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Former Highpoint Church minister, current church member, tweets threats of violence directed towards abuse victim advocates

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Yesterday morning I was made aware of tweets by Jason Bendall. Jason is a former minister at Highpoint Church and current Highpoint Church member. According to his Facebook bio, he worked at Highpoint Church as the Recreation Director. He tweeted that he was on staff at the church for 10 years. After exposure yesterday, he deleted mention of Highpoint as his past employer, as well as his current employer, Old Dominion Freight Line.


I had never heard of Jason before yesterday when I discovered he had preemptively blocked me and many others who had been sharing Jules' story of sexual assault by her then youth pastor in TX, Andy Savage.

Below are screenshots of tweets by Jason Bendall. After exposure of his threats yesterday, he deleted these tweets.










Another Highpoint Church member has been defending Andy Savage's sexual assault of Jules as a "mistake." There also seems to be some confusion about Andy Savage's position at Woodlands Parkway Baptist Church, now Stonebridge Church. Andy was a full time youth pastor, not a "college intern" as Paul Goode insists.








A few weeks ago I received an email from someone who stated that he attended Andy Savage's ordination at Germantown Baptist Church. Others have told me that they have received confirmation that this ordination took place in December of 1995.





Confession Amended: The New York Times video with Jules Woodson

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I was assaulted. He was applauded.
Jules Woodson says she was 17 when her youth pastor, Andy Savage, sexually assaulted her. In late 2017, almost two decades later, Ms. Woodson, inspired by the #MeToo movement, emailed Mr. Savage asking whether he remembered what has haunted her for decades. When he didn’t reply, she told her story to a blog for victims of church abuse. Days later, Mr. Savage addressed his congregation at the Highpoint Church in Memphis, where he is a pastor, and the church streamed the service online as usual.

Jules Woodson responds to announcement of the resignation of Andy Savage from Highpoint Church Memphis

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While yesterday's announcement is a step in the right direction, the conversation must not end here. Instead, this needs to be a wakeup call for everyone. There is a systemic problem within the institution of the church that props people up in places of power and gives them immunity based on cheap grace and a call for forgiveness. This has bred a culture ripe for abuse and cover-up. Repentance, accountability and justice should not be contrived. Unfortunately, my story is not unique. My hope in speaking out is that this opens up the conversation and empowers others.  We, as Christians, should be leading the way in recognizing, preventing and handling abuse. Genuine repentance is not demonstrated by one decision but by many decisions that, over a period of time and born out of humility, transform the culture of the church. As Jesus demonstrated, the church should be the safest and most affirming community for the vulnerable and the wounded. This announcement is one step forward and I am hopeful there are many more steps to follow.


Christian Author Robert D. Smith Seeks to Silence Alleged Child Sexual Abuse Survivor with Defamation Lawsuit

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WSMV News 4


The News 4 I-Team's Lindsay Bramson uncovered the court records that show the brewing battle.
So how influential is Robert D. Smith, the man accused of sexual abuse? Among his 148,000 followers on Twitter, is former president Barack Obama and country star Luke Bryan.
He's a consultant, known for launching best-sellers and he's fighting for his reputation. The accuser, Jim Cochrun, now 51, lives in Texas and says Robert Smith sexually assaulted him when he was just 12 years old. Now, Smith is suing that accuser.
Smith who lives in Franklin serves as a private consultant to a number of bestselling authors, speakers and entertainers including best-selling author Andy Andrews who has cut ties with his former manager saying in a Facebook post from January, "I completely ended the relationship with my longtime manager, Robert D. Smith.  This severing of all ties, business and personal, is due to multiple allegations of child abuse with preadolescence males."
Press release:

HOUSTON (APRIL 3, 2018) – Christian author and personal branding expert Robert D. Smith sexually assaulted Jim Cochrun when he was only 12 years old.  At the time of the assault, Robert Smith told Jim to never tell anyone. Jim was bullied into keeping the child sexual assault secret.  Forty years later, Robert D. Smith is attempting to use the legal system to continue to silence this victim of child sexual assault by filing a defamation suit against Jim Cochrun.


For over 30 years, Robert D. Smith has managed the career of New York Times best-selling author and speaker Andy Andrews and has provided personal branding consultation to numerous other well-known figures in the Christian community. 

After unsuccessfully attempting to “make this go away” in direct conversations with his alleged victim, Smith filed a lawsuit against Cochrun in the Chancery Court of Williamson County, TN at Franklin as Case No. 46996.  In the suit, Smith seeks over $750,000 from his victim. The suit was removed to the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee on February 21, 2018. That case is styled as Case No. 3:18-cv-00225.  Recently, Jim Cochrun filed his answer in federal court challenging the lawsuit against him and also made a complaint with the Tulsa Police Department in Tulsa, OK (the law enforcement agency with jurisdiction over the incidents of sexual abuse committed by Robert Smith on Jim Cochrun).

Jim Cochrun made the difficult decision to share his story with the general public in the hope that any other victims will be emboldened to step forward and seek justice like he is.

“Being sued by your abuser is understandably shocking,” George Edwards said. “Jim has never sought money from his abuser. His motivation is that justice is done and that any other victims who may exist are empowered to come forward. The good news for Jim and other victims like him is that they will defend these allegations with the truth. Proving defamation is difficult. The statements must be false, which means Smith would have to prove that the sexual assault did not happen. Our client has no reason to lie.”

Brent Webster further states that “Jim’s willingness to come forward with the truth is the only way to keep perpetrators like this out of positions of influence.”

