The Curious Incident of Clarity in the Church: A (Limited) Compendium of Church Abuse Cases

 

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Wolves, we’re coming for you.

I began writing this post some months ago, while I was in Germany. I drafted much of the material while travelling, and then became immersed in and distracted by other projects. One of the reasons I was slow to complete and publish this essay is that it is in the main a signpost, directing the reader to more thorough treatments of the several subtopics: a group of major scandals in American Evangelicalism. In drawing all of these threads together, I don’t consider my original contributions ground-breaking; in fact, probably none of them is particularly unique, especially relative to the writers and resources to whom and which I point, these others who have done the leg work and cogitating about these various symptoms of spiritual disease that has descended upon the church in America.

What motivated me to complete it was the recent posting of a presentation by Julie Roys on her blog, which I found inspiring and exhortatory. I am not aware of similar compilations of material for comparison to what I present here, but Julie herself mentioned a handful of major scandals, including some on which she has not written at length on her blog. This leads me to believe that most, like Julie Roys, who have of necessity focused on exposing the truth in one set of circumstances, are nevertheless fully aware and keep themselves appraised of the developments in several other cases. So, it is likely that there are such compilations of references and links elsewhere. Anyone happy to do so may post links to such resources in the comments.

While it is sad to think of ‘getting the scandals all together in one place’ (or at least, as many as I know about), I do hope treating them however briefly and no doubt inadequately, will prove useful to someone somewhere. And of course, considering disparate crimes and experiences in tandem may help us better to understand shared or unshared aspects of the cases, provoking deeper analysis of spiritual and practical processes by which all these evils have taken place, and Lord-willing, more thorough repentance, accountability, resolution, and even revival. That’s what we need—to echo Julie Roys’ overarching point, the exposing of so much corruption throughout the Evangelical Industrial Complex (I believe a term originating with Carl Trueman), in so many of its different camps, is a ‘move of God to purify His church’.  We need to know the truth to know what kind of trouble we’re in, to know how to pray and what appropriate remedial action to take (and what discipline to do).

Some commentary on the cases will be more thorough than others. This is not meant to be an indication of what I think of their relative scale of importance: it is due simply to my own varying levels of knowledge (and ignorance) and to my lack of time in being able to spend the same amount of time on each case. The misconduct in each I find personally disgusting, but I will not say this every time it occurs to me.

In the beginning, the trigger for beginning to accumulate ‘panels’ for the signpost was the lack of clarity characterizing the discussion, self-representation and communication by the respective leadership and allies in even those cans of misdeeds and cover-ups which had already had their lids blown off. The truth was/is proven and publicly available, and yet the spin and desperate attempts to deflect and redirect onlookers’ attention, and the lack of transparency and even visibility (where’s Bill?) on the part of leadership has continued to create and encourage confusion. When repentance and restoration on such a massive scale is required, obfuscation, evasion and deliberately muddled narratives cannot be of God.

What I will say at the outset is that I have discovered a common thread between scandal on the small scale—like that at Aetna CRC—and the large: a twin lack of clarity and curiosity. People, usually the culprits, insist on half-truths, vague and even bizarre abstractions when it comes to responsibility and culpability, and urge all others to direct their attention elsewhere (e.g., ‘we just need to move forward’) without ever having defined and addressed problems or given a thorough and accurate account of what has happened. Others, including what we might call ministry allies and many in the respective congregations, sometimes rising to the level of aiding and abetting, are, for perhaps many reasons, totally disinterested in burning away the fog by seeking and even pushing for the truth. Even if they suspect they’re being lied to or at least aren’t getting the whole story, it is easier to accept what they’re given and to do what they’re told. Neither of these characteristics is a virtue.

So, I have titled this essay, ‘The Curious Incident of Clarity in the Church’, taken from a conversation in The Adventure of Silver Blaze:

“Is there any point to which you would wish to draw my attention?” [asked Colonel Ross.]

“To the curious incident of the dog in the nighttime.”

“The dog did nothing in the night-time.”

“That was the curious incident,” remarked Sherlock Holmes.

*

This is meant to be (only a partial) annotated blogography of recent major abuse scandals in American Evangelicalism, some of the annotations being summaries of the cases as I understand them, and some of them being my responses to these revelations. I readily admit that some of my responses are speculative, and are not to be attributed to the sources to whom/which I link.

Before we begin properly, I will introduce a handful of category-pairs and dichotomies, which may provide us some concepts ‘to think with’, as they say in academia:

1. Origins and Symptoms.

2. Small scale (Aetna) vs large scale corruption.

3. Hard Hearts vs. Regeneration (on regeneration, listen to this conversation between Janet Mefferd & Al Baker)

4. Love of Truth vs. Zeitgeist.

5. The twin lacks of clarity and curiosity: in their place are confusion and indifference (CASUAL INDIFFERENCE). Is there a difference between uninterest and disinterest? Is apathy dangerous? Is it sinful?

6. Consider Ignorance and Want beneath the skirts of the Ghost of Christmas Present in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol.

7. Systemic unfitness and incompetence.

One final note before we begin: This conversation will not cover what has gone on in the Roman Catholic Church, a story in itself! See Rod Dreher’s blog for commentary on recent exposure of scandal in the RCC, with alleged cover-ups aided by Pope Francis himself.

*

One glance at the home page of any news site reveals the ghastly state of the sinful world we live in: disaster, hypocrisy, intrigue, plague, violence, despair. Sadly, a sprinkling of information from the past few years’ news on some of the most important Christian blogs might indicate that the church world–more specifically, the enclave that calls itself American evangelicalism, though that term is now itself the subject of discussion– is not much different.

Here’s a question: have there always been so many wolves, and so many sheep and shepherds expending so much effort and heaping so much judgement upon themselves on the wolves’ behalf, in the fold? In some of these prominent church scandals, the wolves have been allowed to prey repeatedly and with impunity upon the most vulnerable in the house–the children.

This is what is most disturbing to me as a [fairly] new mother. This has kept me awake at night. Church is not safe for our children. I ask myself, staring at the wall in the dead of night, would I be more likely to be encouraged to go to the police and seek justice for my abused child in the secular world than in the church, if the accused were a member of my fellowship? I don’t like the answer that offers itself, which is ‘Yes’. And cynical as it may sound, it is not a baseless conclusion.

If we look at a few of the most high-profile scandals in the church world, especially ‘Evangelicalism’ and including its ‘reformed’ corner, of the past several years, we will see a tendency toward injustice (and I must emphasize I don’t use that term in the fashionable, politicized, Marxist sense, but rather define it in keeping with biblical and classical principles), which manifests itself in a number of different kinds of frightening behaviour, telling uses of language, and fascinating individual and group psychology/ies.

What is important to note at the outset is that no denomination, no camp, no enclave bound by soteriological persuasion, has a monopoly on abuse. Small associations and large denominations, little country churches and mammoth ‘organizations’ which function as denominations or even as single bodies with many ‘members’, i.e., satellites, groups with cult-type leaders and those without, have all been guilty of ignoring, failing to address, or actively covering up abuse of all stripes. We can talk in a later post about what shared cultural factors there may be to cause similar behaviour across groups which otherwise appear to function, and even believe, so differently.

Sovereign Grace Ministries

Perhaps the most apparently scandalous should be named first: SGM, and its higher-ups, beginning with CJ Mahaney. The short version is that members/leaders/teachers within this ‘organization’ (really, it’s a denomination that was run by one charismatic man) were accused of child molestation and sexual abuse of teenagers. When victims and/or their families approached SGM leadership with the allegations, they were dissuaded from going to the secular authorities and encouraged to let the ‘church’ handle it ‘in house’. Deals were cut, promises to keep quiet exacted, and in one case, alleged vitcims were compelled to accept the accused’s apology and verbally grant forgiveness in the presence of the accused and witnesses. This act of ‘forgiveness’ was then touted as a period on the matter which precluded the alleged victim from going to the police. Some have been publishing on SGM for YEARS, the most prominent being a former SGM insider, Brent Detwiler. He claims there is no way such actions and decisions could have been taken in such serious matters without CJ Mahaney knowing about them. To date, CJ Mahaney has admitted to knowing and covering up nothing.

Perhaps worse, several of his ‘friends’, colleagues, fellow conference speakers/goers, publicly defended him, proclaiming that they believed in his ignorance and innocence, without having acquainted themselves with any of the documentary evidence. Most of these–men whom I and others have respected and admired (among them the men pictured sitting with him in apparent solidarity at Together for the Gospel in 2014, and those whose ‘investigation’ of the allegations against SGM is called corrupt by Detwiler)–to my knowledge have never, even after further developments, publicly acknowledged their own ignorance and haste in so committing themselves on behalf of a man who has been running from accountability for years (one of them offered an apology that has been characterized aptly as ‘incomplete’). Mahaney’s silence and apparently successful escape from any real comeuppance is truly sinister.

Recommended Resources: Brent Detwiler has written extensively and exhaustively about Sovereign Grace for years.  The man is a credible former insider whose documentation–for anyone trying to defend SGM from the allegations–is insurmountable.

Todd Wilhelm has also written some on CJ Mahaney and SGM, though his primary focus is on convicted child sex abuser Tom Chantry and ARBCA (see below).  To be frank, the fact that so many smart and ‘accomplished’ (read ‘published’ and ‘famous’) pastors have been so late to the game in recognizing and naming Mahaney and SGM and their misdeeds is perhaps as big and troubling as the abuse itself.

Harvest Bible Chapel (Harvest/HBC)

There then has been the ‘systemic’ corruption of Harvest Bible Chapel, begun and run by James MacDonald. His ‘open secret’ sins have included high stakes poker, big game hunting overseas, disturbing displays of anger and loss of control, bullying, shameless material self-indulgence with everything from mansions to coffee machines, and lavish gift-giving to and hosting of high-flyer friends on the church’s/organization’s dime (known on the inside as the ‘black budget’). Surely this must have kept him busy (trips to South Africa to kill sable take both time and energy to plan–not to mention MONEY). Yet he had time for his various ministries.  When I mention money, we’re talking millions of unaccounted-for dollars.

