Houston Chronicle Sunday

HEALING ‘CHURH HURT’

Christians seek safe place to repair their relationsh­ip with religion

- By Julie Zauzmer

Christians seek safe place to repair their relationsh­ip with religion.

BOSTON — For two years, Terrell Hunt was a Christian without a church.

At the church in the Washington area where he had grown up, Hunt worried that the leaders lectured about good behavior but didn’t act as they preached. He heard members talking badly about one another. One day, a member preaching about toxic habits addressed his sermon to one young woman, causing her to burst into tears in embarrassm­ent. Hunt became convinced this church just wasn’t for him.

Every day, he prayed on his own. He read the Bible. It was a lonely faith.

“It was really, really hard. It made me feel like, if this place isn’t for me, is any place really for me? Am I ever going to feel comfortabl­e again?” said Hunt, 27. “I just felt a really deep sense of hurt.”

That’s when he found Community of Love Christian Fellowship — a church where Hunt joined a community of other lost souls just like him.

Pastor Emmett Price has a term for what a lot of people went through before they came to his congregati­on: “church hurt.” The term, which refers to the pain sometimes inflicted by religious institutio­ns — a pain that distances sufferers from their communitie­s and from God — is an increasing­ly prominent topic of discussion among Christian clergy.

Price tries to keep his services low on jargon and ritual, opting instead for simple songs and a sermon in the sunny, wood-floored multipurpo­se room of a larger church in Boston’s unpretenti­ous Allston neighborho­od. There’s no hierarchy of deacons at Community of Love, no questions about how long someone has been a Christian or who has or hasn’t been baptized. At the start of every service, Price says, “Welcome to Community of Love Christian Fellowship, where God loves you and we do, too.”

At Community of Love, some members were previously put off by a stuffy or cliquey church. Or maybe they were upset by a pastor who demonized them for their behavior, their family situation or their sexuality. In at least two cases, they were sexually abused by clergy.

One way or another, many were traumatize­d by the church, the very institutio­n that they had thought would guide and comfort them.

Price, a pastor with a background in African American Baptist churches who founded this small nondenomin­ational church five years ago, said that sometimes healing comes slowly. He admires the people who return to his church over and over, trying to repair their relationsh­ip with religion. “I cry when they are able to call me ‘Pastor,’ ” he said.

Shannon Collins, a member, said that racial and gender bias in many other churches causes some worshipers deep pain. She called Community of Love a sort of hospital for injured souls.

“It’s not a coincidenc­e that we all ended up here,” she said. “We all got hurt.”

Carol Howard Merritt, a Presbyteri­an minister who in February published a book on church-inflicted trauma, says there has been a growing wave of people hurt by churches in the past 20 years, leading to the sudden swell of books on the topic. Among the apparent causes, Merritt said, are many churches’ lack of caring during the AIDS crisis, revelation­s of widespread clergy sexual abuse and churches’ intensific­ation of their opposition to gay equality.

Although Price doesn’t usually put it this way for fear of stigmatizi­ng his approximat­ely 65 congregant­s, he says his church is in some sense “the place for recovering Christians.”

“We do have those large, glaring situations,” including sexual abuse, as well as smaller concerns in the congregati­on, he says. “We have the whole bandwidth of situations.”

When Hilary Davis first walked in, she was a seminary student angry with God.

She sat down alone, thinking of her recent struggles and weighed down by the years of hypocrisy and dishonesty she had witnessed in church. And then, sitting among strangers, she said, she heard the voice of God.

“I heard God say, ‘I know you love me, Hilary. And I have received the sacrifice of your life,’ ” she said. As the melody of the soloist leading the hymn washed over her, Davis wept.

Unbeknown to Davis, that soloist was hearing the voice of God in that moment, too. Brittany Wells wasn’t a believer when she first came to Community of Love Christian Fellowship. Singing hymns before the congregati­on was simply a paying job, and she treated it like a serious musician.

But that day, during the same hymn that moved Davis so profoundly, Wells found herself choking the words out, missing entire lyrics. “My heart exploded. My body temperatur­e got really, really warm. And I just started crying,” Wells said. “I just felt like I was connected to God. He was using me to deliver a message. He was using me to minister.”

Two encounters with the divine in the course of one rendition of “I Love You, Lord” is unusual. But members tend to praise this church’s role in their lives with a fervor and unanimity rarely seen in any sort of congregati­on.

At the monthly community conversati­on hour in February, the first person to speak gushed unprompted about the fellowship. “Since I’ve been coming here, I have had more peace than I’ve had in my entire life.”

Others rushed to agree. “One of the best decisions that I made was coming to Community of Love. It has really helped me to reaffirm my relationsh­ip and my faith in God.”

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 ?? Julie Zauzmer / Washington Post ?? Members of the Community of Love Christian Fellowship in Boston meet once a month for a conversati­on hour.
Julie Zauzmer / Washington Post Members of the Community of Love Christian Fellowship in Boston meet once a month for a conversati­on hour.

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