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How appropiate is it 4 a Pastor to....

Discussion in 'Pastoral Ministries' started by Phillipians121, Sep 20, 2006.

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  1. thjplgvp

    thjplgvp Member

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    I was a youth pastor in a city that was a subburb of San Diego. My Pastor was a very godly man (;and still is) but felt called by God to the mission field. The church called a man to the pastorate who had preached in our church many times and seemingly did an excellent job. But had only preached messages that dealt with winning the lost to Christ.

    Our church was averaging in the high 200's - low 300's it was a strong church with a solid Christian school and a good testimony in the community. That church is no longer there today the evangelist was a wolf in disguise and a predator of women which in a military city ended up being devastating. In talking to one of the men later I was told that in private he openly talked about counceling families for sexual problems and at one point asked my friend if not he also were having problems?

    Here is the bottom line he ruined families and many wonderful women, he used coercion, threat of death, threat of harm to their children, he was involved in sex cliubs etc. etc. He stole thousands of dollars from the church (nearly $100,00) and disappeared.

    If your church is independent Baptist and your pastor has been to Russia as a missionary or goes to New Orleans to minister during Mardi Gras and went to a military accademy for his education please contact me by private Mail immediately if need be there is another member on this board who will vouch for what I am saying.

    If not you need to spill the beans to any leader who will listen and those who won't as well and get out of that church.

    I can not express my anger and disdain for such a man as you have identified be it his ignorance or wilfulness.

    Thjplgvp
    :mad:
     
    #21 thjplgvp, Sep 21, 2006
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 21, 2006
  2. hawg_427

    hawg_427 Member

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    I totally agree with rbell, he is shopping for future affairs. Not good at all. This is the kind of junk that gives the church a bad rep. Just as the Roman Catholic Priests (not all of them ) gave the Catholic Church. He better back off and ask God for forgiveness and re-acess his priorities.
     
  3. Major B

    Major B <img src=/6069.jpg>

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    My reaction:

    1. I find it amazing this guy talks about his sex life at all with anyone.
    2. I find it doubly amazing that no one has busted his face yet (husbands!).
    3. I find it triply amazing that he has not been fired yet.
    4. At the next business meeting, the pulpit should be vacated--and this Sunday would be a good time to call one.

    No pastor (or other man) should ever say ANYTHING negative about his wife in ANY context unless that pastor is talking to a professional counselor.

    No pastor should speak explicitly about anyone's sexual problems unless it is in the context of counseling, and then the utmost in sensitivity and modesty should be observed. And, the pastor should NEVER meet with a woman about ANY THING unless the pastor's wife is present in the meeting.

    I continue to be amazed--I was fired from my church for preaching the truth, for insisting on holiness standards, for allowing guitars on the stage, and for using the New King James Bible. I hear stuff like this and wonder if we are in Kansas any more!
     
  4. Hope of Glory

    Hope of Glory New Member

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    In general, I agree with the things that are being said here. He's probably shopping, but no matter what, he's inappropriate.

    However, something to think about: Suppose the things that he is saying are true? Pastors counsel people all the time for stuff like this, but I know that if I needed to talk to someone other than God, there is no one that I could responsibly turn to.
     
  5. webdog

    webdog Active Member
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    I agree. I'm getting the vibe that there may be mutual attraction. Lady, your really need to have a heart to heart with your husband...and then confront the leaders of the church with your husband.
     
  6. Bro Tony

    Bro Tony New Member

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    I can tell you brother, we are not!!!:tear: :tear:

    Bro Tony
     
  7. PastorSBC1303

    PastorSBC1303 Active Member

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    You seem to contradict yourself at times here?
     
    #27 PastorSBC1303, Sep 21, 2006
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  8. TaterTot

    TaterTot Guest

    My first thought was that most pastors I know wouldnt say these kinds of things to someone in their church, but I know it happens. Did you express discomfort when he mentioned your own sex drive? That shoulda been the end of that whole ordeal.

    By letting this go on for a year, maybe thats where Webdog gets his opinion that maybe you have liked the attention, esp sice you say you and your husband dont have the ideal relationship either.
    I cant imagine any husband not punching the guy out or still being friends and going to lunch together if he had any inkling that his wife was being thought about in that way.

    Maybe its just me, but something just doesnt sit right with me. Cant' really put my finger on it. I do hope yall get things worked out.
     