At any rate, former Harvest insiders have been publishing on his extravagence and the administration’s (should we even call them elders and deacons?) enablement, for years at websites like the Elephant’s Debt. They have been attacked and vilified both within and without Harvest, and MacDonald has managed to weather the mini-scandals of one-off exposures (like the gambling reveal back in 2013, and the theological fiasco that was the Elephant Room 2). More recently, exposure was given a professional voice thanks to Julie Roys, who braved abuse, threats, and ultimately a malicious and frivolous lawsuit to get the truth out, not least to those being fleeced and lied to in Harvest itself. MacDonald has been fired, but has conveniently dropped from view, with no public confession made (nor, it may be assumed, required by those who have had his back–and bank sort code– for years).  Julie Roys surmises he may soon resurface in another prominent ministry with global reach.

Now there are whiffs of sexual scandal as well, with Harvest leadership failing to report abuse allegations, and as will be seen to be all too typical, none of the leadership has come forward to confess their complicity in pulling the wool over their sheeps’ eyes, which should be the first step for ‘Christian’ organizations who want to move forward with the blessing of God. Not only must biblical protocols be followed (obviously!), but in such situations where so many people have been slandered, abused, defamed and ostracized for telling the truth and demanding some accountability, and where so many others who were kept in the dark suddenly discover they’ve been lied to and taken advantage of, RESOLUTION must be sought. Real resolution can only be pursued and effected when biblical principles are brought to bear, and where psychological and emotional–as well as personal, physical, and reputational–damage is acknowledged, named, and dealt with. The members of these monster ‘churches’ are encouraged to treat the organizations like family. The wounds in such circumstances therefore run deep, and people should ask what it takes to promote true healing. Surely hurrying to move on and hope people forget would not be recommended by professionals who deal with the relational side of injury and injustice in families and communities. On the ‘business’ end of things, where there should be official accountability, there should be written, public responsibility apportioned and acknowledged, and those responsible should face consequences–church discipline, and removal from positions of authority (and the payroll). Where is all this with respect to Harvest? And where, pray, is the butcher himself?

Recommended ResourcesYears in the making (beginning in 2012) is The Elephant’s Debt; see also Julie Roys’ work, and the comments of other discernment blogs over the years on, for example, the damage done by James MacDonald at the Elephant Room 2.

Willow Creek Community Church (Willow)

This brings us to Willow. ‘Bill Hybels started a revival, from the Bible…’ Ed Young, Jr.’s rap told us, lo, these many years ago (I’d link to it on Pirate Christian Radio’s Museum of Idolatry, but the video link there no longer works.  And I don’t want to encourage views of ‘UBU’ on Youtube, so I won’t link to it there either). Behold, another circumstance wherein an international superstar leader-pastor has been accused by MANY credible people of sexual misconduct over the course of many years. An ‘internal investigation’ backs him up, allows for the attacking and disparaging of the accusers, and all are encouraged to forget. This approach blows up in Willow leadership’s faces. The more complete picture can be found at various other sites.

The sum, as you may have guessed, is this: leader is accused publicly and with detailed testimony, sometimes with timelines and documentary evidence, of unbiblical, immoral, sometimes illegal conduct; leadership first ignores the accusations; growing numbers of accusers, greater visibility/readership of the allegations, and questions from the congregation eventually force a confrontation with the accusers, which typically results in a slapdash, surface-level and minimal investment ‘inquiry’, which is internally conducted, does not involve law enforcement or outside agencies, and which produces a leader- and leadership-affirming report that says practically nothing meaningful: it will probably include some subtle language that implies the accusers are crazy, confused, or misguided; or worse, that they ‘have it in’ for the leader for some personal reason, or for the ‘church’, and are therefore to be ignored. More clearly the report will communicate that ‘it’s all good’, the leader is great, the church is great (so the sheep need not worry themselves and should indeed be ‘stoked’ that they’re so special and useful), and God wants us to put this behind us and get back to important things, like our unprecedentedly amazing ministry like the Global Leadership Summit. In short, there’s nothing to see here.

This report, probably accompanied by some sort of feel-good, motivational public statement by the leadership, will be met with outcry from the accusers and their supporters, who will state the obvious: it wasn’t a proper inquiry because it wasn’t independent, and the conclusion was reached before the inquiry began: defend the leader and the brand at all costs, while saying as little about the allegations as possible and trying to appear to ‘be nice’ about the accusers. Once there is pushback against this initial approach, the organization’s leadership will shift gears and go into attack mode. No holds barred. The ensuing push by the leader/ship to regain and/or maintain control over the narrative, and over the sympathies of the organization’s members, will grow increasingly brutal and desperate, and will result in truly harrowing sin, the majority being grievous shattering of the ninth commandment, and sometimes culminating in physical threats against the accusers and whistleblowers.

In some cases, like at Willow, the truth did eventually come out. It is out, and so is Bill Hybels. But as with James MacDonald, where is he? And where are his handlers and right-hand men and women who assisted in character-assassinating his victims? Well, in late summer they had a meeting. And Julie Roys’ post reflecting on that meeting gets at the heart of our discussion: confusion. If Bill Hybels is officially disgraced and his victims have been vindicated, how can there still be so little clarity about what happened, who’s responsible for what, and what needs to be declared and done to make things right? As little kids, we’re told to say sorry when we’re wrong, and we’re told to say what we’re sorry for. It’s concrete acknowledgement to the injured party of what we’ve done wrong. Perhaps when Christians get on leadership boards of corporate-style chain churches, they forget this very simple lesson.  Now, Bill’s ridden off into the sunset, or rather, parachuted into a cushy retirement with zero demand that he make public confession and declare his repentance.

Recommended resources: Definitely, Willow attendee and insider Dr. James Bedell.   A truth-lover and clinical psychologist, he not only provides incisive biblical insight into the facts he presents, but also brings his vocational experience to the table, helping the reader to understand several of the group/corporate social and power dynamics at play in Willow’s particular subculture, identity, self-defense and self-representation.

As will be clear from the embedded links in this section, Julie Roys has also written several posts about the scandal and fallout at Willow.  Also useful RE: Willow is The Wartburg Watch, though I don’t recommend the reader wade into every topic on which they comment, as I find some of their commentary to be abjectly biased (they are particularly reactionary when it comes to ‘Calvinism’.  I put the term in scare quotes because I’m not sure the writers understand the doctrinal system to which they object).

Association of Reformed Baptist Churches in America (ARBCA)

A small enclave of Reformed Baptists has found itself—unexpectedly—in the national evangelical limelight because a man who would otherwise be small fry, but happens to be the son of one of the movement’s leading lights and pastors, has recently been convicted of sexual abuse of children. This of course is Tom Chantry, a ‘pastor’ himself. He continues to profess his innocence of all charges, and the wickedness of all involved in the criminal justice process who have proven/found him guilty, and some in the denomination—Association of Reformed Baptist Churches of America—are still sympathetic. But as with our other cases here, the bigger story, as repulsive and evil as Chantry’s actions are, is the systematic, organized, coordinated campaign of complicity and cover-up perpetrated by his fellow pastors. For years they knew of the truth of the allegations against him; rather, many of them believed the allegations of physical abuse of children, even if they didn’t believe the accusations of molestation.

As in so many of these cases, the parents went first to the elders of their church when they learned what Chantry had allegedly done—one thing I’ve learned from these stories is, if there are accusations of criminal activity against a church leader or member, to go to the police first, so no one can talk me out of doing so. They cut a deal with Chantry, a means to get him out of their hair. They sent him out of state, arranged for the accusers not to go to law enforcement, and secured a promise from Chantry that he would not pastor again. And, I presume, would not be around kids. Within the next year he was teaching at a private Christian academy. And abusing again. Thanks, chiefs.

This was nearly twenty years ago. Justice has only begun to catch up with Chantry and ARBCA’s shenanigans, with his extradition, trial and conviction all happening just in the past two years. Even after his extradition to Arizona, certain men who would otherwise command a great deal of respect from someone like me spoke publicly in his defense or attempted to hush all discussion of the matter in the church at large, and have since not retracted their bold statements of support for Chantry or the leadership of ARBCA who covered for him, a slap in the faces of the victims who were denied protection and justice twenty years ago. It’s not that Todd Pruitt, for example, should have condemned him as guilty (and not thrown ‘bloggers’ under the bus), it’s not that the justice system shouldn’t have been allowed to do its job; maybe the argument can be made that everyone should have waited for the jury’s verdict after the presentation of the evidence of both prosecution and defense, even if people couldn’t help but discuss it. But the court documentation is out—online—and the verdict and sentencing are now realities. Now is the time to admit to being mistaken and misinformed.

But nobody…none of these professing Christian ‘leaders’…will do this. What has been one of the more interesting developments in this case is the departure of several of the congregations from the group, and some of them have left rather quietly, or, have erased any and all signs of affiliation with ARBCA. Interesting, indeed, as is the noteworthy fact that many of the ministers are related to each other: fathers, sons, uncles, nephews, brothers. Administrative nepotism and/or incest? Sadly, blood is thicker than water, and familial ties more weighty than the reputation of Christ’s church, and even one’s own integrity. And then there’s the revelation about their ‘seminary’s’ credential-puffing… Organizations big or small, you can find corruption and self-interest anywhere.

Recommended Resources: My primary source on ARBCA, Chantry, his crimes, the cover-up, and the talking out of turn by friends/colleagues who prematurely dismissed Chantry’s accusers, is Todd Wilhelm.  Wilhelm has also written about CJ Mahaney and SGM at his website, so I have cross-referenced his site above.

The Master’s Seminary (MS)

The Master’s Seminary, affiliated with John MacArthur’s Grace Community Church, had its own issue with transparency and procedural integrity, though I must confess I’m not as informed about this case of mishandling of sexual harassment/abuse allegations; one of the reasons, in my opinion, is the under-reporting relative to these other under-reported cases. Long story short, the staff at MS fumbled, then apparently kept it quiet, and John MacArthur and the other high-profile leadership have kept mum about it. I can’t blame those who think that if they pretend long enough there’s not a problem, over time the vast majority of uninformed, and the goodwill of their fans, combine to minimize, de-legitimize or eliminate the concerns of the informed and the wary. It does seem to work often, or even most of the time.

At any rate, when allegations are mishandled in ways that can only at best be described as inexperience or carelessness, and at worst, as gross negligence or callousness, reluctance or outright refusal to own mistakes may reveal troubling disregard for the truth and failure to apply biblical principles to procedure. So…what will Master’s do about it?

