Dealing with Sexual Abuse in the Church: Advice for Pastors
Recent events have sparked vigorous debate regarding the proper handling of sexual abuse in the church. This essay is not an attempt to directly address a specific incident, but it will certainly intersect well-known incidents at points. While I was pastoring, I dealt with a multitude of sexual abuse cases that occurred both prior to and concurrent with my ministry. The list of tragedies included several rapes of teenagers, gang rape, incest, one entire family of five children molested by the father, and bestiality. While I am certainly not the most experienced person in this regard (not by a long shot), I think I have enough experience to contribute to the conversation.
I feel compelled to write this essay primarily for the younger generation of future pastors. Unless a clear message of what is biblical, right and courageous is sounded, I fear that many of them will enter ministry confused, fearful and uncertain of the proper manner of dealing with sexual abuse. I am afraid that many will swallow the weak excuses for leadership that are often given when pastors fail to properly deal with this terrible phenomenon in the church. Too often believers defend obvious failures of leadership, offer weak excuses, or attempt to bury offenses and hope everybody eventually forgets about them.
A Word for the Pastors
Before you think I am being overly critical of pastors, let me give a few caveats that I hope will communicate my sympathy for any pastor who has to deal with sexual abuse. First, sexual abuse is everywhere. Estimates of abused women range from 1 in 5 to 1 in 3. For men, abuse ranges from 1 in 7 to 1 in 5. Take the average church of 100 people, evenly split between males and females. In this accounting, 20-33 females and 14-20 males will have been or will eventually be sexually abused.1 This is a staggering number, and it screams for colleges and seminaries to give those preparing for ministry clear and sophisticated training on dealing with sexual abuse. In this essay I will primarily speak in terms of male predator and female victim, but the dynamic happens in every possible combination.
Second, any case of sexual abuse is messy, complex, emotional, and exhausting. Sexual abuse implies predation, and predators are notoriously deceitful, conniving, and evasive. A pastor can often feel like a detective, trying to track down and extract the truth from a situation clouded in lies, emotional devastation, fear, anger and cover-ups. In addition, a pastor cannot depend upon the police department or Department of Children and Families (or whatever it is called in your state) to be of much help in most cases. In the state of Connecticut where I pastored, DCF was rife with corruption, neglect and even abuse of children in their charge. My experience with DCF was with a few well-meaning case workers overwhelmed with caseloads often being managed poorly by bureaucrats. The police often had bigger concerns with which to deal, such as drug lords and gangs.
Finally, until the past 15-20 years, sexual abuse was never spoken of in many fundamental and evangelical circles. Only in the last decade have colleges and seminaries made concerted effort to provide quality training to future leaders. Most pastors who were trained more than 15 years ago literally have no formal training in dealing with sexual abuse. Today there are many good resources to help a pastor effectively deal with abuse, but these are recent developments. (On a personal level, I know of no more qualified experts than Chuck and Sue McLain at Calvary Baptist Seminary in Lansdale and Bruce Meyer at Maranatha. Readers would do well to take their classes.)
Understanding Sexual Abuse
Before we go any further, we need to define sexual abuse. The National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect defines child sexual assault as: “Contacts or interactions between a child and an adult when the child is being used for sexual stimulation of the perpetrator or another person when the perpetrator or another person is in a position of power or control over the victim.”
There are several key components to this definition. First, sexual abuse is any contact or interaction…when the child is being used for the sexual stimulation of the predator. Contact or interaction includes actual physical contact, in addition to forcing a child to watch sexual acts or pornography, etc. I would add that lewd comments, gestures and looks also qualify as abuse.
Second, the legal definition of “child” is anyone under eighteen years old, even though the age of consent may be lower in certain states. Legally, and I think, wisely, children under eighteen are not considered to be responsible for sexual behavior with adults. This may seem like an arbitrary determination by some. As the father of seventeen- and fifteen-year-old daughters, I think this is just about right. This is not to deny the fact that some teenagers occasionally seduce adults, but the occurrences of children seducing adults are rare in comparison to the vast majority of cases where the minor is preyed upon. The reason responsibility is not placed upon the minor is simple: It is not normal behavior for a minor to initiate sexual contact with an adult. I know this point will raise howls of protest from men who have “fallen” to the charms of teenage girls, but it is simply not the case that very many teens are out there looking to initiate sexual relations with forty-year-old men. Besides, as Christians we hold adults to a higher standard. Let me say this very clearly. If a teenager should ever initiate sexual contact with an adult, it is the adult who is first and foremost responsible to resist temptation and refuse the contact.
