Friday, March 13, 2015

Bob Jones University, GRACE, and Controlling Perceptions

My phone rang just at the start of dinner in our house. It my was my long-time friend, Evan, calling to let me know that Steve Pettit, President of Bob Jones University (my and Evan's alma mater), had made an announcement that morning about the administration's response to a formal report composed by GRACE (Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment). I had been hearing through the grapevine that BJU was about to blow critics away with a complete apology and overhaul of their harmful counseling practices.

Due to unrest regarding mismanagement of sexual abuse incidents in the greater Bob Jones University constituency (BJU operates much like a denomination among its supporting churches), the school commissioned GRACE to comb through the school's response to sexual abuse, since it was apparent that some of these victims had studied and graduated from BJU. Bob Jones University is more than a university, it is a boarding school with strict standards for living and a faculty/staff/administration that seeks to involve themselves in the spiritual development of each student. Naturally, many students accepted BJU's offer to seek spiritual help for a wide variety of issues.

BJU was to be congratulated for initiating the GRACE report, until it unexpectedly fired the GRACE team just before the results were published. An immediate uproar by interviewed victims and their caring church leaders motivated BJU to re-hire GRACE to finish the report. What the report found was not a rare two or three incidents of alleged mismanagement of abuse victims, but a devastating trail of tears from dozens of interviewed victims that sought refuge in the counseling staff at BJU and received verbally gruff counseling that made the victims feel at fault for the abuse that they received. GRACE made many specific recommendations, as was stated in their job description and as they had done for ministries in the past.

Steve Pettit communicated the administration's standing on the GRACE report by handily refuting each recommendation that the GRACE team had carefully offered. Pettit asserted that BJU's own qualified team had rendered GRACE's recommendations to be over the top. In a personal letter to a confused sexual abuse victim, Pettit declared,

"Please know that higher educational institutions are held to a variety of state and federal laws, including Title IX and Clery, which GRACE did not take into account at times in several instances  where they said we did not report. During the interview phase, GRACE represented to BJU employees a greater responsibility for reporting instances of sexual abuse/assault than the law requires—or even permits. Because of this representation, there were instances in the report where employees were made to believe their responsibility to report was greater than what the law required—when in fact, they were in compliance with the law... GRACE comes from the perspective that we have a 'moral obligation' to report every instance; however, to do so would put us in violation of the law."

The GRACE team was made up of a former prosecutor with over a decade of professional experience; "a mental health professional [with] over 30 years of experience in the field of psychology and sexual abuse"; a seminary professor and pastor with 20 years of experience dealing with matters of sexual abuse in a church context; a project coordinator; and a project director. The BJU administration put together their own team immediately after the GRACE report went public with the perceived intent to make amends for the relational sins uncovered in the GRACE report. Instead, according Pettit's words in his public announcement and in the personal letter above, BJU was held to a great standard than was fair. GRACE's objective, external assessment, according to Pettit, was not so objective and accurate as was the assessment made by BJU's internal team of lawyers and constituents. 

The one glimmer of hope in Pettit's announcement on March 11, 2015, was BJU's admission that "our system of discipline created barriers with many of our students." The loyal constituency of Bob Jones University has a long history of defensiveness whenever they perceive organized attacks against the school. Some argue that this small morsel of an apology is very telling, as an apology in the smallest doses would prove unsatisfactory to BJU's more hyper-loyal constituents.

This whole situation is extremely tricky to process. Pettit handily moved the issue away from obstructing justice (telling the occasional victim to NOT report) and emotionally damaging counseling to the insinuation that everyone expected them to run all accusations of sexual abuse straight to the police without anyone's consent. This was a brilliant yet tragic PR move to put BJU back into victim status, as it had done in the days when BJU lost its tax exemption status for its ban on interracial dating among the student body. Pettit's interpretation of GRACE's recommendations are that they are ill-informed, thus they are mostly irrelevant and untrustworthy.