As an aside, there’s the past problematic conduct (or at least, claims) of Grace Community Church’s Phil Johnson. Once again, someone is called on the carpet for something inappropriate, perhaps wrong, and he appears to decide to simply wait it out. Neither defend nor admit to anything; just ignore the ‘detractors’ and even the most formidable arguments and evidence, and hope your fans will help you ride out the storm until everyone forgets about it and/or gives up on answers and accountability.

Recommended Resources: Brent Detwiler.

The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC)

I’ll confess, this is getting exhausting and disillusioning. It seems like the failures, cover-ups, and victim/accuser blaming and smearing—coddling the wolves—are everywhere. From the second-stage abuse by the leadership who have been entrusted with allegations, and who in turn fail to the take the right action (and caused further harm to true victims and undermine the process), by neglecting to do proper investigation and then harmed Truth and Justice, unto the protection, even elevation and promotion of the initial aggressor/accused, like in the case of Andy Savage. This kind of coddling is typically followed by the vilifying of the accuser, like the DISGUSTING treatment of accuser Jules Woodson (the record of which I cannot find), who was a minor at the time of the alleged assault, at the keyboard-pounding hands of professing Christians taking to social media to smear her. These people prove themselves more conscience-seared, wagon-circling fan boys and girls of pastors like Savage than sober-minded, truth-seeking disciples of Jesus Christ.  (As of October 2019, is he another one who gets to move on and start a new church, like Mark Driscoll and so many others I thought were has-beens?)

And now the SBC—hit with the downfall of proud conservative-resurgence leader (and notorious anti-Calvinist) Paige Patterson and the slapping of Matt Chandler’s church [hey, at least they called the po-po!] with a major lawsuit this past summer–is being rocked by the conflation of different but connected issues. There is the matter of handling current and historic allegations of sexual abuse and misconduct, and addressing mishandling, cover-ups, and corruption in these cases. Then, there is the ongoing and increasingly heated and complicated debate about gender(ed) roles, within the church and without. One of the reasons this debate has become so complicated is due to the inadequacy and imprecision of definitive terms: like ‘evangelicalism’, labels like ‘complementarian’ and ‘egalitarian’ may be destined for the dustbin, as they mean either too much or too little, and the moving target of meaning resulting from human beings’ inconsistency (in the changing of minds or unhelpful definition – ‘clarifying’ over time) creates a need for new terms with which to argue, distinguish, and self-identify.

Demanding accountability for sexual abuse and cover-up does not equate to ‘egalitarianism’ or elimination of biblically outlined gender roles in church ministry.  But regardless of one’s position on gender roles, any biblically tenable position would require condemnation of sexual misconduct (and abuse of authority and power) of any kind. I feel stupid having written this, but it must be declared because it apparently is not a given. How else can one explain the rampant misbehaviour by some, and the excusing of it by countless others? And what must be pointed out again is that one’s official position on anything does not preclude one from favouring a buddy and throwing the weak and victimized under the bus. Ultra- ‘conservatives’ (with regard to the position and role of women) are duty-bound to protect women. Duh. Sweeping female accusers under the rug with no investigation, and leaving male potential abusers to continue in their behaviour, encourages tyranny, not leadership.

And of course, the most liberal-minded on the equality of men and women, like those secularists we find in Hollywood, have been exposed by the #MeToo movement to be the most power-vaunting and craven opportunists when it comes to sexual assault. ‘Respect for the autonomy of women’ is only a buzz-phrase to them, and the victims’ ‘sisters’ in the industry have sided time and again with their accused male buddies. Hypocrisy, again, thrives everywhere.

Recommended Resources: Google. The Houston Chronicle. Myriad Christian blogs, including Wade Burleson‘s.

*See also the investigation into allegations of sexual abuse against the SBC-affiliated International Missions Board (IMB).

Parenthetical: Mammon strikes again, ironically in the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability.  Heh.

Bizarre Developments: James White, Apologia, and Doug Wilson (‘Theologian’, the disambiguation provided by Wikipedia!)

There is much more that could be said about these individual cases, and more generally about the state of the church and how people in it think and behave.  There is one more situation that hits particularly close to home, because the attitudes of the people involved have disappointed me personally.  For years (more than 10?) I was a regular listener of Alpha & Omega Ministries’ The Dividing Line, the long-running podcast of Reformed Baptist Apologist Dr. James White.  I also have several of his books.

Those facts should be enough to demonstrate that I respected his work and found his materials useful.  One of his talents I found particularly helpful over the years was his ability to make complex issues accessible, and to boil arguments down to the basics and make them concise.  His work has trained my thinking.  One example: when hearing a proposition or argument that doesn’t sound quite right, the first reaction should be, ‘What does the Bible say?’  It sounds obvious, like it should be a Christian’s instinctive response to something new or different from what he or she thinks.  BUT IT ISN’T.

Anyway.  He’s also emphasized, constantly, the need for consistency in thought and apologetic method, holding everyone to the same standard.

Concision. Clarity. Consistency.  A virtuous trifecta.

I knew something wasn’t right, then, when he hosted a podcast that left me scratching my head.  It was the first time in ten years that I said to myself, ‘What is he on about?’ During this podcast, Dr. White was ‘explaining’ (ish) why he had left his church home of (I believe) 20 years or so, Phoenix Reformed Baptist Church, to join the up-and-coming Apologia.  I can say no more than that I had a funny feeling, and that he had said a lot of words which communicated, to me, very little.

Something happened in August 2019 that was quite similar: he discussed what he called a ‘face-plant moment’, a mistake he’d made with regard to a video and what I assume he thought was others’ rush to judgment about it.  To this day, I still know very little about what was then apparently becoming infamous, ‘The Founders Trailer’, what people found objectionable in its content, and what they were saying to which Dr. White initially responded.  In his ‘face plant’ acknowledgement podcast, he seemed to admit that he’d not been fully informed when urging others not to rush to judgment, and…sort of…apologized?  But he never said he was sorry, if I recall, and in the end, the face-plant moment ended up being about how ‘we all need to be more loving and gracious’.  But the tone and takeaway left me feeling like it was one of those ‘apologies’ that is really about how the problem is everyone else’s fault.  I know this is highly subjective and nebulous: there is no other way to describe it.

What was unsettling about this podcast, like that concerning Dr. White’s move to Apologia, was that it left me confused.  Dr. White never leaves me confused!  This, plus his rather strange ignorance of who Boz Tchividjian is.  Most people do not have time to inform themselves about everything, and over the years, Dr. White has rarely mentioned abuse scandals in evangelicalism.  But this lack of familiarity with BT gave quite a clear indication that his interest and his attention has been totally focused elsewhere, and that is telling as we move to our next subject, Doug Wilson.

Doug Wilson has been defended (or perhaps more often, his detractors have been dismissed) by Dr. White over the years in the face of what I consider to be overwhelming evidence that he has a.) covered for and enabled convicted sexual predators; b.) plagiarized extensively in his ‘academic’ work, the arguments of which at times lack merit anyway (e.g. his statements on American slavery); c.) conducted himself in a manner unbecoming an elder in Christ’s church, when such should be above reproach.  Perhaps if Dr. White doesn’t know who Boz Tchividjian is, and is unaware of what’s been going in SGM and the SBC (the exposure of widespread abuse of all kinds, but particularly sexual), perhaps he isn’t informed enough to speak about Doug Wilson and the allegations against him, or to rebuff Wilson’s detractors, often people who just want some transparency and honesty.  His apparent ignorance of such situations may mean Dr. White doesn’t understand the ramifications (or implications?) of appearing to defend such a thug.  (And wannabe.  Being married to a man who is actually from Scotland, I find Doug Wilson’s pretensions to be profoundly pathetic.)

Things have gotten more confusing and more troubling since.  I’ll leave it to others to catalogue Dr. White’s and his producer, Rich Pierce’s, strange and questionable online conduct, their perhaps strengthening affiliation with Doug Wilson (if not all of his doctrinal stances, such as Federal Visionism) and with Apologia, about which several thoughtful bloggers and writers have raised concerns.  I will close by saying that I have not listened to a Dividing Line since August.  Initially, I wasn’t able to explain why.  But since then, after seeing further developments (particularly online exchanges and the ‘blocking’ of folk asking straightforward and more often than not fair questions), I now think I had a sense that something had changed, something had gone off the rails, though I couldn’t explain it and had no real evidence that something had ‘happened’.

Recommended ResourcesThe Truth About Moscow.

CONFUSION, CONFLATION & HASTE.  The way to keep the truth at bay.

In sum, all is not well.  One of the most frustrating features of several of these stories–including the as-yet unmanifested cause of my ‘falling away’ from AOmin, is the inability of these people–these big pastors, these would-be shepherds–to admit they’re wrong.   They’re all just like Keith Mannes and the others involved in Simon Templar’s case, when their failures are lined up in front of them like carnival ducks to be shot, and they can’t acknowledge anything

Now, we could talk about the falls from grace of evangelical superstars, or the—I presume– impending doom of those still standing. Several of those on my radar rose through the ranks of the so-called ‘Young, Restless, and Reformed’ movement. Carl Trueman has already written a poignant short article on this phenomenon, apparently occasioned by the personal implosion of Josh Harris—but I will mention the names of those who have fallen hard, but have not necessarily implicated their churches or ministries in cover-ups in quite the same way, and yet who have not to this day confessed to any wrongdoing: Perry Noble; Mark Driscoll (it took a while for his accusers to get noticed); Tullian Tchividjian.  Perhaps readers can think of more?

I urge readers to supplement my resource list in the comments, and to correct any errors of fact in my presentation of these materials.

We close with some input from a co-contributor:

‘What does it all point to?

The Narcissistic Leader is too big to fail;

The Narcissistic Leader surrounds himself with yes-men who won’t/can’t hold him accountable;

The Narcissistic Leader’s lackeys need him to remain in power because they derive status from being in his presence;

The Narcissistic Leader is above the rules; he can avoid accountability by running away.

It is noteworthy that in addition to the misdeeds of Bill Hybels and James MacDonald, their “leadership teams” or “administrative boards” or whatever they called them attacked the complainants/plaintiffs. In light of how terrible BH’s and JM’s behavior was, this makes for very bad optics. I wonder if those elders “get” how disgusting it was to defend those guys?