Why so many people don’t understand this is a mystery to me. In so many instances where Christian men (especially leaders) have preyed upon teenagers, it seems that the automatic assumption is that this “godly man” would never do such a thing willingly. He must have been seduced by a perverse teenage girl. She is to blame for ruining the man’s ministry or position or life. This kind of response needs to be identified as the twisted delusion that it is.
Third, sexual abuse happens when the perpetrator or another person is in a position of power or control over the victim. This neglected point is often misunderstood or ignored in cases of sexual abuse. Having control over a victim is a powerful dynamic that can leave one absolutely in the grip of the perpetrator. Power is gained in many ways, and unfortunately religious or spiritual power is often the best tool of the abuser.
Predators use a variety of scare tactics: everything from threats of bodily harm against the victim or her family to threats of public exposure and shame and loss of family support and love. They may appeal to her sympathy and incite fear of church discipline or even damnation. Recently in our area, a “Christian” man was exposed as raping his now nineteen-year-old adopted daughter continuously from the very first night he brought her home at the age of twelve. All those years he threatened that if she told anyone, the family would reject her and have nothing to do with her. And he was right! When he was finally exposed, the negligently ignorant wife blamed all those years of abuse on the daughter and threw her out of the house. The power dynamic in sexual abuse cannot be underestimated.
If this description so far makes you sick to your stomach and afraid to ever have to deal with sexual abuse, it should. It is not for the faint of heart or the ill-prepared. Without the training I received in seminary I would have completely failed the sheep that limped into my office, broken and bleeding from the wolf-attacks they had endured. So how should a pastor deal with sexual abuse in his congregation?
Shepherding the Victim
First, a distinction needs to be made between sexual immorality and sexual abuse. They are not the same. The issue of consent is not a minor issue; it is the issue. When two adults or two minors engage in consensual sexual immorality, they are both morally responsible for their actions. When one person forces another to engage in a sexual act, there is no responsibility on the part of the victim. And by definition, there can be no consensual sexual contact between minors and adults. Why? Because adults have inherent power over minors. Again, I am aware of the rare cases where a sixteen- or seventeen-year-old may appear to be consensually involved with an adult. But even at that age, there is a power dynamic in the relationship that makes it abuse.
What does this mean for pastoral care? In the case of sexual contact between a minor and an adult, the minor ought to be considered the innocent victim unless clear and compelling evidence says otherwise. And even in such rare cases, the responsibility of the act still rests squarely on the shoulders of the adult. I am amazed at the confusion on this issue. In an attempt to somehow explain how a “Christian” man who seemed to be godly, seemed to be a good family man, and seemed to love God could do such a thing, blame is quite often laid at the feet of the minor. It is especially appalling to me when women rush to blame a teenager for sexual contact with an adult. Perhaps many women who respond in this fashion were abused themselves, and have never stopped blaming themselves for the abuse they suffered.
The main role of the pastor with the victim at this point is that of the gentle shepherd, recognizing that he is dealing with a severely wounded lamb who needs care, comfort, counseling, support, courage and more. A pastor needs to demonstrate compassion toward the victim, reassuring her that the abuse was not her fault, and that the church will be there to help her through the trauma that will unfold in her life over the next years as she comes to grips with this most devastating violation of her person.
It is not uncommon for abuse victims to suffer depression, thoughts of suicide, eating disorders, self-mutilation, and a host of other symptoms in the years following an act of abuse. Pastors need to be prepared for the long haul to minister patiently to the victim. The victim will be wracked with guilt, fear, anger and other emotions. She will be tormented with questions such as, “Could I have fought harder? Did I do anything to encourage him? Why am I such a bad person?” In addition, the victim will most likely suffer the humiliation of ignorant people making hurtful comments. All this adds up to a monumental task for a pastor in the post-abuse care of an abuse victim.
The pastor needs to take the lead in finding women who will come alongside her in the process. He needs to help the family find a good counselor and perhaps a good lawyer. He needs to fulfill the commands of 1 Thessalonians 5:14 to “encourage the fainthearted, help the weak, be patient with them all.” Above all, the pastor needs to ensure that the victim is not exposed to shame in any way for the heinous act committed against her. The one place a violated person ought to be able to go to find relief from shame and condemnation is the church. How a pastor prepares his people for this eventuality will make all the difference in the world. This will be discussed later.
(See Part 2 on shepherding the perpetrator and shepherding the church.)
