Monday, May 15, 2023

God is still good, even when his people aren't

     Church hurt is real and it can cause a lot of damage. Church is supposed to be the place where we are safe, the place where we learn to be our full selves, the place where we find hope in a good, good Savior. But the church is also made up of humans and humans are messy and they make mistakes and humans hurt each other. Unfortunately, the hurt from messy and sinful humans can make the church no longer a safe place, a place where you never feel like yourself, a place where you forget the hope of the Savior. But I am here to tell you, that even when God's people are messy and sinful, even when that church is no longer safe, our God, HE is still good.

     I have spent a lot of time over the past few years working through and naming the hurts that were done to me at our last church. I have shared my side of the story, the part that very few knew because my voice was silenced. I have written about my hurt, I have shared with close friends about my hurt, I have done artwork about my hurt, I have cried about my hurt, and now I am working on letting it go. So I'm doing a little something different, I'm going to list out all the ways that God has shown me he is GOOD and the ways that God has reminded me that he hurts with me and he has not once left me in all of this. I am going to tell you about my good, good Savior and the evidences of his grace. 
    First and foremost, my husband is evidence of God's goodness and grace. That man took a beating at our old church and he fought so hard for me. He bore the brunt of the accusations and the interogations and never once made me feel like it was my fault. He has held me when I've cried, he has listened when I have vented or had to process out loud, he has read every single blog I've written to make sure I wasn't mis-remembering, and he has been by my side the whole time. Even when he was feeling the tug to go back into vocational ministry, he was gentle in telling me and re-assured me over and over again that he would not do anything until we were BOTH ready. He has supported me while I have gone to therapy and he has loved me so well. And he never once told me I was wrong, in fact, he told me that I was right to fight and to speak out, and that meant so much. 

   God has given me amazing friends. Friends who got the story as it was unfolding, friends who listened to me process, friends who have stood by me when I felt so isolated and alone at my old church. These friends helped get me through a really dark time and they are still holding tight to me today. I mean it when I say that my tribe is a lifeline for me. They have broke through the walls and pulled me to safety more times than I can count.
     My family has supported Aaron and me every step of the way, even when they didn't hold to our same convictions. That is really powerful. My family was able to see past the our difference in convictions to see the sin being done against us and they stood by us the whole way. They were also a safe haven for us that first weekend after leaving our old church - a place to be away from the chaos. For that I am forever grateful. 
     We may have left our old church, but by God's grace we did not leave THE church. Years before we entered the doors of our old church we were members at Sojourn. Aaron and I both were interns at various points and we served in many capacities during our time there. One of the elders that Aaron had been an intern for was now the main teaching pastor at our local Sojourn campus, so we knew that was were we would move our membership. And I cannot express enough how valuable and precious our time there has been. Our church is a special place, a place where so many of the members are healing together. We are a church for the broken and hurting and it is beautiful. We have incredible leadership that has stepped into our mess and loved us through it all. And I cannot tell you how important it has been for me personally to have multiple male leaders tell me that they are sorry for what happened to me, that what was done to me was wrong, and that my voice and presence not only matter, but are desired. What a powerful thing! They have given me the courage and weirdly the permission (I know now I didn't need it, but it was still important in the moment) to process my pain, name my hurts, and get help.
     I have been in therapy for almost a year now. I knew that if I was ever going to be able to step back into the role of pastor's wife, that I would need to work on my mental health and develop strategies to cope with the hard and mess that comes with doing ministry. I have spent time processing childhood trauma and unpacking the ways that I was seeing God through the wrong lens and every day I am little bit stronger. God created our brains to be able to heal and because of this therapy has been a wonderful experience for me.
     It took a long time, but I am able to see that God did not make me wrong and it is okay if I take up space. My voice is valuable and I have something to offer and I am more than someone's wife and mother. I am my own person and that is okay. God made me uniquiely me and I do not have to fit some manufactured mold. God gave me the Holy Spirit too and I am allowed to hold to my own convictions and opinions. I have been reminded that God is big enough for my doubts and my questions and my hurts.   
 There are some who want everything to be black or white, right or wrong, but life isn't like that - life is full of gray and nuance. But in the gray and the nuance and yes, even the mess, there is beauty. The ability to see God's goodness through the mess. The ability hold the tension of a good God whose people are sometimes not. The grace and mercy to hold tight to God when it feels like there is nothing else left. God never left me and I'm working to live more and more in that truth every day.
     So yes the church and God's people caused me a great deal of hurt because people are sinful and messy. In any relationship, be it between Christians or non-Christians, someone will get hurt, be it big or small. That's the risk of being vulnerable with another human. But God is not human, he is, simply put, God, the Great I AM, and God is always good, even when his people are not.
     