Regarding the [issue of] so little clarity about what happened– there sure was clarity when they [Willow leadership] called the women liars!’

Interview with ST, ep. 2 (VeraVox 4)

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Happy New Year, all!  Here is part 2 of my interview with Simon Templar.  In this episode, we cover the following topics: the Special Meeting of Classis in December, 2015; the involvement of Keith Mannes (church visitor 22), and Simon’s conversation with him in Spring 2017; Aetna’s congregational meeting in November, 2015;and what’s been going at Aetna over the past couple of years.

Interview with ST, ep .1 (VeraVox 3)

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The long-expected first instalment of the planned series of interviews is finally here!  Simon discusses at length the early stages of the Aetna disaster, focusing on the destructive involvement of Church Coach 54, and the enthusiastic but ignorant, partisan, misguided, and paladinesque intervention of the Church Visitors, 21 & 22.  Listeners are directed to the more relevant background documentation, especially Exhibit E., Exhibit L., and Exhibit J.

Alias Key: Stan Koster=54; Keith Mannes=21.

An Update–& Launching VeraVox!

It’s been over a year since I bade readers and fellow sojourners farewell from the battlefield in Fin.  While I’ve been working on my dissertation, teaching Latin and having a baby, the plodding wheels of the NM Classical steamroller have continued to slowly, inefficiently crush everything in their way: Simon Templar, mostly.

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I’ll outline briefly in bullet points what has happened in the past year, and then introduce you to veritaspraebita’s new feature, VeraVox.  For those of you who are new here, before reading this outline, please check out the Introduction, and Table of Contents, along with the latter posts of 2017 to get yourself up to speed.  I will include a few events from earlier in the ‘process’ for additional context:

–Early September, 2016: ST severs ties (‘fires’) initial Oversight Committee for numerous failings, including lack of transparency, obfuscation, overreach of mandate, and antagonistic conduct.

–Mid-Late September, 2016: representative of the OC delivers libellous report about ST to Classis; ST is forced out of the ‘Executive Session’ by an ad hoc voice vote (thus was not allowed to hear what was said about him; only learned the content when he solicited a copy of that report from the Clerk of Classis and received it some weeks later).  ST’s character and integrity was also called into question publicly by the notorious Church Visitor 21 and a member of the OC. (See Open Letter to Classis, Oct. 2016.)

–December, 2016: the CIC recommends that Classis defrock ST (for failure to bow to the whims of the OC).

–December 2016 to January 2017: ST’s counsellor intervenes, persuades the CIC to allow Pastor-Church Resources personnel and himself to oversee ST, recommends continued counselling and a quarter of Clinical Pastoral Education at Pine Rest in Grand Rapids, MI.

–Summer, 2017: ST completes quarter of CPE.

–September, 2017: ST’s counsellor and supervisors at Pine Rest recommend ST be declared eligible for a call by Classis Northern Michigan.  For reasons known only to themselves, the CIC rejects this recommendation, and, ah, ermmmm, wants him to stick around and…do some stuff.   Like the ‘busy work’ you do when you have a substitute teacher in your algebra class.Image result for mr starfish freddi fish

–November, 2017: ST gets a list of recommendations which the CIC brainstormed at their meeting in October after the Classis meeting in September at which they and Classis rejected the recommendations of the professionals who had actually been working with ST over the preceding year (two of the CIC had not had any contact with him in that time, one of them had never even met him).  They rejected the recommendation of the informed, qualified people without having a plan of their own.  Or a justification for their decision.  One of the tasks for ST in this list was to do a critical ’empathetic’ reading on Exhibit B., ignoring its truth value and its real significance in the unfolding of the original events at Aetna.  (NB: Exhibit B. was discussed by ST and the CNM regional pastor in September; he was the one who trotted it out at the October CIC meeting.)

–January-August 2018: ST liaises with Pastor-Church Resources (who have declared their wariness to get involved; more on this in a later post) and Classis Zeeland for guidance and support in pursuing both progress (escape from Limbo) and some sort of resolution with members of CNM.  The air needed to be cleared. especially after the debilitating and works-gumming circulation of and acting upon bad information.  This culminated in a meeting between ST, the CIC of CNM, and two pastors of Classis Zeeland.  I may get persmission to share ST’s complete Time Line of Events at a later date.

Result: the Classis Northern Michigan guys still don’t get it.  And the regional pastor warned ST that, regarding his credentials and his desire to be declared eligible, ‘some’ in ‘Classis’ won’t go for it.  On what basis, since this whole mess is now so old it’s got cobwebs on it and predates the tenure of many, and since the CIC itself is ignorant of even its own failings, much less what happened at Aetna, how can ‘Classis’ be in a position to declare or decide anything?  But we are not surprised.  This is where we stand now.

Note 1: Someone recently asked ST if Church Order was consulted/followed in Aetna council’s initial suspension of him in late October 2015.  He wrote to the current Aetna council about a month ago to find out.  For those of you who’ve ‘been around’ on this blog, you know what kind of rubbish reply he got–‘get lost’, in semi-professional lingo.

Note 2: I recorded this post two weeks ago, on the 18th of September.  There are a few important bits of news that we will hopefully be able to discuss in the next post, which will cover Rules of Disclosure, and the Ethically-Challenged-Executive-Session Meme.

With that in mind, allow me, in this first episode of VeraVox, to offer a bit of commentary on these more recent developments, and issue an invitation to Classis Northern Michigan.  Have a listen (it’s about 36 minutes), and please suggest songs for future bumper music in the comments!  Thank you for your patience, one and all–maintaining baby, house and dissertation forces projects like this onto the back burner.

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(Big, big thanks to the IT Schmo, who gave me a crash course on my amateur sound-editing software and prevented this from being aired on the All Humiliation Network!)

REVISION UPDATE (11 October 2018): in the best interests of a third party, I have removed segment 3, in which I discussed a recent event at one of the local farms and how it is symptomatic of the ‘toxic subculture’ of the area.  I will cover this topic in a later instalment of VeraVox.  I have also added our sign-off ‘call sign’: IUSQUE FASQUE.

 

 

Fin: A Fond Farewell from the Battlefield. 5 July 2017.

[Return to Table of Contents.]

On this the 2nd anniversary of 13’s hand-scrawled list of ‘suggestions’, I thought it fitting to post the blog’s swan song.

I’ve been thinking for many weeks how best to wrap up this project.  A blip of inspiration appeared on the radar screen some time ago, but it was not substantial enough to begin writing.  Now I trust I have discovered a train of thought that will round out the record of this catastrophe rather, for lack of a better word, nicely.

The blip of inspiration was the result of my morbid fascination with shipwrecks.  After finishing Erik Larson’s novelised account of the sinking of the Lusitania (highly recommended, though perhaps not narratively as strong as either Devil in the White City or In the Garden of Beasts), I found myself on a ‘Wikiwalk’ during which I stumbled upon a section listing shipwrecks, ordered according to their number of deaths.  It is shocking how many people have died in recent times on Asian ferries, and of course anyone living on this side of the Atlantic will be aware of the numbers of migrants from North Africa who have drowned in the Mediterranean these past few years, trying to get to Italy.

What piqued my curiosity were the ships listed as missing or lost before 1800.  One of these was a Dutch ship called the Batavia, which went down off the coast of Western Australia  en route to the Dutch East Indies in 1629.  To Americans, this period is practically pre-history.  The Wikipedia page will tell most readers what they may wish to know; there are also a couple of recent books available on Amazon.  One of the writers, Peter Fitzsimons, did this entertaining interview on Australian radio about the time his book came out.  I won’t detail the story of the Batavia here; it’s a tale of almost unbelievable evil and savagery, though the ending seems to demonstrate an intervention of Providence. While this is cheeky, I have to admit I took great pleasure in reading about certain Dutchmen behaving very badly, and other Dutchmen taking that bad behaviour very seriously.

Image result for ship batavia

It’s worth making the point that people don’t take betrayal very seriously these days, especially if they’re not the victims.  Mutiny, among his other crimes, earned Jeronimus Cornelisz the gallows, with his hands cut off to boot.  In contrast, 54 was told early on by Templar that was 13 was doing was dishonest, the backstabbing of a former friend.  54 didn’t think this was morally or relationally significant enough to do anything about it; maybe he should have–oh, I don’t know–BEEN SUSPICIOUS OF 13.

**

In past posts we have had lists of home truths embodied or proven by this scam (or is it a sham?  Probably a bit of both.).  In this last post I will do something similar, drawing on another real-life of event and its fall-out as a parallel story, and for direction in subject matter.

**

I was in London last Wednesday, and thus had the opportunity to pick up a copy of the Evening Standard.  Image result for evening standard hillsborough cops chargedThe front page headline was not about Grenfell Tower, cladding, or Glastonbury.  Instead, I read this ⇒

 

I remember when I first came across the term ‘football [soccer] hooliganism’, back in 2012, my first year in the UK.  I sat at my computer in our Headington flat living room on yet another ‘Wikiwalk’, which eventually brought me to the page on the Hillsborough Disaster.  I was captivated by the story at the time; I’d not been aware until this past week that that same year, an independent panel published its findings, and in 2014, a new inquest into the events of 15 April 1989 began, and took more than two years to complete.  The verdict and results were released in 2016.  And now, criminal charges have been brought against responsible parties who were spared accountability by the systems–legal and political–again and again.  The campaign of the Hillsborough Families and survivors for justice and acknowledgment of the truth is a fight nearly as old as I am.

The Hillsborough Disaster was a human crush at an FA semi-final match at Hillsborough stadium in Sheffield, between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest football clubs.  But it became more than the chaos that killed 96 people.  It’s turned out to be both the events of that day, and the cover-up that began while people were still being injured and killed.  One thirty-year-long miscarriage of justice.

Image result for hillsborough fans help fans up the wall
Fans in the west stand above pens 3 & 4 pull people out of the crush.

Those who enable and work a corrupt system know they can often wear down victims of injustice through long waits, setbacks, and disappointments.  On the one hand, the Classis process seemed to us to drag on unnecessarily and through people’s carelessness, though in retrospect, perhaps it was deliberate.  But on the other, at long last, the truth about Hillsborough has been admitted and declared, and now there are meaningful consequences.