Notes
1 Editor’s note: Perhaps the congregation size would need to be 200 to produce the final numbers indicated here (since the statistics are calculated based on 100 females (1 in 5 = 20/100, 1 in 3 = 33/100) + 100 males (1 in 7 = 14/100, 1 in 5 = 20/100)? Or if the average church is 100 and not 200, the ranges of abused women/men should be adjusted in half (for a congregation of 50 women/50 men). Still a “staggering number.”
Mark Farnham is Assistant Professor of Theology and New Testament at Calvary Baptist Theological Seminary (Lansdale, PA). He and his wife, Adrienne, grew up in Connecticut and were married after graduating from Maranatha Baptist Bible College (Watertown, WI). They have two daughters and a son, all teenagers. Mark served as director of youth ministries at Positive Action for Christ (Rocky Mount, NC) after seminary and pastored for seven years in New London, Connecticut. He holds an MDiv from Calvary and a ThM in New Testament from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary (South Hamilton, MA). He has also studied ancient manuscripts at Harvard Divinity School and philosophy at Villanova University. He is presently a doctoral student at Westminster Theological Seminary (Glenside, PA) in the field of Apologetics. These views do not necessarily reflect those of Calvary Baptist Theological Seminary or its faculty and administration.
- 1276 views
First, sexual abuse is everywhere. Estimates of abused women range from 1 in 5 to 1 in 3. For men, abuse ranges from 1 in 7 to 1 in 5. Take the average church of 100 people, evenly split between males and females. In this accounting, 20-33 females and 14-20 males will have been or will eventually be sexually abused.He qualifies that somewhat in a footnote, but he gives no support for his statistics - he doesn’t tell us where they come from and leaves the implication that such statistics are equally applicable for a small sample group like a church as they are for society at large. There are certain communities in our area where the likelihood is that EVERY female in the community has been sexually abused. What does that prove? It proves that there are some deep deep problems in that community.
Mark seems to suggest that in the church, because of what seem to be NATIONWIDE statistics, one can thus extrapolate the number of women in an average church will have been or WILL BE abused eventually. This is absolute BALDERDASH. It is “statistical abuse”. The reality is that in churches, far less abuse is likely to occur than the national average.
That is not to say that abuse does not happen, or that pastors shouldn’t educate themselves on the subject, or that proper policies need to be in place in order to do everything possible to prevent even the suggestion that abuse could possibly take place in the framework of church ministry. These are serious matters and we need to be serious about them.
But Mark’s use of statistics seems to be playing into the hand of a fear-mongering lobby. They suggest that the church is AS UNSAFE an environment as any other social group in our society. I think that is just wrong.
UPDATE: I see that Mark replied to some of my complaints while I was writing this. I appreciate it. I would like to see if what he thinks about the rest of my comment.
Maranatha!
Don Johnson
Jer 33.3
[Mark Farnham] What I mean by “sexual abuse in churches” is the presence of people in a church who have been sexually abused at some time in their lives. In my own experience, I found that quite a few women (and some men) who were saved in adulthood and had grown up in unsaved homes had been abused as children or adults. So, this is not an indictment on Christianity. It is rather the reality of many people’s lives.And so we can conclude that if a church has no one in its membership who has been sexually abused, that church probably hasn’t been doing the work of the gospel. If we’re bringing wounded sheep to the Good Shepherd, membership won’t be uniform, and these cases will exist.
-David Morgan
[Mark Farnham] Don raises a good point, so I need to clarify myself. I am NOT suggesting that the church is no safer than any other place. When I talk about sexual abuse in the church, I don’t mean that I believe these statistics to be reflective of the experience of genuinely converted families in a Bible believing church. Certainly sexual abuse DOES happen in Bible believing churches and professedly Christian families. What I mean by “sexual abuse in churches” is the presence of people in a church who have been sexually abused at some time in their lives. In my own experience, I found that quite a few women (and some men) who were saved in adulthood and had grown up in unsaved homes had been abused as children or adults. So, this is not an indictment on Christianity. It is rather the reality of many people’s lives. It IS an indictment on spiritual leaders who don’t know their Bibles well enough to deal with sexual abuse properly.Thanks Mark. I appreciate your reply.
I don’t deny that people in churches have been sexually abused. We have had more than our share of them. One poor lady is dying in the hospital right now after a lifetime of constant abuse at the hands of all sorts of wicked men, none in the church though. Thank the Lord we have never had to deal with an ongoing immediate issue involving anyone in our ministry, as some of my friends have had. I hope and pray we never have to deal with that.
I do think the clarification is important.
Maranatha!
Don Johnson
Jer 33.3
The legal system considers someone innocent until proven guilty- but should the church wait to take action until the legal wheels have stopped turning? Or should they assume the worst in order to protect children? What if the charges are found to be false- does the accused have grounds to sue the church for defamation of character because they took punitive action before the verdict was handed down by the justice system?