    #28 TaterTot, Sep 21, 2006
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  9. bapmom

    bapmom New Member

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    Philippians,

    Im glad Tater said it first.....:)

    Ladies to lady.....you should never have let him speak such things to you......ever. As a lady, AND as a member in his church, you were never the appropriate person to help him with such a matter. Ever. No matter how good your intentions were. Personally I think you know that, and it is that knowledge that embarrasses you and is making you hesitate to say anything. You MUST overcome this embarrassment.

    As others said, this is not someone else's problem. This is a problem within YOUR church body, and it is your responsibility to deal with it. Even if you think you will be ignored......doesn't matter.

    IF you are ignored, then leave.....THEN and only then have you absolved yourself of your responsibilities in this matter. This man needs help, not from you OR your husband though. If he doesn't get it, it will become just one more church scandal.

    God has placed you in a position to stop it now, before it goes any further. Don't let it get to the point where people are crying out "Why didn't anyone say anything sooner!"
     
  10. blackbird

    blackbird Active Member

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    I agree---BUT---do your homework!! Make sure you present truth---and nothing but truth---remembering that probably----probably----probably----those deacons

    #1 Are so earthly minded---so carnal---they won't know "diddly" about handling the situation

    #2 May just be his "Puppets" or "Do-Boys"

    Get ready for a "counter-attack" from the Pastor----get ready for him to make up lies about you in front of your husband and deacons----"She was comin' on to me!!!" etc.

    I encourage you to do what you need to do---but it isn't gonna be easy---nor nice!! The preacher will rise to defend himself---and he's gonna be a "Bull in a China Shop"---and he's gonna do his best to break YOUR China--

    -before the meeting here's what do

    You and your husband---Get yourselves before the throne of God and get yourselves full of His holiness---confess your sins before Almighty---get every "Log" out of your eyes---I mean, EVERY log!!! Empty yourselves of the world---not a trace of the world is to be left behind!!! Then fill yourselves with the sweet Holy Spirit-----how do you do that??? Simply begin by being obedient to what the Scripture says----receive the truth of Scripture and obey what it says---let Scripture speak to you!!

    You need to be so spiritually clean---you need to be so dressed in the "garments of Jesus"(see Colossians 3)---that when you and your husband appear in the room before that crowd of men----they(the men) will "melt" under the intense spiritual heat and light being given off from your husband and your self---they will feel "Piitful" in your presense!!!!

    There's a lot more all of us preachers could say to you----but suffice it to say this----you get yourselves spiritually clean---no "guile" found in your mouths---no bitterness hidden in your heart that can rise up and divistate the whole meeting----you get those logs out of your eyes---and you'll find the truth of Proverbs 28:1 to be a reality---"The wicked flee when no man pursueth: but the righteous are bold as a Lion."

    Bro. David
     
  11. LeBuick

    LeBuick New Member

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    For some reason, I thought this needed repeating. I will be praying for your situation but as the old saying goes, it takes two to tango. Don't just look for his faults.

    I'm sure as the year went on he got more and more comfortable with revealing more and more of his world. I'm also sure there was a time or point when the line was crossed. It could have been the first word out of his mouth or it could have been anywhere before now. What you did at that time or point is why you are where you are today. No matter what else becomes of this, that point and your reaction is a valuable lesson to you (or not, depending on your role).

    This really grabs me as one side or view of a very ugly, bad and dangerous mess.

    Not referring to the OP, it's incredible how women in their desire to get attention can have a man chasing their scent while seeming so innocent the entire time.
     
  12. LeBuick

    LeBuick New Member

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    I agree with some but I believe they should go in as they are. Unlike court, where each side presents what they did right and the other side did wrong, Church should be a place of confession. The whole truth and nothing but the truth. Right AND wrong.
     
  13. Phillipians121

    Phillipians121 New Member

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    OK we are back now. I talked with my husband and we decided since the head elder wife is a good friend of mine, we would talk to her and him and see if they plan and dealing with it. We will wait for a phone call or letter to see if they will take this seriously and if not we will know they never will.

    I think I mentioned before that my husband and I were never in counceling about our sexual relations in fact it was never brought up and isn't an area we had problems with. The pastor said if the only problem we had in our marriage was how to deal with our son and working outside together than we should be very thankful that was it.

    as far as the attention I would say I found it interesting that he would say such things and felt maybe since we (my husband and I) did have good relations I could help in that area understand his wife better. He said they had been to counceling but that it didn't work. I guess we felt sorry for the guy. We liked the church a lot and have friends there and felt if it went too far we would say something.