In sum, the Disaster was this: on April 15, 1989, the mass of Liverpool fans were being ticket-checked through an inadequate number of antiquated turnstiles and then sent into the grounds.  At the time, Hillsborough’s standing-room-only section consisted of concrete terraces at the goal ends of the pitch.  These terraces were divided into ‘pens’, separated by spiked fences, and divided internally by ‘crush barriers’, metal railings to keep the weight of the crowd split so as not to squash the people at the front of the terrace (I don’t believe we have had such things in American sports).  Liverpool fans were allocated the west end terrace, the entrance to which was through Leppings Lane.  The front of the terrace is separated from the pitch by a fence that is intended to be impossible to climb over.  In each pen is a single-file gate to the pitch, through the perimeter fence, that can only be opened from the pitch side.

Kick-off was scheduled for 3pm.  By 2:45, the crowd outside the stadium was so dense at the turnstiles that the police managing the crowd outside feared injury to people at the front–they were witnessing a crush at the gates and turnstiles.  To relieve the pressure, they requested (one officer in quite colourful, desperate terms over his radio) that police control–headed by chief superintendent David Duckenfield–inside the stadium, who could see everything happening outside on CCTV, open an exit gate (C) around the side of the turnstile wall, to allow people on that side to go into the stadium, taking the pressure off the bottleneck.  This the police did twice, a few minutes apart.  Just before 3, Gates A & B were opened.  At 2:59, Gate C was opened a third time.

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Diagram produced by the BBC.

It made sense–but other orders that on previous similar occasions had been given in conjunction with the opening of the exit gate–such as for police escort onto the terraces, or the closing of the tunnel (outlined in blue above) to the central pens–were not given now.  Most of the fans, something like 1,800, coming in through the exit gate C headed for the tunnel, and into the two central pens 3 & 4–which were already over-full and where people had already been uncomfortable since 2:30.  The crush began in earnest.  Less than 6 minutes after kick-off, the game was halted.

This is BBC Liverpool’s timeline of the events of the day.  The conduct of police and emergency services shows a complete absence of control, and complete lack of preparedness.  95 people died; 1 man succumbed to his injuries four years later (he was taken off life support after showing no signs of improvement, having been in a PVS since the Disaster).  The aftermath was to be the scandal of not only the police (and to a lesser extent stadium owners/managers) failing to take responsibility, but also turning the press (and indeed much of the country) on the Liverpool fans, who would be made to take the blame for their own dead and injured.

I won’t outline further details here.  Instead, readers may inform themselves by watching BBC’s 2013 Panorama program, which I recommend be followed up by the 2-hour documentary from 2016.  Do watch them; though be warned, some of the footage is distressing.  Parties interested in learning still more can start with the latest edition of Prof. Phil Scraton’s book (which is extremely affordable on Kindle).

**

So why Hillsborough?  What has a fatal incident in the late ’80s at a sporting event in the UK got to do with a church coup in Northern Michigan in the 2010s?  As I delved deeper into Hillsborough, the number of significant parallels between the two cases began to add up, leading me to at least one conclusion: institutional cover-ups, whether of the cause of death for football fans or of a church scandal, manifest similar MOs.

Hillsb crush at the gate
A glimpse of the sea of faces trapped in the crush.

What are these parallels? This list comprises both parallel actions and parallel lessons from Hillsborough and Aetna.

  1. Each case should have been anticipated based on already known pre-existing circumstances and earlier events.

Prof. Scraton’s book on Hillsborough opens with a chapter that, after an introduction to Sheffield’s police context, enumerates several earlier football disasters and near-disasters in the UK.  Why?  I myself asked this question when I realised he was beginning with a set of other stories.  His point was, of course, that Hillsborough was not the first major incident at a football stadium, not even the first one to have claimed scores of lives.  Some of the significant examples are:

Burnden Park in Bolton, 1946.  A crush in an overcrowded embankment killed 33 and injured 400.

Non-fatal crush at Molineux Stadium in Wolverhampton, 1976.

Bradford City Stadium in Bradford, 1985.  A rubbish fire in wooden stands killed 56 and injured at least 256.

Ibrox Stadium in Glasgow, 1902 and 1971.  1902: a stand collapse killed 25; in 1971, as thousands of spectators left down a single stairway, a pile-up or crush killed 66.  In contrast to what happened at Hillsborough, fans were not blamed, and due to previous incidents at the grounds with injuries and even fatalities, the Rangers Football Club was deemed responsible.  The Club did not oppose the findings of the law that they were at fault, and they were subsequently sued for damages by relatives of the deceased.

These events were warnings about the conditions of stadiums, and opportunities to [re]assess and adapt crowd management and safety, and police and stewarding, procedures.  Reports were published, warning signs interpreted and articulated, recommendations issued, but there were no wide-ranging changes in regulation or practice.  In the 1971 case of Ibrox, the investigating sheriff noted in his Damages Statement (emphasis mine):

“So far as the evidence is concerned, the Board [of the RFC] never so much as considered that it ought to apply its mind to the question of safety on that particular stairway […] and would appear – I put it no higher – to have proceeded on the view that if the problem was ignored long enough it would eventually go away […] Indeed it goes further than this because certain of their actions can only be interpreted as a deliberate and apparently successful attempt to deceive others that they were doing something, when in fact they were doing nothing.”

Doing nothing after repeated signs that something was amiss was also a feature at Aetna.  The Raisin and the unwillingness of the leadership to deal with her in a responsible way; the situation with the Ss; the doctrinal issues with and unbiblical discontent of, for example, the Three Little Elders (on council before 2015); and the conspiracy to extortion that happened at Prosper, were all proof that there’s something going on beneath the surface in both Aetna and its wider Christian community, on the spiritual plane, that is not healthy, and not Christ-oriented.  No one on the council in early and mid-2015 wanted to pursue the theory that Aetna was dealing with a serious spiritual problem–even an invasion!  They preferred a superficial reading of the situation–the pastor and his preaching are upsetting people–and opted for 13’s quick fix.Image result for snake oil salesman

 

In a sense, the Article 17 did come completely out of the blue.  The Classis system, with positions being manned by fellow believers, should have ensured some sort of due process, as well as some compassion and Spirit-led sensibility.  Also, the leader of the ‘movement’ within Aetna was a surprise, because Templar had believed 13 was his friend, and the two men’s families had spent so much time together over the years, especially holidays and birthdays (and a wedding).  But perhaps too, if 13 hadn’t been a friend, Templar would have seen red flags.  42 and others knew that 13’s character was inconsistent.  But we’ve talked about this already.

So, those two components were surprises.  But the fact that the Event happened shouldn’t have been a total shock, given the precedents, and given Templar’s own analysis of Aetna’s situation, which no one else was willing to accept or investigate.  In fact, it should only be expected that Evil, when the Good gets close to putting its finger on it, lashes out and makes an extra effort to thwart the perceiver, and work extra hard to deceive those who might eventually come to recognise it for what it is.

As the RTE commentator states in the midst of the crush: ‘That [i]s a situation which should never have developed.’  And the people chant, ‘Please help us, please help us!’

**

2. Each case involved conspiracy to change the record, blame and castigate the victims, discredit witnesses, and bias in advance those appointed to conduct inquiries.

Related imageThe creation of the Myth (h/t P. Scraton for this term) of the fault of the Liverpool supporters in the disaster began within minutes of the stopping of the match.  Here is the first claim ‘explaining’ the cause of the crush, broadcast during live RTE coverage of the match and the disaster; the BBC’s commentator John Motson reported the same–the explanation came from the police control room at the Liverpool end of the pitch, from David Duckenfield himself, namely that the gate the police themselves had ordered opened to relieve pressure outside the stadium had been broken and rushed through by drunk and disorderly fans.

In the very midst of mayhem and death, those in charge were thinking how they were going to escape culpability.  This was merely the beginning of decades of cover-up, the first in a string of dishonest, blame-diverting assertions put forward by those who failed in their duty of care.  For those of you in Classis Northern Michigan with difficulties in this area, this claim is an example of what’s called a ‘lie’.

The laying of the groundwork for what happened at Aetna began before the Church Visitors were brought in, e.g. with the submission of the ‘list of suggestions’ full of innuendo and horse manure, and the publication of the report by Uncle 54.  These documents were also the start of a myth, Image result for actaeonwhich like the Hillsborough cover-up, snowballed as time went on, and as more people were willing to become part of the conspiracy whose sole purpose for existence was, apparently, to destroy the career and public character of Simon Templar.  But I’m sure, like the South Yorkshire Police in 1989 and after, they believed they were acting in the best interests of…someone.  Most likely themselves.

There was the creation of a myth by creation of an artificial record, a paper trail, first by 13, and then by Classical officers.  The problem was that most of the paper trail was unclear–due to poor exposition of the supposed problem(s), poor writing, and lack of clarity in purpose and thought.  But it was enough.  Beyond that, there was the use or misuse of the power to control the of flow of information, which we will address in point 5 below.

Regarding changing the record, this is perhaps at its clearest in the misrepresentations of the Oversight Committee (in flagrant contradiction of a pre-existing written record of interactions in Simon Templar’s emails–utter idiocy, one would think, but they got away with it).  It could also be seen in the fluctuating dates, which got earlier and earlier, in particularly 21’s documents, when alleged ‘problems’ between pastor and church at Aetna really began.  It’s like a multiple choice quiz, and every time 21 picked a different option.  Of course, we know why the date kept getting earlier–to try to refute the fact that the real trouble started with 13’s odd about-face in late 2014/early 2015.  Attention had to be deflected from the falling dominos that could be traced to 13’s behaviour, and a case had to be insisted upon, a case that Templar had been a long-standing MAJOR issue, and it just took people ages to do anything about it/him (or to realise it?).  I’d like to think that when I make stuff up, I can still keep my story straight.  Not that I do that for any situation but writing what I acknowledge to be FICTION.

Of course, the option that 13 and the council required a blaming of the person they were firing and evicting without cause.  What about castigating?   Classis personnel showed themselves expert at this, with allegations about Templar’s lack of submissiveness, stubbornness, tendency to ask uncomfortable questions, strange penchant for justice (maybe he could go into law? surely there’s no room for that in the pastorate!), and paranoia.  Some of the Hillsborough Families know what it is to be derided as conspiracy theorists.  You look crazy until you can prove it’s a conspiracy.  Of course, those within the conspiracy will always prefer you be thought unstable than to allow you to demand scrutiny of their operations.  I think we’ve demonstrated here with all our documentation that, for as poorly organized and executed as everything was, it was a conspiracy–certain things were agreed upon from the outset, and everything was done and represented with certain goals in mind–integrity, truth, health and well-being of the person in question, and honour of the church be d*mned.

