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Ricci Bickle's avatar

These are deep questions to be wrestled with. What a great blog to write because it allows your audience to process together. It helps me to gain clarity as I grapple through my thoughts and fight to find words.

I, like you, have found meaning and clarity in the struggle… but it does ebb and flow. Some days, it is much easier than others to find it, but with time, it becomes clearer.

Steven, I am restating your definitions here as I refer back to them.

Restitution - repayment or compensation for harm done.

Restoration - making something whole again or reinstating what was lost.

First - Let's address restitution. I think restitution is only possible if the foundation of the church/community is established in such a way that it seeks to love, honor, and protect its body of believers. There must be proper checks and balances for accountability in place. I’m not one to pretend to know what that looks like, but I am aware that there are some church bodies fighting to establish just this! I believe I’ve heard Michael Miller with Reclamation Church in Denver is working to construct something of the sort. The very foundation of the church must have a plan in place to handle situations of clergy spritual abuse and sexual abuse. Let's face it, without safeguards in place those pastors/leaders are human and they are prone to sin, just as we all are. Power and influence can create a sense of invincibility with little, to no accountability, resulting in abusive behaviors. I think without a foundation already set, finding restitution within the church/community that has caused the harm, is very unlikely to happen. They are neither prepared nor educated on how to handle such situations.

As I reflect on my experience at IHOPKC I can’t help but replay the countless scenarios that could have had the potential of such different outcomes. Restitution, to me, looks like humility. Restitution could have been possible if the cries of injustice were met with a genuine response of empathy and concern. A humble response could have brought so much safety, healing, and depth of relationship within our community. To be heard, validated, and yes, even protected, would have provided my heart, and the hearts of others, with much-needed comfort as well as a token of trust in the leadership. In the beginning for me, it wasn’t even a matter of who was right or wrong. It was more about being heard, validated, and protected when harm was being committed. As things within the IHOP community intensified due to the amount of allegations coming forward against Mike, if leadership had come together and addressed a hurting community with something like the following:

“You know, we have failed so miserably in protecting and hearing the cries of those who were hurting and abused. Our leadership has failed, would you forgive us? Would you help us make this a safe place?” Add in your own words here. You get the picture. What needed to be said from leadership was something that stated empathy, validation, and ownership with a desire to make it right.

Despite things having been handled so poorly in the beginning, words like this, or something along these lines could have helped bring the much-needed healing my soul was longing for. This is what I had HOPED for but sadly this has not been IHOPKC’s response. (I want to clarify when I say IHOPKC I also am referring to Forerunner Church as they are one and the same.) This has not even been the response of individual leaders within the body, except for those who have left the church because of their convictions. The lack of accountability and ownership within our IHOP community by the leadership reflects the very foundation it was built on. It signals a red flag waving that says this church/community is unable to move forward healthily. For churches/communities seeking to have proper checks, balances, and accountability in place, I also think there should be an allocation of finances to provide professional counseling to help bring restoration to those who have been harmed.

Restoration: I love this word and the hope it embodies! Restoration is a process and it takes time. When I am talking about restoration, I am not talking about the restoration of the perpetrator or abuser but rather of the restoration of the one harmed. This isn’t a one-and-done thing, it's a process. In my opinion, how a church/community responds to restitution can profoundly impact the individual's restoration process. When good care is provided the healing can occur more quickly. If a church/community is unhealthy - much like that of IHOPCK, then finding the path to restoration can be much more difficult.

My restitution came through a good therapist (more than one I might add!) and supportive friends and family providing me the opportunity to heal while restoring my heart and soul. God, in his gentleness, has somehow walked me through the fire. The restoration has been, and will continue to be, a slow process that has come by way of countless different avenues, because for me, the church doesn’t feel safe right now and that’s OK.

This experience has taught me so much. I am not ready to go back to church but there will be a time when I am, and when I do, I will be all the wiser in asking questions regarding church governance and transparency. I, like you Stephen, will want to know about policies in place that deal with clergy sexual abuse and spiritual abuse. I don’t believe all churches are bad or all pastors are evil predators who are out for their own gain. I am not cynical, bitter, or unforgiving. I am also not as naive as I once was to believe that pastors or leaders are all good and they have my wellbeing in mind as they lead.

As difficult and painful as this whole experience has been, I can honestly say I have become a better version of myself. It has been a brutally steep learning curve. I don’t see my mistakes and failures as setbacks but rather as opportunities to learn and grow from them. My faith and my love for God have become much more rooted and grounded because amid all the “ICK” I have continued to see his faithfulness to me and my children. He has had my back even when I couldn’t see it. I am filled with more hope for the future than I ever was before. All of our journeys will look different and that’s OK. We need to be kind and patient with ourselves and trust that God will lead us in our healing because he is good and he cares.

I sign off with this….he truly is giving me beauty for ashes and for this I am grateful!

Isaiah 61:3 “To all who mourn I will give a crown of beauty for ashes, a joyous blessing instead of mourning, and praise instead of despair.”

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David C. McGuire - Prophet's avatar

Great to see someone who shares my struggle in going back to church. Our struggles may differ on this matter, but I believe they match up. I'm struggling to go back to church because every single church we've gone to in the past decade or so has been pastor-centric. I say this meaning the pastors are so disconnected from the congregation and the churches being just money machines. Along with mucho Charismatic abuse (I say this as a Charismatic). I'll leave it at that for now and hope to see others who can provide answers.

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