The science of Spiritual Abuse (SA) is in its infancy, and professionals are learning that SA comes at the hands of intentional abusers as well as unintentional abusers. The intentional spiritual abusers apply great energy to control their followers and are more easily detected. But sometimes intentions are somewhat wholesome, and those unwittingly guilty of SA look to a greater cause for the justification of harmful actions against a few. Regardless of intentionality, SA is at its root a release from the obligation to obey the greatest commandment: to love God with all our hearts and to love our neighbor as ourselves. Who is my neighbor, you may ask? Your neighbor is the one you meet on the side of the road, beaten, bruised, and avoided by the spiritual elite of your day. Your neighbor will sometimes be a friend you know, but he/she may also be someone you just met, socially a bit outside of your comfort zone.

BJU judged its behavior by its own set of moral obligations and the justification that its attorneys found would easily hold up in a court of law. The administration does not intend to further harm their neighbor, they just fail to involve themselves in the needs of those whom GRACE revealed had been poorly helped (the report found that many victims had been re-victimized by austere counseling measures).

"One method of manipulation [in cases of SA] is in challenging an individual's perception of reality. A common experience is the distortion of personal experience by the abusive individual attempting to alter the perception of a negative experience or encounter. This results in the 'retelling' of the incident to portray the abusive individual in a positive manner and the target of abuse as negative, weak or inaccurate, thus placing the abuser in a position of control... It is suggested that individuals' own reality testing becomes damaged in the abusive context and this damage is seen to result in an inability to be objective, critical and analytical... Thus, the individuals report their perception of an abusive event and this perception is denied and an alternative, often altruistic, version is provided by the abuser. This results in confusion for the individual and self-doubt which often results in acceptance of the alternative reality. Benyei (1998) suggests that the distortion of reality is a fundamental part of the abusive system rendering individuals unable to define reality and therefore unable to challenge the abusive process" (Lisa Oakley and Kathryn Kinmond, Breaking the Silence on Spiritual Abuse).

The process under discussion looks like this. A young lady confides in a counselor that she has been sexually abused, but her abuser is in a position of prominence in the greater BJU constituency. This young lady is told that she must keep silent for the greater good of the BJU constituency. This hypothetical is not so hypothetical, as the GRACE report reveals. The victim is forced to conform to this "alternative, altruistic" perception of her abuse. This "alternative perception" continues with the affirmation of harmful counseling practices as having helped many, according to the BJU administration, and that the confused sexual abuse victims must conform again to this "alternative, altruistic perception."

The BJU administration would further have us conform to the "alternative perception" that the GRACE investigative team is not to be trusted, that they were poised to hold BJU to a higher "moral obligation," that GRACE themselves forced their own "alternative perception" whereupon "employees were made to believe their responsibility to report was greater than what the law required." Perhaps, given GRACE's credentials and experience, that "higher standard" was not one which sought to mercilessly beat down God's servants into unreasonable reporting standards, but to hold a group of Believers to God's standard of loving one's neighbor as oneself. Perhaps, given GRACE's credentials and experience, GRACE sought to introduce BJU to a world that was wildly foreign to them, a world where victims are those little ones, the ones who were made to stumble, that ought to move us beyond any normal dose of compassion with the result that we lay aside all personal agendas to tenderly uplift that trembling soul with love, a love generous with speechless, tearful hugs.

BJU's own investigative team proved itself vastly more qualified than GRACE. GRACE brought the perspective of law AND Christlike compassion. BJU trumped GRACE with their own limited perspective of law and public image. In this contest of apples (Christlike compassion) and oranges (legalese), oranges won out.

To the victims who are further confused by Pettit's attempts to force upon you an "alternative perception" of your tragic memories, consider yourselves victors. You have survived and re-survived ugly circumstances, and you are still standing. As more and more organized religious camps in the United States flex their institutional muscles and add to the congregations of disenchanted former-church goers, you will find a new and powerful grace to love your neighbor in ways you know they need to be loved into the Kingdom. While you wait for this grace to flourish, look away from the Bob Jones University constituency to the thousands behind you who want to hear your story and shower you with love and compassion. Forgive us for holding back our compassion until this day.














