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Congregations and clergy
need to stop hiding their heads in the sand and
pretending domestic violence isn’t happening in their
communities.
This month (October) cities, schools and faith-based
groups across the USA are drawing attention to domestic
violence, which some are calling a pandemic.
Violence in the home affects millions of women and
children, including those in the church, yet some say
the pulpits remain silent on the issue.
Congregations and clergy need to stop hiding their heads
in the sand and pretending domestic violence isn’t
happening in their communities, said the Rev. Mary Lou
Adame, chair of the United Methodist Desert Southwest
Conference’s Commission on the Status & Role of Women.
The United Methodist Church confessed that it too has
done little to raise awareness in its churches and has
named domestic violence as a priority issue of the
church.
In recent years, the General Board of Church and Society
of The United Methodist Church has conducted one-day
seminars titled “Domestic Violence, A Holy Response” to
educate local churches and leaders on the issue and
equip them with how to respond to people in abusive
relationships.
According to the Methodist Church’s GBCS, one in three
women will experience some level of violence in their
lives – half of them from intimate partners. Three in
ten women murdered in the United States are killed by
their husbands, ex-husbands or boyfriends.
GBCS acknowledges, however, that Christian women often
feel compelled to stay in abusive relationships in
obedience to Scripture stating “submit” to their
husbands. And tragically, many pastors cite the biblical
passages when counseling women.
According to a survey featured in What Women Wish
Pastors Knew by Denise George, 26 percent of pastors
said they would counsel women who came to them for help
with domestic violence to continue to “submit” to her
husband, no matter what. A quarter of the nearly 6,000
pastors surveyed told wives the abuse was their own
fault-for failing to submit in the first place.
Moreover, half said women should be willing to “tolerate
some level of violence” because it is better than
divorce.
Jocelyn Andersen, author of Woman Submit! Christians &
Domestic Violence was formerly in an abusive
relationship herself. She initially stayed in the
marriage out of fear and not wanting to “commit a sin”
by divorcing her husband.
“I was following the counsel of respected leaders in the
evangelical community who counsel against divorce – even
in the case of wife-beating – so, I continued to hope
and pray for my marriage and seek solutions other than
divorce,” she said.
In her book, released in 2007, Andersen calls into
account evangelical Christian leaders who have
“tragically let down the battered wives within our
congregations.”
“Careless counsel coming from countless pulpits and from
leaders with incredible influence (due to television,
radio, internet and best-selling books) has ruined and
cost the lives of far too many women. This must stop,”
she asserted.
Some churches have already begun to make changes. The
United Methodist Church in 2004 adopted a resolution
challenging the church to listen to the stories of
victims and survivors and to seek information that will
lead to wiser and more effective ways of minister with
persons who experience abuse.
“The church must be a refuge for people who are hurting,
and it is an entirely appropriate place for these issues
to be addressed,” the resolution states. Domestic
Violence Awareness Month is observed annually in
October.
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