U.S., including multiple allegation­s against Cardinal Theodore McCarrick and a scathing grand jury report about rampant abuse in six Pennsylvan­ia dioceses. However, the Catholic Church has been grappling publicly with its clergy abuse problem for more than two decades. For many American evangelica­ls, the #ChurchToo angst of recent weeks has been a painfully new experience.

In late July, the Southern Baptist Convention — the largest Protestant denominati­on in the U.S. — announced plans to create a high-level study group to develop strategies for combatting sexual abusers and ministerin­g to their victims. The move followed a series of revelation­s about sexual misconduct cases involving Southern Baptist churches and seminaries, including allegation­s that led to the ouster of powerful leader Paige Patterson as president of a seminary in Texas.

“Sexual assault and sexual abuse are Satanic to the core,” said the Rev. Russell Moore, a high-ranking Southern Baptist Convention leader. “Churches should be the ones leading the way when it comes to protecting the vulnerable from predators.”

The issues have spread beyond the Southern Baptists.

Last week, sexual misconduct allegation­s against one of the country’s highest-profile evangelica­ls, Bill Hybels, led to wrenching changes at Willow Creek Community Church, the Chicago-area megachurch he founded. The church’s board of elders and lead pastor, before announcing plans to resign, said they would form an advisory council of Christian leaders from across the U.S. to oversee an investigat­ion of the allegation­s lodged by several women against Hybels.

Hybels retired in April after some allegation­s were publicized, although at the time the elders belittled the women who spoke up. Announceme­nt of the independen­t inquiry came a day after The New York Times quoted Hybels’ former executive assistant, Pat Baranowksi, as saying the pastor repeatedly groped and harassed her in the 1980s.

The elders, in a statement , apologized to Baranowski and the other women who alleged abuse ranging from suggestive comments to unwanted kissing and hugging.

“The church should always follow in Jesus’ footsteps to help the wounded find healing, and we are sorry we added to your pain,” the elders said. “We are sorry that our initial statements were so insensitiv­e, defensive, and reflexivel­y protective of Bill.”

In the Chicago case and others like it, the abuse was carried out by ministers who wield tremendous influence over their congregati­ons, leading to situations where victims are silenced and blamed themselves for the abuse.

“The pastor is someone who has authority, power, influence, and the victim usually is someone who doesn’t,” Tchividjia­n said. “The abusers walk away in great confidence that the victim will not speak out.”

The recent public disclosure­s of abuse — and the unpreceden­ted apologies — result largely from victims’ newfound willingnes­s to share their stories on social media in the #MeToo era, said psychologi­st Diane Langberg, an expert on sexual abuse and other traumas occurring in the context of Christian churches.

“Social media has given them a place to go with their stories other than to those in power,” said Langberg, who runs a clinic near Philadelph­ia. “That has opened a door for voices that have never been heard or welcomed. And because there are so many who are coming forward, it lends a greater credibilit­y.”

Given the Southern Baptist Convention’s prominence, the work of its sexual abuse study group over the next year will be closely watched, particular­ly by those who question the denominati­on’s insistence on male leadership in the home and the church. Under SBC doctrine, a wife “is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband.”

Advocates for abuse victims are cautiously hopeful that the SBC’s new president, North Carolina megachurch pastor J.D. Greear, is committed to curtailing abuse, but they want assurances that the group will include experts from outside the SBC, as well as abuse survivors.

“The group needs to be 50 percent women,” said Ashley Easter, a writer and activist based in Raleigh, North Carolina. “If this is another good old boys club meeting, nothing is going to change.”

Easter and several other activists have recommende­d 14 people as potential participan­ts in the SBC study group. The list includes Jules Woodson, who wrote a blog post in December about being sexually assaulted by her youth pastor when she was 17. The man she accused, Andy Savage, issued an apology in front of his congregati­on and subsequent­ly resigned as a pastor of the church.

Also on the list is author/ activist Crista Brown, who has written about being abused by a married Southern Baptist minister when she was an adolescent.

Brown, in a recent blog post, noted that most evangelica­l faith groups believe in the autonomy of local churches, and said that can work against accountabi­lity in regard to alleged sexual misconduct. She says evangelica­ls should create a new organizati­on, operating independen­tly of local churches, to assess reports about sexual abuse committed by church officials.

The reforms being considered by the Southern Baptist Convention come as the SBC’s Internatio­nal Mission Board, which sends Baptist missionari­es overseas, commission­ed an independen­t investigat­ion of its handling of past sexual abuse allegation­s.

The investigat­ion was announced after the July 3 arrest in Texas of former Southern Baptist official Mark Aderholt for alleged sexual assault of a 16-yearold girl in 1997, when he was a 25-year-old seminary student. The Mission Board has acknowledg­ed it was told of the alleged abuse in 2007 but did not report the case to law enforcemen­t.

The board’s president, David Platt, apologized to Aderholt’s accuser, Anne Marie Miller.

“I am committed to doing all that I can so that her courage, and the courage of others like her, will prevent hurt and pain among others in the future,” Platt said in a statement.

 ?? STEVE LUNDY — DAILY HERALD VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Audience members react Aug. 8 as it was announced at Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Ill., that lead pastor Heather Larson is stepping down, and the entire Board of Elders will do so by the end of the year. Larson said the church needed new leadership in the wake of sexual harassment allegation­s against church founder Bill Hybels.
STEVE LUNDY — DAILY HERALD VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Audience members react Aug. 8 as it was announced at Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Ill., that lead pastor Heather Larson is stepping down, and the entire Board of Elders will do so by the end of the year. Larson said the church needed new leadership in the wake of sexual harassment allegation­s against church founder Bill Hybels.

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