Reflecting 1 Corinthians 10:1-22
Dale O. Wolery, Clergy Recovery NetworkImage source: philosophyforlife.org
Pastors
should be the last people to perpetuate abuse. The idea is disconcerting and
repulsive, but God’s people sometimes do God’s work in destructive ways. Surely
not every clergyperson is an abuser, and yet many thoughtful observers believe
that spiritual abuse, intentional or not, has become the norm for modern
pastors.
Any ministerial behaviour, mine or someone else’s that damages
someone’s relationship with God is spiritual abuse. But it’s not just a clergy
problem. People in the pews have an enormous appetite for abuse. The fear and
shame that motivate the abusers are the same feelings that often motivate
victims to accept the abuse. Some church attendees wouldn’t have church any other
way. Within the church, spiritual abuse has become so normalised that it is
viewed as the path to spiritual growth. We crave what hurts us because we
believe it is best for us.
Recognising my own
spiritual abuse as a pastor has been gradual. So has my recovery as both abuser
and victim. Recognising the abuse in others and in myself has been both painful
and helpful. Those who have experienced my ministry over the years might well
have been as unaware as I was that I was abusing them. (How I would love to
make amends, to assemble them to apologise and together find a better way, a
way of healing and grace!) Recognising the distorted, damaging pieces on our
spiritual journeys is the first step toward true spirituality.
Dogmatism
Spiritual abuses come in a
variety of personalities. One kind of spiritual abuser is the Uninformed
Dogmatician. Too often I ministered Scripture as if I were the authority,
while I was ignorant even of my own spirituality, needs, desires and feelings.
My perceived need to be viewed as the authority was met and those in my congregation
who were overly dependent on authority felt that their needs were met.
In fact
they encouraged me in this damaging stance, treating me like the expert, the
guru, and telling me they liked it when I stepped on their toes. But instead of
becoming more spiritual we fell into a ditch together. Like a blind leader of
the blind I helped create an enslaving damaging ‘discipleship.’ I focused on
the intellectual and less meaningful details of biblical passages and missed
the heart of the Good News. And I scarred some souls in the process.
Rigidity
Another kind of abuser is
the Rigid Ruler. Usurping the throne of God, he calls the shots about
when you should attend church, how much you should give, what you should look
like and how you should treat him, your spouse and your children. He interprets
Scripture for the congregation, not allowing sound reasoning or questions.
The
rigid performance standards with which he burdens his people destroy freedom
and grace. He distorts the image of God, projecting Him as the Enforcer, the
Harsh Taskmaster. The Rigid Ruler imposes his own control using fear and shame.
Congregations support this abuse by hiring pastor after pastor based on whether
he has the same rigid ‘convictions.’
Reality Bending
The Reality Bender
also spiritually abuses people. As pastors, we should be ever searching for the
truth about how we feel, what matters most to us, what our real priorities are,
whether we are wrestling with dark secrets. We should be honest and real.
Instead, other pastors and I bend the truth. We project a reality we do not
enjoy. When our lives become unmanageable, we feel compelled to put on a happy
face and act, instead of telling the truth.
Such role-playing bends what is
real and deceives those who are trying to find out what God is like. This perverts
Christianity at the core. When I have bent reality, I have deceived the ones I
was supposed to protect and I have modelled a view of God that is void of truth
and grace. Happy ‘painted’ faces hurt the souls of others.
To be sure, people in the
pews encourage the spiritual abuse of bending reality. It is somehow more
comfortable to put the pastor on a pedestal, even if that pedestal is built on
a lie, than to graciously accept him with all his flaws. This came home
powerfully to me when, I, as a pastor, shared for the first time that I had
been seeking professional help. Elders as well as other church members were angered
and embarrassed. Our push to put pastors on the pedestal contributes to the
sickening cycle of spiritual abuse.
Dale Wolery
is the executive director of the Clergy Recovery Network (www.clergyrecovery. com). This
article has appeared in the Spiritual Abuse Recovery Resources website run by
Jeff VanVonderen of Christian Recovery International., which is a non-denominational
Christian organisation founded to help Christians deal with spiritual abuse.
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