This is not so cut&dried as what folks want to make it. We don’t simply punish the accused and ask questions later. These tragedies, as has been pointed out, create more than one victim. The whole flock is affected to one extent or the other, from the families involved to the inevitable rippling outward.
BTW, the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA) was originally passed in the early 70’s, but has been amended and reauthorized several times. [URL=http://www.childwelfare.gov/systemwide/laws_policies/state/ Each state has different statutes[/URL] as to who is/isn’t a mandatory reporter. Some states still do not require members of the ‘clergy’ to report. Some states require film developers to report. It would behoove pastors to know the law in their state.
[RPittman] Thus, the secular concepts of victimization and recovery become lifelong therapeutic processes that never achieve closure. The answer is true Biblical forgiveness, not psychotherapy. Once true forgiveness is given, one has satisfied God’s requirement (Matthew 6:14; Matthew 18:35; Mark 11:25) and one experiences closure through peace with God and the peace of God within. Needlessly to say, granting forgiveness is not easy as Christ’s disciples recognized and realized that it was an act requiring faith (Luke 17:1-10). Oftentimes, forgiveness is difficult because it violates our sense of righteous anger and hatred toward one who has caused us pain and violated our sense of self. This, however, is a wrongheaded spirit of vindictiveness encouraged by many in the victim and recovery movement.RPittman, I think the secular concepts of victiimization etc is part of what makes me react to the statistical statements so much. You said earlier that many young people are coming forward with stories of abuse, etc. I don’t doubt that this is a huge problem, but I wonder how much of it is fed by the secular mindset that seems to permeate our thinking at every hand. I also wonder how healthy it is for these people to be hung up on the past. That is not to minimize how horrible these events are, but to question how healthy it is to dredge them up.
When crimes are committed, it is vital to do what we can to bring the criminals to justice, but sometimes that is impossible. In one case I have dealt with, the perpetrator was long dead. What good did it do for the victim to dwell on those past experiences? Better for her to forgive and live now to the glory of God. (Easily said, of course.) The past shouldn’t be allowed to cripple the present.
Maranatha!
Don Johnson
Jer 33.3
REPORT, REPORT, REPORT.
Then, wrap that little girl or teenage girl up in your arms and tell them that it was not their fault and keep repeating it to them. You as a pastor/shepherd have the responsibility to protect all of your sheep. And, if someone hurts one of your sheep, then you need to do everything you can to make sure it never happens again. Don’t wait for the victim to request counseling — offer it — give them names/phone numbers of professional counselors to help. Show them you care by keeping the perp away from them and away from the church.
[Anna Walker] Children statistically do not make false claims of sexual abuse. Most children in our IFB churches are so sheltered about sex, that if they claim abuse — then it is very probable that it occurred simply because they wouldn’t have had that knowledge otherwise.I agree that false claims are few and far between, but I do not believe that most children in IFB churches are sheltered about sex. I grew up in IFB churches, and the kids always knew a whole lot more about the birds and bees than they let on to the adults, and many were sexually active at a very young age. It’s why my dh and I don’t allow sleepovers nor do our children attend overnight church activities or go away to camp without one of us attending as a counselor. I’ve mentioned here at SI that I saw my first R-rated movie at a ‘church’ sleepover… and it certainly wasn’t my last experience with a sexually charged atmosphere at a church function.
That was more than 20 years ago- and now more than ever children are being sexualized. Today [URL=http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/06/24/mass-district-policy-let-elementar…] elementary schools have policies[/URL] that make “condoms available to all Provincetown public school students and takes effect in the fall. Under the policy, any student requesting a condom from a school nurse must first receive counseling, which includes information on abstinence….without the knowledge of their parents.” If our IFB kids are attending public schools, they aren’t ignorant on sexual issues. And they aren’t likely ignorant even if they attend Christian schools. You really have to have a tight grip on your kids for them to be truly innocent in today’s world.
We need to get a clue- not only should we educate our kids on sexual issues (before the perverts do it for us) but they need to understand what they can do to prevent their own victimization. Stating that abuse can be prevented does not mean that when a child is victimized they are at fault, but it does mean that they can reduce their risk by understanding how to listen to their instincts and by parents giving them the freedom to disobey authority when they believe authority has overstepped their bounds. I teach my kids that if anyone- be it pastor, teacher, or other authority figure- makes them feel creeped out, they are to immediately leave and come and find me or their dad- and we will protect them. Any adult who cares about kids is not going to be upset that a child left a situation where they felt uncomfortable or afraid.