Saturday, January 10, 2015

Institution versus Community

Since the close of our church in Sneads Ferry, my wife and I have worked through a massive amount of theological and emotional struggles. Our view of church was shattered after we essentially learned that the American Church was less about fighting for people and more about fighting for a system. Naturally, cynicism begins calling the shots, where we suspect the evil in others rather than prepare ourselves in love for the evil in others. The real struggle has been to patiently allow all the struggles to remain until they are finished maturing us. Many family and friends seem Hell-bent on seeing our struggles end so that we are "useful" and meeting their own emotional needs of seeing us "get right with God."

Thankfully, God has NOT been so rigid and callous. He has been patient and enlightening, which is so merciful of Him to do. Surprisingly, God has also given us more questions with more doubt and despair. On the surface, this would seem to undermine God's will for our lives, but it is actually quite liberating. We ask the hard questions, feel the discomfort, and we awake to a new day of mercy and grace. The gifts of God are not exhausted but empowered by our weakness.

My wife and I know our Bibles very well, having been well-trained to memorize it and use it to debunk liberal viewpoints on philosophy, religion, socialism, and politics. What we are green at is Christian community. Without the wide array of Christian communities in Wilmington coming around us with patient love and care, we would be very bad place. The wealth of personalized Bible knowledge was not enough to help us. But Christ claimed that He would never leave us or forsake us. We realize Christ's faithfulness through the love and support of a handful of Christian communities in the Carolinas. The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate (CMA) have shown us a great many things about God and ourselves in such a way that gave us spiritual safety.

At the risk of "franchising" a good church, there are several common characteristics that these churches share, and they are miraculously affecting change in the American Church, slowing the wide-spread disenchantment and making new disciples in surprising places. To my former-Fundamentalist friends, I think you will find these thoughts helpful in finding a healthy church and avoiding the dangerous ones.

They talk about the Holy Spirit....a lot

The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate are more nervous about impeding the Holy Spirit's work in the lives of Believers than they are about "guiding" the Holy Spirit's work. They argue that the book of Acts is descriptive, not prescriptive. Thus, they want to see God do unexpected things and not fit Him into a system. They do not de-value the inspired Word of God, but they worship God, Christ, and the Holy Spirit...not a book with white pages and black letters. The Word of God informs all men about how to know God. It is not meant to restrict the power of God into a rigid school of biblical perspective that permits institutional systems to unveil the mind of God for the masses.

Your story is important

Before I can know what the Holy Spirit is doing in your life, I need to know who you are and where you come from. Details are important. You might be lying about some things, you might be 100% truthful. Regardless, you say what you say about yourself and life for a reason. With each new day, there is more about your life that transpired, so there is always more to learn. I need to listen. I need to pay attention to your emotions, your hobbies, your dislikes, and so on.

The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate place a great deal of emphasis on individual stories rather than the church's expectations. As pastor of The Anchor likes to say, "Life is not made up of atoms: it is made up of stories." Lest this sounds as though church is all about you and me, there is a surprisingly high participation rate in non-programmed ministry: initiative to start Bible studies in the local community gathering points; evangelization; spontaneous prayer meetings; adopting foreigners brought in from the local refugee ministry; and so on. There appears to be a direct correlation between receiving the gift of being heard and desiring to give of yourself to others in need. Armed with intimate knowledge about their members, The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate are quite efficient in seeing spiritual gifts used to their fullest extent. 

Confusion is part of the journey

In most churches, spiritual confusion is uncomfortable for disciple-makers. The American Church demands that you are "on board with the mission." Therefore, your spiritual confusion must be resolved as soon as is humanly possible. If your confusion is not resolved quickly, it must be because you are not submissive. 