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And what about discrediting witnesses?  John Ashton (picture here is from the Telegraph), a qualified doctor, was an ‘inconvenient witness’, critical of the lack of coordinated and organized police and emergency response at Hillsborough.  When he wouldn’t keep quiet about his take on what he saw at the Disaster, his reputation and credibility were attacked and undermined.  Ashton uses the word ‘implication’–subtle statements are very powerful things.  Did he contact the media, or did the media contact him?  Sort of like 21’s slimy generalization, ‘We got the sense that something just wasn’t quite right.’  Sorry, this was supposed to be akin to a legal proceeding.  Put forth a charge and some evidence, or else withdraw your innuendo.

The assault on Dr. Ashton’s character was a lateral one.  Just like what happened to 42, behind closed doors, at the Special Meeting of Classis.  Because he was articulate, educated, righteous, and a star witness for the defense–having torpedoed Classis’ star prosecuting pastor’s written bilge–who couldn’t be rebutted, 21 and others had to make him look unreasonable, angry, unhinged, whatever.  It couldn’t be that someone that sound could side with Simon Templar: then he would have to be listened to.  Only the Lord Himself knows if any pastor in that room stood up and said that attacking the man sideways in his absence was unacceptable.  Somehow I doubt it.

Finally, biasing officials in advance of proceedings.  There are multiple examples of this–but we’ll stick with one that may have been a pastor putting his foot in his mouth.  Do you, reader, remember this extract of email exchanges in Exhibit T.?:

On Thursday, Nov 5, 2015, at 9:58 AM, WVW writes:

The [classical committee x] has deemed it necessary to call a special classis meeting for November 18 at 6:30 PM location to be determined if either V—- Church or P— Church could host let us know.

I am aware that this is short notice but the matter has been brewing for some time and has been dealt with well by church visitors.

WVW

On Monday, Nov 9, 2015 at 09:40:AM, WVW writes:

To all,

Due to conflicts for many of the pastors involved it has been deemed necessary to change the date of the Special Classis meeting.

We still need to act on this as soon as possible so it has been decided to change the date to Monday Nov 23 again at 6:30 PM at P—– Church.

Di— respond if we need to find a different location.

Please respond to Dwight concerning your availability.

Dwight sorry to complicate the process of finding synodical deputies.

If you are back from your trip Da—- this would once again place you as chair of the meeting.

The special meeting is necessary to address A. and Simon Templar concerning their ministry.

WVW [classical committee x] Chair (short term)

On Thursday, Nov 12, 2015 at 7:49 AM, Simon Templar writes:

TO: WVW

FROM: Simon Templar

Hi, WVW. I received your note sent Monday morning, Nov 9, on Wednesday afternoon.

I had not received your communication from Thursday morning, November 5; did you send an e-mail to me that got lost?

I need to know a couple of things.

First, am I expected or allowed to be at the “Special Classis meeting” planned for November 23?

Second, in the event that I desire to be present but am unable to attend on November 23 (Thanksgiving week!), at what date in December could the meeting be rescheduled?

I’ll wait to hear from you.

Thank you.

Simon Templar A. Church

On Thursday, Nov 12, 2015 at 11:20 AM, WVW writes:

Simon,

You are allowed to attend this meeting, you are not compelled to be there.

The meeting will not be extended to a later date it is time to conclude this matter.

WVW

**

What is interesting about the above exchange is that it shows someone both in the act of biasing others, and in the state of having been biased himself by someone else.  And this kind of thing, getting evidence of what people are saying about you behind your back, which influences how they treat you (scornfully) and how they handle their duties (hurriedly and haphazardly) shows how bias can affect the outcome of cases which are supposedly handled by neutral, ‘objective’ people–before it even comes to the official proceedings.  It should prick people’s consciences that they allow themselves to be poisoned against others without seeking the truth for themselves and demanding proof.  But it’s also thoroughly irresponsible and unprofessional to shoot one’s ‘mouth’ off in emails, offering conclusions about and appraisals of procedures and performances to which one hasn’t even been privy.  It’s contamination of judge and jury.

When attention was drawn to this by Simon Templar, who in Classis Northern Michigan do you think cared?

Secularists do it better.  Recognizing and calling out hypocrisy and bias, I mean.

tony blair why
1997: PM Tony Blair on Home Secretary Jack Straw’s proposal of a limited independent review on Hillsborough: ‘Why?  What’s the point?’  Classis NM can relate.

 

**

Here we find a point of contrast.  What happened to the Liverpool fans on 15 April was not deliberate.  It was gross, even criminal, negligence.

What happened at Aetna was a travesty, a set-up.  From the beginning, a case was being built against someone for purely personal reasons, with the end goal of ousting him.  What’s strange is the path that people repeatedly chose to bring this about, including the July 4th weekend faction building, the sending of complaint emails and writing of ‘suggestions’, the encouraging of reporting discontent through inappropriate channels, the orchestration of the elder visits, the bias of the report summarising the visits, the underhanded one-on-one meetings between 13 and 54, and 13 and 21, the joke that was the ‘List’ and the manipulation of the record in terms of how it was initially presented to Simon Templar, the tissue of lies and innuendo that make up both the Article 17a and the summary report to Classis in early December 2015, were all unnecessarily messy and degrading.

A going of separate ways could have been done with forthrightness, grace and collegiality.  Why 13 and his party decided not to go this route, and why the church visitors encouraged them in their foolishness, will perhaps always remain a mystery.  Probably the main reason on the Classis side is that nobody knew what he was doing, and was captivated by what seemed to be the desperation of the moment.  Which is a ludicrous thing to say, given our parallel case.  At Hillsborough people suffocated in a mass of humanity while pleading for help in unison.  At Aetna, folk decided they were justified in flouting Christ’s commands and hurting others because some of them found biblical preaching intolerable, and because some of them didn’t want to do the hard work of dealing with the issues in the pews (because: ‘Well, then people might leave!’).  People then left as a result of the decision they actually took, and now they’re still vacant.

At any rate, there was deceit and guile from the very beginning in the Aetna case.  But as things got ugly, those struggling at the helm of the off-course ship decided before anything else, that if anything went wrong or looked untoward, Templar would take all the blame.  Everything in writing after autumn 2015 from any member of Classis seems to bear this out; each document was produced in light of the tacit assumption, and probably, articulated and agreed upon by some, that Templar could and would be vilified, and the Classis personnel could keep themselves in the clear.  Regardless of the difference in original intent, however, what is significant in each case is that the cover-up by institutions after the Primary Event, not the Primary Event itself, actually constitutes the greater wrong, in that it embodies the greater miscarriage of justice.

**

3. People are perfectly willing to say, hear, write, read and believe perfectly horrible accusations made against others without any evidence–or even contrary to the reality they themselves know.

Image result for the sun hillsborough lies

 

People believed these headlines about Liverpool fans–not only that they were the cause of their own melee, by breaking down a gate and forcing their way into the ground without tickets, but also that they were guilty of such disgusting acts as these claimed by the Sun.  And the family members and survivors of Hillsborough had to grieve and pick up the pieces knowing that such things were both said and believed about them–they were lies.  The documentary evidence of the day, the live footage you can watch for yourself, shows fans taking the lead in rescue efforts.  Yes, some of them in the footage are angry; but they’d been half-suffocated, and many of their fellow fans were dead or injured due to negligence and lack of police initiative.  For the most part, they are desperate to save others.  Once these headlines started hitting news racks and TV broadcasts, the families knew they had a battle ahead of them.  Also, notice the lead-in to the headline, in the all-caps.

People will believe and repeat almost anything.  If folk passed around the above heinous claims without fact-checking or even consulting with common sense, then it is no wonder that Simon Templar was subject to the slander and libel that was so thoughtlessly bandied about.  What’s more surprising in the Aetna case isn’t the content of the allegations, but who was making them, failing to check their veracity, and repeating them in speech and in print–‘Christian’ ‘leaders’, rather than journalists.  And not only did they not do their homework, they also ignored Templar’s challenge of the allegations (including his demand for examples and evidence), and denied him rightful means and opportunity for defense.  Well, actually, they did more than that: they pilloried him for asking questions, and for wanting to do the most natural thing in the world–protect his reputation.

In at least one case, one elder’s own experience with Templar forced him to recognize that the allegations were untrue, but he went along with the plot anyway, eventually succumbing to the Aetnaspeak.  I assume this was to help clear up the cognitive dissonance caused by the choice he made.  Eventually, what he had before admitted was untrue, he repeated without reservation like a parrot.  Other people, especially those on the council and the small group families, who should have known better, because they knew Templar so well personally, were beguiled by the dangerous combination of their own desperation and spiritual vulnerability.  They lacked discernment, they were afraid, and 13, aggressive, wheedling and blandishing, talked a pretty good game and seemed to have a ‘plan’.  And then, when the ‘authorities’ backed up 13 by giving him what he wanted, that provided the seal of approval on all the lies and seemed to give ecclesiastical, if not divine, authorization and justification of 13’s goal and methods.  But as I’ve demonstrated here, with respect to the allegations against Templar to superficially excuse the Aetna council’s abusive treatment of him, there were no examples given, no evidence provided, not even clarity of mind and argument.  Just a lot of blustering.  And yet they got results, and got away with it.

In both cases the lack of integrity, and abject gullibility coupled with moral irresponsibility, is thoroughly disgusting.

**

4. Slander has (lasting) consequences.

People think and act based upon what they hear and believe.  Even years after mass produced and published lies have been discredited, people’s judgment is still influenced by the libel and slander.  As I stood in the queue at Victoria Coach Station last Wednesday, waiting for my bus, a friendly elderly couple standing beside mentioned the Hillsborough headline.  And then the husband made a snide comment to the wife about how the men charged will now take the blame, rather than ‘the 2000 Scousers’ who ran over each other.  Then he chuckled.  The fact that people still knock Liverpool as hooligans who killed their own is a great injustice.  Should never have happened.