*All artwork featured was painted by me over the past year.*

Saturday, May 13, 2023

So what happened in 2020?

      I have a bad habit of being really passionate about a thing, doing that thing everyday, then once the buzz or adrenaline wear off or life simply gets busy, I step away and then forget what I was so passionate about. That's why you will see literal years go by between blog posts. I forget until I remember.

     I also avoided the blog because I knew it was time - time to share what happened at our old church in 2020 - time to lay it all there - share my side of the story - explain why we made the choice to step down from ministry and leave that church. But every time I sat down to write, I just couldn't find the words. It was still so fresh and it still hurt so much and still made me so angry, that I would just stare at the screen, not able to put the words on paper.

     But I think it's time - so I'm going to start writing and see where it goes. 

     I think we can all agree that 2020 was the worst. We faced a global pandemic that put us on lockdown and we were isolated, and the busyness of life that normally kept us distracted was gone, so we were left to see things as they really were. I was in the camp of at first thinking this Covid thing was being blown out of portion until I realized the danger it posed to my youngest daughter - the daughter who had pulmonary hypertension and chronic lung disease and was in the group of people most at danger of dying from Covid. My daughter was in that small percentage of people that the rest of us were so desparately trying to protect. So in March, when lockdown went into effect, I stayed home with Ellie. We didn't go to church, we didn't go into the grocery store, we didn't do therapy, everything was done via video chats and live streams. Eventually I started keeping the big kids home as well so as not to risk them being exposed and then passing it along to their baby sister. So in our final months at our church, I only stepped in the building a handful of times, but watched the live stream every Sunday morning.

    But Covid wasn't the only hard part of 2020. 2020 was also the year that we watched George Floyd be killed at the hands of police. 2020 was the year that learned of the murder of Ahmaud Arbery at the hands of 3 white men who literally chased him down in their vehicles because they decided he looked like someone who might have broken into a construction site. 2020 was the year that Breonna Taylor was murdered in her home in the middle of the night after LMPD issued a no knock warrant that we later found was retrived under false information. 2020 was the year that we watched protests happen all across the nation calling for change, for the end to systemic racism in our judicial system. And I was a vocal advocate, using my voice and privilege to call out the injustice I was seeing, to declare the truth that "Black Lives Matter". 

    I remember the weekend after George Floyd was murdered I looked at my husband, who was the worship leader at our church, and I asked him, "what are you going to say on Sunday? I don't think you can remain silent on this issue." I had this overwhelming feeling that being silent was being complicit in what was happening and that to love God and to love his image bearers meant speaking - pointing out the injustice, fighting for change, and opening our mouths to speak. We could not remain silent anymore.

     So I started posting on social media. A lot. I was posting pretty much every day, sometimes multiple times a day. And I was using the hashtag, #BlackLivesMatter and #BLM, not because I supported the organization (because I didn't and still don't), but because as I continued to watch black bodies be murder I couldn't help but see the black people in my life. My nephew, who has autism - I couldn't help but think of how easiliy Elijah McClain could have been my nephew. My brother-in-law, who travels all over the country as a musician - I couldn't help but think that Ahmaud Arbery could easily have been him. My neighbors two houses down, who also happen to be the parents of a friend - I couldn't help but think of how easily the wife could have been Breonna Taylor. And the list goes on and on. I knew the stories, I knew the systemic racism, the implicit bias that was pointed at them, and I knew that their beautiful black lives mattered. So I used the hashtag and I made the posts.   


Then my son and I attended two protests. The first was in Louisville with other families. We made signs and we stood on a busy street in a predominately white part of town and shouted the worth of black lives. We stood in solidarity with our black brothers and sisters saying, we see you, we see what is happening, and we will not stand for it anymore. I think my favorite memory from that day was watching the faces of the black people driving by, the smiles of being seen. And watching my son soak it all in and having hard conversations about what we were trying to do. We also attended a protest in New Albany where we wrote the names of those killed by police on the sidewalks and kneeled on the hot sidewalk for 8 1/2 minutes in silence. We were putting our privilege where our mouth was. And this was all shared on social media.

     Not long after my son and I attended the protests, Aaron was called into a meeting with our interim pastor and the pastoral intern (you may remember him from earlier blog posts as the Sunday School teacher who dismissed me and treated women poorly). As Aaron sat down, this man dropped a STACK of papers on the desk. He had actually printed off every post I had made over the prior months and wanted Aaron to explain them. He wanted Aaron to make account for the things I had said - he wanted to know why Aaron couldn't control his woman. Aaron understandably got very upset and defended me and was less than pleased when he came home that afternoon to relay what had happened. And he did encourage me to make sure that all that I was saying was rooted in Scripture.