The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate dig out your spiritual confusion as part of hearing your story. Your spiritual insecurities are part of God's journey for you. This helps them pray for you. This helps them know God better, because they get to see the Holy Spirit cut through the crap of a fallen world and redeem one more soul from destruction. This helps them love you with understanding in such a way that adds to the grace of God in your life rather than frustrating the grace of God in your life.

Membership is too obvious to be forced upon regular church attenders

Of The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate, some of them offer official membership, and some of them do not. To them, membership is merely a formality for living Gospel together. Where membership exists, it defines relational accountability. Where membership does not exist, the group is already obedient and does not need the state to sanction their obedience to God and one another as a 501-3C Not-for-profit.

For most American churches, regardless of what the leadership might say, membership is for the numbers. They look to numbers in order to judge their effectiveness as a church. Litmus test: attend a church for ten straight Sundays, do coffee with the pastor, get involved with other members, and refuse to sign any philosophy of ministry documentation. An involved church attender messes with numbers if he/she is not a member. Most churches are also suspect of what you think until you join and sign their philosophy of ministry documents. Such a litmus test will show whether the church is more interested in institutionalization rather than Gospel-centered community. 

Decentralization, Decentralization, Decentralization!

Since the Holy Spirit is real, and the Great Commission literally commands Believers to scatter,The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate consider Sunday gatherings the powow before real church starts (Monday thru Saturday). Church happens between smaller groups of church members showing grace and mercy to one another. Church happens when a Believer behaves as the Samaritan who found a man robbed and beaten on the side of the road and nursed him back to health at the Samaritan's expense. Church happens outside of the church walls where Believers are talking less and acting in love toward God and their neighbors more.

The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate have little issue creating minor (or sometimes major) discomfort for the "members" in order to pull the sticks out of their you-know-wheres and motivate them to scatter. In contrast, most American churches spend thousands of dollars each week to service the preferences of their membership.

The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate place heavy emphasis on small groups, not to be a cool Acts 29 or Gospel Coalition church, but because small groups operate like little churches. These little churches grow up to be mature churches that create little churches of their own. Regardless of the labels (community groups, missional communities, satellite campuses), small groups are their key to decentralization, not necessarily a key to numerical growth.

Passion for a geographical area and everything within

If you visit pastors' offices at Summit Church, you will see an entire wall displaying a local map and red circle outlining a 5-mile radius from the church location. Everything within that circle is the church's realm of responsibility: neighborhoods, schools, businesses, other churches, etc... Their resources are poured into loving that 5-mile radius to death (figuratively, of course). Summit occasionally dedicates a Sunday "service" to putting together and then delivering gift baskets to any employees working at a business in that 5-mile radius. They do other "crazy" things like this regularly, and Summit pastors have to begrudgingly handle phone calls from other local pastors who want to know the ROI on such activities. 

The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate expend grace recklessly and don't ask the community for anything in return. They don't avoid certain groups in their realm of responsibility. They don't try to squeeze a white-collar culture into their area of responsibility. They just love on everyone within.

Team players

The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate consider other local churches assets and hope that those churches reciprocate. Unfortunately, they end up loving on other churches without always receiving the same courtesy. To them, buildings, numbers, and money are unnecessary. We don't need any of those things to make relationships and see the Holy Spirit work in the lives of others. Unfortunately for most American churches, sharing resources and building relationships with other churches threatens their resources and whatever power they think that they have in the community. 



There will come a day when the American Church looks different, and we take these characteristics to an unhealthy extreme. But that day is far away. Today, the American Church cares about the health of the institution and relationships come second. Christ began his earthly ministry under similar circumstances. The religious system of Christ's day was overwhelmed with institutional pressures, political-entanglement, and hoarded resources. Christ was far from kind to the religious system and sought out the weak and made disciples of them. I am thankful for the example of churches like The Anchor, Redeemer Fellowship, and Summit Church of the Upstate who break the mold and obey Christ with simplicity and lean resources.