    I have never been put in this situation before with a pastor although a few years back i had a friend who's husband tried to have sex with me while I slept over on the couch. I told her that night what he tried to do she admitted he was a dog and had done this to other friends, she went as far as calling him a rapist. It wasn't long before they both tried to play a Clinton on me and turn it around to be my fault. (I was sleeping on the couch minding my own business, am NOT the flirting type, am actually very conservative and dress very modestly if not tomboyish) Anyway I left and when I tried to call her she suggested we never talk again she is still with that dog to this day all because he makes the money and they have two kids together.

    I am afraid this will happen again. The church will stand by him no matter what, because of his personality (which by the way is very charming) and so will his wife.
     
    #33 Phillipians121, Sep 24, 2006
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 24, 2006
  14. Phillipians121

    Phillipians121 New Member

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    For the women on this board who are suggesting I had something to do with it wait a minute.

    My husband didn't know a lot of what he said till after he came home one day with having lunch with him and telling me he spent the first 15 minutes talking about me and what he said about when they have sex his wife just lays there etc. That is when i shared some of the things he said to me that I could remember.

    We were in counceling with some serious issues we really wanted to work on and to us that was MUCH more important and we felt we were adult enough and strong enough and smart enough to not allow him to take advantage of me. My husband and I have a very strong relationship when it comes to TRUST neither one of would ever cheat on the other we tell each other everything no matter what. My husband has seen through the years, 16 that is...that men in the church or in general are attracted to me, it happens often, not to this extent (except that one husband of my friends) but it does and he knows it. But again we do trust each other and would never do anything to hurt our marriage or our children. So I guess what I am saying is we didn't think it was that big of a deal. Now I realize it may not have been for us but MAY be for someone else, now or down the road.

    It is hard to really judge someone unless you have gone through something like this. It's like saying how can a women be the victim of abuse or a child a victim of molestation (like his wife was) its called CONDITIONING and I believe those who do it know how to do it well.

    Consider this information on the subject of Pastors who abuses, read the part where it says it is never the womens fault but always the pastors becasue he is the one who SETS THE BOUNDRIES!
     
    #34 Phillipians121, Sep 24, 2006
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  15. Phillipians121

    Phillipians121 New Member

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    I do not know how to do the edit thing it isn't working
    so here is the link

    http://www.snapnetwork.org/psych_effects/soul_stealing_1.htm


    .................................................................................................................................

    OK I figured out the edit thing. here is part of the article

    Pastoral abuse--pastors engaging in sexual or romantic relationships with their parishioners or counsels--is much more prevalent than is commonly supposed. Estimates exceed the 10 percent figure Rutter ascribes to male psychotherapists. The abuse often is seen by parisioners and denominational executives as something else--a problem with alcohol, for example, or an emotional or relationship problem of the pastor or the parishioner, or a parish conflict. A single pastor relating inti- mately with a single parishioner is typically seen as an acceptable and time-honored practice. I argue, however, that such intimate relating is always an unethical boundary violation and that it is always the pastor's responsibly to maintain the appropriate boundaries. As with rape, a pastor's sexual or romantic involvement with a parishioner is not primarily a matter of sex or sexuality but of power and control. For this reason I call it pastoral sexual abuse rather than "pastor-parishioner relations" or, worse, a matter of private activity between consenting adults (which is almost always how the perpetrator will describe it). Even when adultery is involved, unfaithfullness is not the primary issue. I have found that ministers enter into romantic or sexual relationships with parishioners primarily because there is an imbalance of power between them at the outset and because they need to reinforce and heighten the intensity of that power dynamic. This is need is driven by internal forces and Is reinforced by societaly conditioned expectations that women will function as a nurturing, sexual servant class.

    WHY SHOULD these relationships be considered abuse? If both the minister and the parishioner are single (usually not the case), what's wrong with their havinging a relationship?................
     
    #35 Phillipians121, Sep 24, 2006
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 24, 2006
  16. Scarlett O.

    Scarlett O. Moderator
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    For this pastor to make comments to you about his unhappy sexual relationship with his wife is his fault.

    For the conversation to continue for a year is your fault.

     
  17. Phillipians121

    Phillipians121 New Member

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    I guess you are right in a way, but he started with the fact his wife had been abused by her father so my heart went out right then and there.

    Lets not forget the grooming process. I guess every abused women and child in your eyes is alos at fault right? Did you read the article...guess not.

    Does anyone else find it interesting that the men see my side and the abuse and the women do not? You'd think it would be the other way around. i wonder what that is all about?
     
