html hit counter Tag Archive for forced-out-of-church at Letters From Leavers

Tag Archive for 'forced-out-of-church'

Unrequited love

Dear my former church

I dearly wish you had been everything you said you were. I wih you had been a community.  I wish you had been a place genuinely committed to people’s healing, a place where people could ask questions, a place were people honoured commitments, a place where people extended care.

I loved you so much and I gave you my time, my heart, my life.  And you go on, unaffected by my life, unaffected by the lives of many like me who were spat out, confused, heartbroken and bewildered.  Those of us who loved you so much but were never loved back because we didn’t somehow fit the mould - whatever that mould was.

It wasn’t just that I was on your staff team but unlike other staff members you weren’t interested in my development and that as soon as the leadership changed you made me redundant without taking time to get to know who I was, what I could do, what I was called to, what I dreamed of.

Nor was it just that the people in the church who promised they would not abandon and hurt me as others had done, that they were committed to me no matter what didn’t hold true to their words, didn’t care, had better things to do, better people to spend time with.

Although those things hurt, it was the way you brushed aside my questions and confusion and hurt that killed me the most - not just because it happened to me but because it could happen to so many others like me.  Because you think everything that happened is purely down to me being just generally messed up, therefore there is nothing to learn from this experience for you.

When I said I wasn’t sure what the gospel was, when I didn’t see the things in the Bible reflected in my life, when I never felt peace or joy or any of that stuff, when everything God said to me the opposite happened, when my head and heart were so messed up by the failure of God’s word to come to fruition, when I saw no fulfillment on his promises or people’s promises, when I found no healing despite so much prayer ministry, when I asked for help because worship services always made me feel evil and because every Christian I tried to befriend ignored me no matter what I tried, when I was told (and was convinced myself) there were demons in me and most of all when I was devastated to the point of self-harming, panicking and attempting suicide because I had no love, no support and no answers, you told me everything that happened was my fault (with no explanation of why), you shouted at me for being upset and you told me to get over myself.

When I was most in need of people to lament for me, to call out to God for me, to sit in the sackcloth and ashes, you told me there was nothing that could be done for me and cut me off.

 What will you do to the next depressed person, the drug addict, the prostitute, the next lonely person, the bereaved, the outcast?   You say you want people like this in your church - but you don’t.  Only the sorted, the popular, the straightforward fit in.  the messy are only allowed if they get unmessy very quickly.  There is no room for questions, no room for doubt and very little love for anyone who isn’t perfect.

I believed you, I believed God and I took the most risks I have ever taken in my life in loving, trusting and hoping him and you.

After nine years in your church I left in a worse mess than when I joined (no mean feat), and I’m not sure I will ever join a church again, other than some charade attendance to please my family who would emotionally blackmail and nag me to death if I ever dared to not be a good Christian.  In my own heart though, I would no longer call myself a Christian, or at least I would say I was an agnostic Christian although I still try to live by some Christian principles, and I would still love it to be true.

I don’t think I will ever understand what happened - and until I do I will never dare take the same risks of loving, believing or trusting again.

Before I joined your church I was scared to hope, to love, to trust, to believe.  You made me drop my guard and then beat me to death when I was most vulnerable.  I loved you so much, but it was an abusive relationship.  You made out I was the abusive one because I wasn’t perfect, because I wasn’t straightforward, because I got upset, I questioned, I expected returns on the things I was promised.  All I did was believe and trust and obey - and have the audactity to hurt and to question when these things didn’t work.

I just wish you’d wanted me to be a part of you as much as I wanted to be. 

I know what I believed God said to me, and so many of you confirmed those things.  Just because you then randomly decided to do the opposite to what God was saying and told me I needed to go with your decisions because they must be from God even though you’d had no ‘words’ or anything doesn’t mean what you did was of Him.  I may have heard him wrong, but if that is possible, it is also possible your words and decisions were wrong, especially as many of them were conflicting and contradictory.  I wish someone had cared enough to at least understand the confusion and sit with me through it.  The one person I trusted most even said they had to leave me because they were getting confused too and couldn’t handle it.

I know you would tell me the way I am living (by not going to church etc) is wrong, but no more wrong than the things you said or did.  I don’t know any more if there is a right, if there is a God.  If there was, why didn’t he intervene? 

Life is not the way your preach it to be (become a Christian, do everything God’s way, do everything you are told, and your life will be amazing) and until you accept it, your large front door and large back door will always remain.

Technorati , , , , , , , ,
Email this LFL Content to a Friend

Real Forgiveness

We were members of the “largest Pentecostal denomination in the world” for over ten years now. My husband served on the board and led major events.

We loved the Lord (still do), but we still had struggles.

In Jan 2006, my husband’s struggle with a personal sin came to the surface.

My husband repented and confessed to our pastor in April 2006. We had been seeing a Christian counselor since Jan.
The pastor told him to step down from everything.

After a year of restoration - a bible study and prayer time with the pastor, he was told he was restored. But we weren’t treated like there was restoration.

We felt ostracized, not helped and supported.
I told my pastor many times that I was hurting and I didn’t feel that restoration had taken place.

We tried to get involved and found that it was a “our team” vs “your team” mentality. We weren’t ONE as we used to be. No unity. No one stood with us, no one helped us.

People who were our friends before, suddenly disappeared.

Over the next year, we ran into or became friends with many others who had left our church. We didn’t look for them. We were like magnets for the hurting. To this day they are not in a church they call home.

We got frustrated and things came to a head when I lost my last ministry I had been a part of for about 8 years. It was a thank you, but we don’t need you email.

I was devastated and called/emailed my pastor.
He never responded.

The next day I went to the church and he was there. He wanted to talk in the sanctuary, while his wife set up for prayer time.

I asked him if he got my email and message. He said yes, and he prayed and God told him not to respond.

My husband had just started going back to his Bible study. He noticed everytime we try to take a step forward, we’re slammed 2 back.

Then he said, as my friend and not my pastor, “If I were you, I’d consider going to another church, even another denomination.”

This blew my mind and I yelled, “Are you not my shepherd, am I not your lamb, don’t you love or care for us?”

We talked about forgiveness and he admitted he’s just a man and cannot forget what my husband did. He also thought my husband should have repented more in front of him, broke down and cried during one of their sessions.

He said it more than once. I left broken hearted.

I apologized and repented for yelling a few days later by email.

2 weeks later we received a certified letter from the elder board, being called into a window at their next meeting.

I think our story is a sad one. What effected my family, is happening to Christian families everyday.

Why can’t we confess and be real? Why can’t we get real forgiveness and healing?

Why is the end result this?

I have 3 young adult children that grew up in our church.
Now, we are “homeless”.

I don’t recommend confessing personal sin to your pastor unless you are willing to lose it all.

Technorati , , , ,
Email this LFL Content to a Friend