Today it was announced that Paige Patterson, President of the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, would be “demoted” from President to President Emeritus (though some would reasonably argue that this is simply an early retirement). This “demotion” came after immense public pressure that has been capably recorded in other places, such as Spiritual Sounding Board. I wrote about the problem behind the problem of Paige Patterson once, here.

The Washington Post article about Paige Patterson’s early retirement is here, and while others are commenting about various implications of this new turn of events, there’s a different part I want to focus on: how the students responded.

Most female students approached by The Post declined to be interviewed, but Sarah Reiter, 20, a sophomore music major from Cross Plains, Tex., said she was happy to talk. . . . Reiter said she is torn over what Patterson said. . . . Reiter, who said she hadn’t heard much discussion among her seminary friends about the controversy, said she was willing to give Patterson the benefit of the doubt. “I don’t feel like he’s promoting abuse,” she said. “He’s not saying, ‘Men, beat your wives so they know how to trust God.’ That’s not what he’s saying.”

Actually, I was horrified when I read this. My mouth dropped open.

I realize that Sarah is only twenty years old. And I realize that most schools and seminaries never mention abuse at all in their training, so certainly allowances can be made for her ignorance. When I was twenty I actually might have said something similar.

But here’s the thing . . .

With all the many speakers and writers who have “promoted abuse” in the sense that they tell victims of abuse . . .

and many, many other messages delivered relentlessly over years and years . . .

with all those many ways they have “promoted abuse” . . .

I have never heard any of these speakers or writers say “Men, beat your wives so they know how to trust God.”

If that is the only definition of “promoting abuse” that the younger generation of Christians understands, then heaven help us.

Another student, Sharayah Colter, who is pursuing a master’s degree in theological studies, came to the meeting — part of which was open before the closed session began — to show support for Patterson. . . . “I think people have mischaracterized him and misconstrued what he has said in the past,” Colter said. “And he’s clarified comments. So just like anybody likes to be taken at their word when they clarify what they really mean, I take him at his word when he explains what he means.” “I’m just very grateful for Dr. Patterson,” she added. “He would be one of my faith heroes, I would say.”

I certainly understand learning from someone, even admiring someone, and then finding out that that someone has sinned in egregious ways. I have found out horror-inducing information about more men I respected than I can even bear to think about right now. Not only what they have said, but what they have actually done, according to women who have spoken elsewhere and also women who have spoken with me but are not yet ready to tell their stories publicly.

I understand that these SWBTS students are young and I am old, and this is part of what makes the difference, but I pray that the younger generation of evangelicals will hear: The fact that I have learned from these men and even admired them does not mean I will turn a blind eye to what is actually happening.

These are a few things that cannot be “clarified.” Paige Patterson has . . .

  • taught that getting physically pummelled in an abusive marriage is an excellent thing to do if it means the abuser will walk the aisle,
  • taught that young beautiful single women are to be objectified as sex objects and old married women are to be caricatured as meddlesome biddies,
  • rescinded a job offer to a qualified candidate because he found out that his wife had been divorced out of an abusive marriage,
  • Claimed that he has “always” reported abuse, eighteen years after telling the story above in which he did not report abuse,

and in my mind, most egregious,

  • refused to believe twenty-five women who accused a rising-star pastor of rape, because none of them brought evidence other than their own testimony, obviously again giving the lie to his statement that he has “always” reported abuse.

Going to school on a college campus does in some ways put a student in a bubble, insulated to the larger picture. Often, because they have a very close view of a person or a situation, they believe they have the whole view. I first saw this in my involvement with the Bob Jones University investigation of dealing with sexual abuse allegations. Most students who were interviewed on the campus in those days couldn’t for the life of them figure out what the big deal was. (These were not the students who had been counseled there for their sexual abuse.) The micro-focused view these students had of the school, their classes, teachers, activities, and friends, prevented them from seeing the larger events that were taking place, and most of them dismissed the claims of those of us who were listening to those who had been abused there.

The general attitude seemed to be, “Everything’s fine for me, and that means everything’s fine.”

As Christians, as those who are called to love others, this cannot be our stance. We need to listen to those who have been harmed without accusing them of gossip or bitterness. We need to care for them, and stand with the oppressed against the oppressors. I trust that in spite of the ignorance of some, we are seeing a generation rising up of those who care.

 

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Go here to download your free Guide, How to Enjoy the Bible Again (when you’re ready) After Spiritual Abuse (without feeling guilty or getting triggered out of your mind). You’ll receive access to both print and audio versions of the Guide (audio read by me). I’m praying it will be helpful.

 

 

 

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