Image result for dieu et mon droit
The Taylor Report in late 1989 ought to have killed the idea that Liverpool fans and their behaviour were the cause of the disaster.  Yet the slander persisted.  The lies persisted, partly due to the way the Disaster and evidence related to it was handled in the first coroner’s inquest, which wrapped up in 1991 and was the longest inquest in English legal history.  Selection and handling of material is discussed at length in the TV documentaries.  In sum, due to the coroner’s ‘cut off’ time for validity of evidence, 3:15pm on the day of the disaster, everyone who died was presumed dead or unsaveable by that time, and one of the results of this decision was the verdict that every person’s death was accidental (rather than an ‘unlawful killing’.)

It took a new inquest–that running from 2014 to 2016–after the results of the Independent Panel to officially debunk the myth against Liverpool.  Will its verdict, and the criminal prosecution of Duckenfield et al., be enough to effectively set the record straight?  Time will tell.

There can be no doubt that the allegations and accusations, some of them very subtle, against Simon Templar in the months before the December 2015 Special Meeting of Classis affected the way his peers saw him; this in turn affected how they treated him.  We saw some evidence of this in point 2.  There can be no doubt that what 21 in particular aired about him in preparatory documents and on the floor of Classis biased the men who made up his Oversight Committee, and the CIC, against him.  How else can one explain their attitudes and actions?  I’ve never seen such coldness, rudeness, prejudice and unprofessionalism amongst colleagues in either the hospitality sector or academia.  I conclude that one of the reasons such happened and was allowed to happen in this circumstances was that Templar’s peers didn’t think he deserved any better, and that was justification for treating him with contempt.  They’d heard too much dirt about him not to be influenced by it.

I note, of course, that Christians are supposed to treat even their enemies with compassion; Templar was treated, by his fellow pastors, ‘worse than a criminal.’  Now, how does such behaviour from people you’re supposed to be able to trust affect both your perception of yourself and of others?  Perhaps even of God Himself?

**

5. Police & Institutions and Classis demonstrated lack of professionalism; investigation in the respective aftermaths was hampered by conflicts of interest, and lack of adherence to proper protocol, even in handling of documentation.

The infrastructure and ‘leadership’ in both cases did not have a plan, and in addressing the problem(s), by making it up as they went, ad hoc, the results were far from praiseworthy.  At Hillsborough, no emergency was declared.  Seeing and acknowledging a situation for what it is is essential to addressing it properly.  No one in Classis leadership tasked with handling what happened at Aetna was prepared, equipped or willing to see a petty power play for what it was, or the sham-empty claims–that had nothing to do with reality–for what they were, or how they evidenced spiritual rot.

Image result for hillsborough families funerals

There is a story to be told about the shabby treatment, professionally as well as [inter]personally, of the bereaved and survivors, the battered in both cases, by the harming institutions, but I’ll leave the documentaries and Prof. Scraton’s book to detail the Hillsborough families’ account.  The legacy of the abuse of and inhumanity toward my family is already here and clear on this blog.

After the fact, handling of procedure and materials went against both written regulation and common sense.  And of course, it was not only extraordinary, it was illegal.

The many police officers present at the Hillsborough Disaster were instructed not to give witness statements as dictated by normal police procedure.  One officer claimed they were ordered not to put anything in their personal notebooks.  Instead, their statements (‘recollections of the day’) were to be written almost like a diary entry on a blank piece of paper.  In a 1996 interview, a former police officer used the word ‘sanitised’ to describe the version of events he was pressured into attesting years before.  His interview eventually led to the discovery that hundreds of reports and witness statements had been tampered with, redacted before being handed over to the investigation.  When that happened, what a blow that should have been to the South Yorkshire and West Midlands police forces’ standing.  Not quite; not until the Independent Panel published its findings more than a decade later was the editing of officers’ statements in this case (mostly consisting of the removal of any comments critical of police procedure on the day of the Disaster) thoroughly scrutinized and condemned.  The altered witness statements can be viewed here.

The institutions again and again failed personally and relationally; the man set to head up the inquiry in the late ’90s, for example, was evidently not the person for the job.  He epitomized the bias against the victims and their families.  He also failed to avail himself of available evidence, like the altered police statements, which were being kept in a sloppy state in the House of Lords reading room when Prof. Scraton went to consult them in October 1998.  That sounds familiar.

The Classis’ methodology for release and review of documents is equally negligent and self-serving; they have no answer or justification when asked why certain things were shared with people with whom they oughtn’t have been, or why dissemination of 42’s and Templar’s documents were delayed, suspiciously, almost until 21 could whip up his atomic attack document so they’d all be released at the same time in December 2015.  This probably had the (intended?) consequence of overwhelming would-be readers in the 2-3 days before the Classis meeting.  And then of course, there’s the publishing of records and statements about Templar which were presented to Classis (or to congregations) which by rights he should have had a chance to see, if not agree to, before presentation.  Not only did this repeatedly NOT happen, but he was even prevented from hearing what was said about him in more than one ‘Executive Session’.  Baloney–from a bunch of executive turkeys.Image result for oscar mayer bologna

They again proved themselves inadequate to their duties when they failed to follow up and follow through with witnesses.  How useless.  Both 54 and BDK were approached by people trying to give them their side of the story.  54 was approached by several different people, BDK by the same person more than once.  I sent my documentation to everyone I could think of.  No one took us seriously, and those who were aware of our testimony continued to make assertions about the universal approval of the Article 17 at Aetna.  The very existence of these people–I hardly count, because I was no longer at Aetna regularly, though I was still a member–with their perspectives was omitted from the record.

 Image result for kalkaska mi

Aetna and CNM didn’t have the guts or the professionalism to just admit we were expendable, and that for the sake of politics and keeping the right people happy, we had to go.  Instead, charges had to be trumped up to make the person(s) on the rail out of town look bad, so that the people getting rid of them could be heroes.  Well, I trust, now that it’s more than a year and a half on,  that ‘sense of burnout’ 54 mentioned in his summer 2015 report is even worse, especially now that it appears Aetna will have to share a pastor with another local congregation, as they can’t afford to call their own.  Things didn’t quite go according to 13’s plan–the guy he thought he had in his pocket in October 2015 got called up to Kalkaska!  God bless Kalkaska.

Finally, the Oversight Committee did exactly what the police did in running criminal background checks on all the Hillsborough deceased with a BAC.  As Prof. Scraton puts it, ‘[F]rom the outset, the police were determined to criminalise those who died, to damage their reputation.’  This would make it even easier to lay the blame on the victims.  Malicious.  This is analogous to the OC’s move to interview people from the church in Z– at which Simon Templar did his seminary internship 17 years before.  They were looking for ‘evidence’ of a pathology to bolster the case they’d committed to making at the outset.  They needed proof for their argument.  This ‘background check’ was completely outside the scope of their mandate; naturally, when challenged on this, they could not explain their reason for doing it; they lied about Templar’s response to their request for names; and they refused to name the denominational advisor or advisors who presumably suggested they go on this wild goose chase.  Both inappropriate and a waste of time.

We have talked elsewhere about their inconsistency in application of the church order; when they’re befuddled and being challenged to think for themselves, they fall back on it and what they assume its boundaries and spirit are.  When they’re ignoring it or contradicting its spirit, it no longer matters.  This is not love of either the church order or God’s Law.  Further incidents of lack of professionalism and conflict of interest we detailed, for example, in Exposure, pt.2.

**

6. Lies.

When it comes to Hillsborough, plenty of people have been interested in–fought for–the Truth.  It’s the name of Prof. Scraton’s book, and was the Metro headline when the most recent inquest proffered its ruling.  In Northern Michigan, perhaps the stakes just aren’t high enough.  In Aetna’s scandal, no one died.  But consciences were seared, hands were dirtied, innocents were seduced.  Evil was enabled and rewarded. Righteousness was attacked and befouled.  Leaders lied–first to score popularity points and puff up their own egos, and later, to save their own skins.  But an upright career was ended.  Christ and His bride were shamed, God’s Word was mocked, justice was perverted, the truth was locked away or even derided.  Friendships were ended, even denied.  Families were torn by discord. Reputations were damaged or ruined, names slandered, and integrity, where present, was questioned without justification.  Allegations and accusations of devastating import were aired without evidence or challenge.  Trust was broken.  Misconduct was excused, covered up, sometimes with praise and self-congratulation and -adulation.  Victims were intimidated and blamed.  Innuendo ran rampant.  Accountability was sacrificed on the altar of expedience.  Professing Christians found no need for transparency, forthrightness, or honesty.  People were hurt, souls were battered, hearts were bruised and minds were traumatised.  And as there is no sign of a change of conviction on the part of either the initially guilty at Aetna, or those overseers who at the least failed to hold them accountable, and at worst, bear even greater responsibility, I deem the damage done to be irreparable.

No deaths, no, except the death of Christian charity and every other virtue.  Shame on traitors to friends, and on Pharisees.

**

The Lie becomes ‘defining.’

And by lie, I do mean wilful misrepresentations–regardless of whether the misrepresenting party sees it as a lie or not.  Lies also include ‘slanting’ or ‘twisting’, using the power of suggestion (similar to innuendo), and convenient omissions.  You know–leaving things out which might undermine your claims.  13 is quite adept at this.

13 lied.

54 lied.

21 lied.

The OC lied.

Falsehood takes several forms, and some of it is subtler than others.  But even the most blatant seen in this scandal wouldn’t be acknowledged as such by Classis Northern Michigan pastors.  Either they don’t know the difference between truth and lie, or something else is more important than admitting it.

Several Christian ‘leaders’ evaded honest questions, the answers to which the questioning parties had a right (dishonest).  Several misrepresented conversations and events verbally and in writing (dishonest).  Some publicly and pointedly questioned the honesty and integrity of others without cause (dishonest).  Some went out of their way to proclaim personal care and concern while at the same time supporting or failing to oppose the actions of the faction (inconsistent, if not hypocritical and dishonest).  The dishonesty, the Big Lie and the little lies, in the case of Aetna’s scandal, like Hillsborough, is and are defining.

Image result for hillsborough advertising hoardings as stretchers
Liverpool fans tear down & carry advertising hoardings to use as stretchers.

Scraton’s book–again, incidentally entitled ‘The TRUTH’–names all the people who helped him bring the truth in that form to publication.  It is a humbling list of people who care, in great numbers.  And enough people across the UK over the past 28 years cared.