    #37 Phillipians121, Sep 24, 2006
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  18. Phillipians121

    Phillipians121 New Member

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    While some of this is true in my case not all of it is. But here is what the article had to say about why women allow this to happen.

    No one type of woman is predisposed to victimization, however. In battered women's work, we know from experience that, contrary to prevailing myths and stereotypes, because of the way both women and men are socialized, any woman can be bartered. There are some learned susceptibilities that incline women to overlook, forgive and tolerate a pastor's sexual exploitation: women's socialization to be polite, nonconfrontational and accepting of men's behavior; their training and design to heal men's wounds (these men often present themselves to women as needing their special love and healing); the sense of submissiveness as a Christian value, especially ingrained in churchwomen; and having one's identity defined by society as primarily sexual.

    Particular situations add to a woman's vulnerabiiity, and the typical clergy perpetrator has an uncanny knack-some woman call it almost psychic in intensity-for zeroing in on women with these vulnerabilities. (partly because the intimate details are being shared with them in counseling): divorce, marital conflict or abuse; a husband who shows indifference or is frequently absent; a time of career confusion (his encouragement can be very important) decade passages (a powerful man can validate her attractiveness a new, young or problem child; a particular dedication to the church-she may be a lay minister, a member of church committees, a church employee or a seminary intern (this makes for additional potential loss if she confronts him or says no a personal history of family boundary violations--sexual. physical or psychological (this makes it harder for her to be clear i about what is inappropriate on his part power differentials such as a large age difference or his prominence in the community or denomination. Just about any life change that brings a woman in to talk with her pastor can be exploited as a gateway to satisfying his own pow er needs.

    Many woman neither stop nor report pastoral abuse, for several reasons. First, they usually feel responsible. But as Fortune has written, even if a woman initiated the sexual contact out of her own need or vulnerability, the pastor, like a therapist, has the responsibility to maintain the appropriate boundary. It was not her fault. Society blames women for attracting men--rape survivors usually feel that they are the ones on trial. "She must have done something to provoke it." This is further compounded by myths and stereotypes portraying male pastors as sitting ducks for the seductive maneuvers of female parishioners.

    Victim-blaming, however, can also take the more sophisticated guise of clinical diagnosis of the women. Such "diagnoses" can range from masochism and personality disorder to "co-dependency" to woman blaming once-removed: blaming the perpetrator's mother for poor bonding and causing narcissistic wounds. Such strategies divert attention from the only appropriate focus: holding the abuser accountable for the abuse.

    Second, the woman may fail initially to stop or report abuse because she feels validated by it on some level. It's flattering; it makes her feel special. At vulnerable times especially, this is compelling. Third, over time her self-esteem is seriously battered down by this relationship. fourth, once the sexual relationship is begun, the men frequently engage in confusing behavior. Women have consistently reported extreme highs and lows in the relationship and an on-again, off-again quality. Promises of marriage are proffered and then withdrawn. Fifth, she may be sworn, with a religious intensity, to secrecy "The parish would never understand our kind of love." In the wont cases this opens the door for multiple relationships with several parishioners at once.

    The woman may not want to hurt his career. She may love him and believe he needs her. She may feel that the good times make the bad times worth it--or that the good times represent the "real him." She may be unwilling to hurt his wife and family or the church's reputation.

    Once a certain determination to think about leaving has taken hold in her, however, fear keeps her stuck. She fears that no one will believe her when it's her word against his. She fears that she will be the one held respon- sible. She fears losing her church, community, her personal reputation and, if she is employed by the church, her professional reputation. She fears his retaliation-- sometimes within the sphere of personal and church life, but also sometimes in the form of physical violence, rape, or threats of violence.

    Most chilling, she fears his retaliation on the spiritual level. This aspect became increasingly clear to me in work with the survivors' group. It is difficult for others to comprehend the sheer terror that accompanies this form

    of abuse. But often because of the image of charismatic spiritual power that these men have asserted and fostered. the women's terror is akin to actually being cursed or damned. Sometimes this kind of threat is made explicit by the abuser. Its power is clearly demonic in nature and intensity-victims fear that their very souls will be stolen...........................
    http://www.snapnetwork.org/psych_effects/soul_stealing_2.htm
     
  19. LeBuick

    LeBuick New Member

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    Not all the men. I agree with Scarlett.
     
  20. gb93433

    gb93433 Active Member
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    There are six of us in the church we attend. If you were there that would make one more.
     
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