[Anna Walker] The first thing to do when someone comes to you with suspected abuse is to involve the authorities. It is not your place as a pastor or other Christian leader to decide if the claims are true. I am in the middle of an open investigation with my childhood rapist. My detective was very alarmed when I gave my affidavit at the number of mandatory reporters who did not report. Two of them in particular are or will be in serious legal hot water because of their failure to report.I CANNOT emphasize this enough. While I haven’t been abused, I know of family members who have been and the utter failure on the part of the pastor to report what was clearly ongoing, graphic abuse has utterly destroyed any relationship that I could have had with the Pastor. I still can’t understand why he didn’t do report it, and it’s been at least three years since I found out. Fortunately, the victim has started getting the help she so desperately needed.
The hardest part for me personally has been knowing when to step back once the report is made. I doubt that I’m the only one who would like to be the judge, jury and executioner when abuse situations come up in the course of personal/pastoral counseling.
"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells
Do we exonerate someone who shoots a child because the child was playing with a gun? Do we exonerate someone who burns a child because they were playing with matches? Do we exonerate someone who beats a child because the child hit them? Is it not abuse when a man puts a woman in the hospital. Yes, I know and have heard, ‘she hit me first.’
A Child abuser/Rapist is a sinner, period. If we want to hold onto the image we had of them, that is our own weakness and should not be directed to the victim. It is natural to want ask, “are you sure?” We do not want to believe that of ‘one of our own.’ Could have done such a thing.
Yet, DO NOT DO THAT. Do you not hear how that line of questioning ends up telling a victim that they are lying, untrustworthy. The passionate person with no control yells, “No you are lying!” And now the victim has been further victimized. Chances are the victim has been threatened with not being believed, asking that question gives the abuser credence. “Tell me what happened?” would be a better line of questioning. and following that up love and assurance that you value the victim. There is a great chance they withheld information and were just testing to see if you would believe them. IF you do not believe them, still ask more questions without a cynical nature, do not interrogate them. If you find it hard to believe then do report it immediately, find someone with experience to talk with them.
Do the promiscuous teens bent on attacking ‘Godly Men’ exist? I suppose, I have not met them in my experience. I have met adults with such a bent, but not a child. A 30 year old man has as much emotional and intellectual power over a teen as they have physical power. The promiscuous teen so often blamed is usually the victim of previous abuse, or just terrible training on what it is to be a young woman.
A Child is a child. PERIOD. Their parents encourage to become close to the youth pastor/pastor/Sunday School teacher/coach/teacher/uncle/step father/etc. I would sooner blame the parent for not protecting the child from a predator than the child for opening up their heart to an adult. I understand, their ‘opening up’ could be very sexual in nature. Our culture is saturated with sex equals love. A child, even a fully developed teen, does not understand their ‘sexuality.’ You can disagree with me, that is fine, but I would sooner take responsibility for the action as the pastor for failing to protect than blame the child who has been taught incorrect use of their God given body.
We are not talking about looking down someone’s shirt and blaming them for wearing it so low. We are talking about planned actions of deception that are executed. Even the most streetwise teen can not manipulate an adult male to that extent. It would be easier for the girl to physically defeat their rapist than for them to manipulate a ‘godly man’ into rape. What Bibles are we using that we forget Matt 18:6 and Luke 17:2? Their actions are not the result of the victim, James 1:14 IT is his own lusts, not the child’s schemes. A child opening their heart to an adult, even in the rare case where it is in a sexual manner, is NOT the sin, the abuse is the sin.
He who created us without our help will not save us without our consent. - Augustine
And so we can conclude that if a church has no one in its membership who has been sexually abused, that church probably hasn’t been doing the work of the gospel. If we’re bringing wounded sheep to the Good Shepherd, membership won’t be uniform, and these cases will exist.Just want to caution about what stats—even good ones—mean. If you have any kind of “average” calculation (as in, [URL=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arithmetic_mean] mean[/URL] ), the reality is that there are not necessarily any “average” cases. Rather, the individuals/groups involved can usually be mapped on something that resembles a bell curve so you have a fair number of exceptional cases at either end and a bunch in the middle. This is if your sample is large enough.
To be more concrete, you can have 5 people in a room and calculate that their average age 21. But it is possible that none of them are even close to 21 in age (like, roughly age 10, age 10, age 11, age 40 and age 35).
So even if the national averages are accurate, there will be some churches, towns, villages, maybe even whole states or regions that are way above or way below “average.”
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
Discussion