This is a generalization declared by a disappointed girl: when it comes to the Aetna scandal, nobody cares. This is on two different levels: Classis Northern Michigan and the Christian Reformed Church have failed in their duty of care.  And they have demonstrated they don’t give one fig about the well-being of people who are not worthy–of what, exactly, I’m not sure.  21 is to be excused, backed up on anything, beholden to; Simon Templar is to be punished for things he didn’t even do.  The culture is one of a clique, and if you’re not in it, why should any of them go out of their way to pretend they give a shit about you?  Nobody in the community cares if any particular ‘Christ follower’ acts like Jesus, so why put up a front?  Well, I have to confess, they keep claiming they care, and even talk about ‘love’, but in the same documents, they lie and go out of their way to make the people they claim to love look bad.  So, not a very great effort–it seems to be more to soothe themselves than to impress the CRC public in the area.

**

7. People don’t get over being screwed by the institutions that are supposed to protect them.  It is no good saying, ‘Just move on.’

Nobody believed the Hillsborough families from the beginning, and they were denied justice at every turn.  The system couldn’t give them what they were due.  They weren’t believed.  People who didn’t understand wondered what more they wanted, wondered why they couldn’t get over it, calling Liverpool ‘self-pity city’.  This attitude of those outside, and of the establishment, increased the suffering of the victims.  Scraton sums it up neatly: ‘Stress and pressure associated with injustice…exacerbated bereavement’, and ‘people [were] broken by the struggle for justice… The price of Hillsborough is not reducible to 96 people dying; the price of Hillsborough is the price of institutionalised injustice, the appalling treatment by some of the media of the good reputations of innocent people, the cavalier way in which wonderful people were vilified.  That’s the price of Hillsborough.’

You don’t get over that.  You don’t just ‘move on.’  My family has been treated the same way.  When Templar and I talked recently about whether others in similar situations would have ‘moved on’ by now, I said, ‘I don’t think people do.  It would have been one thing if the initial salvo came from people you expected.  But it came from a friend, and his whole family just went along with it.’  We’d all spent so much time together, shared so much that I thought was special.  And they just turned their backs on us (there are of course two exceptions, of my generation).  And then so many of the others in the church I thought I knew and cared about, and whom I thought cared about us, followed suit, seeming to do so very easily.  It’s finding out you really mean very little to people when you become one of two options–you, or the clan.  It was, again, the fact that it seemed so easy for fellow Christians, for friends, to throw us over.  And then the system joins them in kicking you while you’re down, and claiming to pray for you while they do it.  Trust me when I say, You don’t get over that.

Image result for justice for the 96 scarf
‘Justice delayed is justice denied.’ -Prof. Phil Scraton.

**

I’d closed the initial line of exhibits with some closing remarks.  I’ll make my final remarks here.

In 2009, at the time of the 20th anniversary memorial event of Hillsborough in Liverpool, at least one of the survivors was convinced that they ‘would never get justice; the truth would never come out.’  After a number of catalysing events, he was thankfully proven wrong.

Will we ever get justice?  Will Classis Northern Michigan ever admit its failure and misconduct?  Will Aetna’s leadership ever be told by CRC officials that what they did was wrong?  God only knows.  It may seem like small-town stuff.  It is small-town stuff.  But we are human beings.  We’ve been wronged.  We are owed at least the truth.  The Evening Standard’s article from last week closed with this: ‘Margaret Aspinall, whose son James, 18, was among the victims, said ahead of the decision: “All we want is accountability–nothing more and nothing less.”‘  Is that, fellow disciples of Jesus Christ, too much to ask?

Life is short; few will ever remember we were here, and like Dorothea in Middlemarch, let’s be honest, most of us will rest in unvisited tombs.  But we will still have left an indelible stamp on the little corners of the world in which we lived, and on the church in which we worshiped–or didn’t.  And–the Lord knows.  He does choose to forget, but the Bible is very clear–He forgets those sins which are repented of.

Image result for metro the truthThe context has changed, in the sense that Simon Templar is no longer in the midst of the mire, nor is he officially (or is he?) bound to or by Classis Northern Michigan.  But the fight for the truth to see the light of day, the fight for justice in some form of accountability, goes on.  I’m young enough to keep on, whether it means plunging back into battle, or waiting for an opportune moment.  The truth will remain here, with all the documentation now at the reader’s disposal.  I will continue to blog at my original site.  The time may come when more documentation is made available to me, and I will post it, given proper permission.  Thank you for reading, and thank you to my co-contributors and those who helped in acquiring and organizing evidence, in fact-checking, and in building and proofreading this project.

Truth is strength.  It is life, and it is freedom.

DICENDA EST VERITAS.  VERITAS PRAEBITA EST.  QED.

ekklescake.

ekklescake signature

 

Table of Contents.

[Return to Introduction.]

(Condensed Table of Primary Documents below.*)

Updated Anonymity Statement & Definition of Terms.

Preacher’s Corner: Messages by ‘Simon Templar’.

EXHIBITS:

Exhibit A. Background Letter, December 2015.

Prelude: Summer 2015.

Exhibit B. 13 Writes a Note. 5 July 2015.

Exhibit C. ‘For the Record’. July 2015. 

Exhibit D. A few sundry points for context, August 2015.

Exhibit E. 54’s Report. My reaction and a Poem. September 2015. 

Exhibit F. Personal note to 13. Written 16 September 2015, given to 13 via ekkles’ sister.

Exhibit G. First Letter to the CVs, 18 September 2015. 

Exhibit H. The First Reply from the CV(s). 21 September 2015. 

Crisis: Autumn 2015.

Exhibit I. Notes and Reflections on ‘Interviews’ Conducted Early October 2015.

Exhibit J. The Mighty List. 6 October 2015. 

Exhibit K. Preaching Schedule up to ‘Being Word-Centered’ (25 October 2015).

Exhibit L. The Council Meeting. 27 October 2015. 

Exhibit M. The Announcement to the Congregation. 1 November 2015. 

Exhibit N. Follow-up Email to Council Members. 26 October 2015. 

Exhibit O. Second Letter to the CVs. 5 November 2015.

Travesty: November-December 2015.

Exhibit P. The Article 17. 5 November 2015. 

Exhibit Q. A grad student takes on the A-17. 

Exhibit R. The Congregational Meeting. 10 November 2015. 

Exhibit S. Sparring with the CVs. 11, 14, & 19 November 2015.

Exhibit T. Special Meeting of Classis. November-December 2015.

Exhibit U. Letter from the Council to the Congregation (and my Criticism). 17 December 2015.

Aftermath: 2016 Correspondence.

Exhibit V. Aftermath: Emails to Council. December 2015-June 2016.

Exhibit W.  Correspondence to Current Members, late January-early February 2016.

Exhibit X. Concluding Remarks.

Exhibit Y. From the Far-Flung Peanut Gallery.

Exhibit Z. Classics and classics: Applied Humanities.

Appendix: Further Resources on Abuse of Clergy.

Appendix ii: On Confidentiality.

Appendix iii: It wasn’t the Classis!

Appendix iv: On the 9th Commandment.

Appendix v: Correspondence with Denominational Leadership.  (Link deactivated. Replaced with Appendix vi.)

Aftermath: 2016 & 2017 Commentary on Classical Activity & Procedure; ‘Churchianity’ & Cultural Christianity.

Anniversary Message, 5 July 2016.

Inhumanity in the Church, pt. 1.

Inhumanity in the Church, pt. 2.

Inhumanity in the Church, pt. 3.

What would YOU do? pt.1.

What would YOU do? pt.2.

Open Letter to Classis, Revised: Oct. 12, 2016.

Literacy, Pt. 1: A Photo ‘Essay.’ Oct. 29, 2016.

Literacy, Pt. 2: Writing on Writing.

Anniversary Feature: Rockin’ Rubbish, Nov. 6, 2016.

Somewhere along 8 Mile…

A Visit to the Clubhouse, Sept. 11, 2016.

Lead by Example. 18 November 2016.

What about Love? 22 November 2016.

Strangeness and Fictions. 28 November 2016.

The Big Picture. 2 December 2016.

“Testimony”: Post from our Guest Contributor. 5 December 2016.

Exposure, pt.1. 13 January 2017.

A Slight Detour. 20 January 2017.

Exposure, pt.2. 27 January 2017.

Exposure, pt.3. 3 March 2017.

A Small Matter of Forgiveness, 1 May 2017.

Following Up on Forgiveness, 15 May 2017.

Fin: A Fond Farewell from the Battlefield. 5 July 2017.

Poetry & Short Stories.

My Mistake.

The Dry Dip.

I am the Friend.

Empty (or, Cold Moonshine). 15 November 2016.

Withering Heights. 23 January 2017.

Astral Projection: A Parable.

2018:

VeraVox Series.

Episode 1: An Update and Launch.

Episode 2: A Guy Fawkes Special.

Episode 3: Interview with Simon Templar, instalment 1.

2018 Documentation:

September Correspondence between ST & Aetna Council.

2019:

VV Episode 4: Interview with Simon Templar, instalment 2.

VV Episode 5: Interview with Simon Templar, instalment 3.

Letter from ekklescake to the Aetna Council, January 2019.

VV Episode 6: Simon and ekklescake on the Dec. 2015 ‘Letter to the Congregation’, pt. 1

VV Episode 7: Simon and ekklescake on the Dec. 2015 ‘Letter to the Congregation’, pt. 2

*Condensed Table: Primary Documents.

Exhibit A. Background Letter, December 2015.

Exhibit B. 13 Writes a Note. 5 July 2015.

Exhibit F. Personal note to 13. Written 16 September 2015, given to 13 via ekkles’ sister.

Exhibit J. The Mighty List. 6 October 2015. 

Exhibit K. Preaching Schedule up to ‘Being Word-Centered’ (25 October 2015).

Exhibit L. The Council Meeting. 27 October 2015. 

Exhibit M. The Announcement to the Congregation. 1 November 2015. 

Exhibit P. The Article 17. 5 November 2015. 

Exhibit Q. A grad student takes on the A-17. 

Exhibit U. Letter from the Council to the Congregation (and my Criticism). 17 December 2015.

Appendix vi. Correspondence with 54.