     So I kept posting, but I tried to make sure I was very clear that I was upset because of my love for

Jesus. I believe that we are all image bearers of God and that as such deserve dignity and protection. I believe what Scripture says in Micah 6:8 "He has told you, O man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?" [ESV]. I believe what it is says in Ecclesiastes 3: 1 and 7, that "For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven...a time to tear, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak;" [ESV]. I hold that our call is that of Isaiah 1:17 "learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, plead the widow's cause." [ESV]. And that we are to do as it says in Proverbs 31:8-9 (which by the way is the same scripture we love to quote on Mother's Day as to the epitome of a Godly woman) "Open your mouth for the mute, for the rights of all who are destitute. Open your mouth, judge righteously, defend the rights of the poor and the needy." [ESV]. I was outspoken BECAUSE of my love for Jesus, not in contradiction to it. While I do believe that the gospel is ultimately what everyone needs - to see their need for Jesus and his salvation - I also believe that you can't feed empty bellies Jesus and that sometimes people don't need to be given a pamphlet, but instead need your presence beside them in the fight.

     Then another meeting was called, this time with a church member who also raised conerns that because I was using a hashtag that I was now a full supporter of an organization and that I was now an appostate who had lost my salvation. And I should mention these concerns were not brought to me, the person doing the posting and using the hashtag, no the concerns were brought to Aaron and he was once again implicitly told to go get control of his woman. I can't remember, but I think there was a third meeting between Aaron, the interim pastor and the pastoral intern and finally it was decided that Aaron would sit down with the personnel committee and the deacons to answer questions and give defense for the things I was saying.

     I still remember the day that Aaron came home and told me that because of everything, our interim pastor had decided to not move forward with Aaron's ordination. That was the first real gut punch of all of this. While Aaron was on staff at the church and was leading worship every Sunday and preaching in a regular rotation, he has not yet been ordained as a pastor. But he had gone through all the steps, he had been vetted, he had sat before a counsel of other pastors for hours and answered questions about doctrine and his theology and at the end of it all, these men had recommended him to be ordained as a pastor. Then because I had the audacity to speak out about injustice, one man decided to withhold that from Aaron and that hurt so much. Not long after, Aaron told me that we were being asked not to make anymore social media posts until after the meeting with the deacons and personnel committee. So we complied and I stopped posting.

     In the days leading up to the meeting, Aaron was provided a list of questions that would most likely be asked so that he could have some time to think and prepare. Aaron then offered, more than once to arrange childcare so that I could attend as well. It seemed only appropriate that I be a part of the conversation since it was my words that had caused all this. And he was told, more than once that it was not necessary for me to be there. So Aaron went into a room and spent hours being questioned and having to make an account and defend me. And he walked out of the meeting feeling defeated and less than hopeful about our future at the church.

     The day before we were to leave on our annual vacation, Aaron had a meeting with our interim pastor, where he was presented with the "first steps" that would need to be taken to move foward with reconciling and staying in leadership at the church. In a gist, we were to apologize for what we said and any discomfort or offense it may have caused, I was to remove all of my posts involving "black lives matter", all hashtags, and any future posts would need to be run past the interim pastor to make sure they were "appropriate". We were told that our convictions were not wrong or unbiblical and in fact Aaron had made a strong biblical argument for them, and that while we could still hold to those convictions, we would need to remain silent about them in public. There may have been more, but this is what I remember. Aaron almost drove up to the church the next morning before we left town to turn in his resignation, but ultimately we decided to take the week to pray and sit on everything before we made any decisions. Then when we returned home Aaron submitted is resignation and agreed to stay on for the next 30 days. 

     This was such a hard decision, but ultimately, we felt it was best for the church as a whole. You see our church had already been through so much, including a really nasty split that had left only a handful of families. We could stay and fight and most likely we would win, but at what cost? How many people would be caught in the cross fire and hurt? For the sake of the unity of the body, we were going to step down and the public reason would be because of a difference of conscience, but not of any fault or any disqualification. We had asked all involved to honor our wishes to not give specifics to the congregation, again because we believed unity in the body was the most important thing in this situation. And then a week after Aaron's resignation was annouced, the interim pastor got up on Sunday morning and told everyone that it was because of some social media posts and that was the final nail in the coffin for me. I knew that we were done at that church and would never be back.

     It's been almost 3 years and I still get angry about it. I am mostly angry for how little I was valued in the whole situation. Not once in MONTHS of concerns did anyone ever speak directly to me or ask me what I meant. Assumptions and judgments were made about me without ever once asking me for clarification. I was deemed a problem for Aaron to deal with and as such no one needed to actually speak to me. And that was the worst part. It was MY words, MY posts, MY actions that were cause for concern, but not once was I allowed to speak in my own defense. I was a woman under the headship of my husband and therefore my status was less than. I was taking up too much space and this was a way to silence me. And it worked, I haven't been the same since.