George Edwards, III, Murtaza Sutarwalla, and Brent Webster of Edwards Sutarwalla PLLC and John D. Kitch, of Counsel for Cornelius & Collins LLP, represent Jim Cochrun. 
###
About Edwards Sutarwalla PLLC
Edwards Sutarwalla PLLC (www.eslawpartners.com) is a full-service business law firm based in Houston and Austin, Texas practicing in the areas of civil litigation, commercial transactions and corporate law. Edwards Sutarwalla PLLC also represents survivors of child sexual assault and abuse throughout the country.






The narrative portion of the Tulsa police report (embedded above) states that the victim Jim Cochrun alleges that after the sexual assault, Robert D. Smith told him, "This is going to be our little secret. You can never tell ANYONE about this."




"Let it go" Southern Baptist Convention organization tells child sexual abuse victim after internal investigation and failure to report pastor to law enforcement

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Last month, Anne Miller reached out to clergy sex abuse survivor, Jules Woodson. Jules was sexually assaulted by her youth pastor, Andy Savage, in Texas in 1998. Dee Parsons (The Wartburg Watch) and I have supported Jules in speaking out about her abuse, so Jules offered to connect Anne with us. We all spoke on the phone at length and have been in communication throughout the last month. Anne had just begun the process of reporting her abuser, a current SBC pastor and convention leader, to law enforcement. That investigation process is ongoing. We are refraining at this time from naming the pastor at the request of child sex crimes investigators.


Posted May 10, 2018






From Anne's story on her Go Fund Me page:

If you read any of my books or my blog, you know that I was sexually abused in 1996, when I was just 16 years old. The man who did this was a 25-year-old seminary student and youth pastor in the Southern Baptist Convention. You also did know I did not recognize it as abuse until I was his age in 2005. The day after I recognized it as abuse, I went to a church counselor within my SBC church where I worked who told me to work on my forgiveness and that to do anything about it would do more harm than good to the body of Christ, the church. I followed that counsel and that is what I did. 

A year later, in 2006, at the suggestion of my counselor, I wrote my abuser a letter saying I forgave him for what happened. He never responded. I felt somewhat free but constantly haunted by flashbacks of the experience triggered by things that reminded me of him. 

I began writing more about the experience of forgiving him for my local church newsletter and as a result, I had a friend come to me with her own story in 2007. Since we both were in the same denomination, I told my friend where my abuser worked–in a position of leadership within one of the many autonomous organizations in the SBC. I did not know her father worked with the same organization. She told her father who in turn told the organization.

That organization confronted my abuser with this and he denied it. They conducted an investigation that lasted months. I had to tell them every detail of what happened. I did not know then, but what I experienced was revictimization. At one point, my body went into shock during the investigation. 

The internal investigation within the SBC concluded that this man DID sexually abuse me, a child, when he was 25. 

Even though I knew this man was still working at a large church, I was under the impression he was terminated from the position with this organization. 

On March 20, 2018, when I asked this organization directly, I learned he was not terminated and was given a chance to resign. I then asked the legal counsel for this investigation if they reported it to law enforcement, as is mandatory in Texas. They did not because they did not believe that is what I wanted. What I wanted doesn’t matter. 

It is and was required by law for them to report it. The law says this is a felony: indecency with a child of at least five counts. I remember five times specifically, but I am sure there are more. Yet they did not report it.

This man presently serves in a position of leadership with more stature and responsibility than before. When, over the course of the last decade since the internal investigation, I asked how it was possible, I was told to “let it go” because to dwell on it or to desire what the SBC termed “reconciliation” (what the law and what I consider is justice) would cause me more harm than good.

In 2010, I was diagnosed with PTSD because of this abuse and was hospitalized at a trauma-specific psychiatric hospital for a month to work on healing from this and other issues that stemmed from it. This treatment was incredibly effective and allowed me to write and speak and engage as you know me. It allowed me to find healing and to find me again. It allowed me to share that hope and healing with others during my tenure as a religious writer and speaker.

When I learned this crime was not reported, I reported it. I reported what happened to CPS on March 23, 2018 and made a police report on April 4, 2018. On both occasions, within 24 hours, the authorities followed up with me and are pursuing this man for a criminal investigation. They said they don’t care if it happened 22 seconds, 22 months, or 22 years ago. It’s a felony and justice needs to be served. I have been working diligently with the crimes against children (CAC) unit task force of this police department over the last six weeks. I had no idea the trauma would resurface as it has. I even joked with some of the detectives about how much counseling I had; I thought I would be okay.

I have never been so wrong in my life.

This experience has shaken me to my core. I am eternally grateful for my the CAC unit, the DA, and others involved and am grateful for all they have done and continue to do. However, in working with them, I have had to re-live many moments of my abuse. I knew this was a risk but one that I am willing to take. I’ve also suffered from the shame and guilt for NOT reporting this sooner because I realize there are likely other victims that I could have saved if I would have gone to the authorities first and not the church.

The courage it took to come forward to law enforcement may be admirable, but I now understand why more victims do not come forward. My anxiety has rendered me a shell of who I was. There have been many days in the last month where I cannot leave my bed, where I am medicated to the max just so I don’t return to the level of shock and dissociation I have previously experienced. I went to a short-term psychiatric hospital. I explored a partial hospitalization program locally. I have been faithfully seeing a psychiatrist since even before I went to the police. I thought I was prepared to handle this, but my level of re-experience trauma is beyond stable.

It breaks my heart beyond words to hear our 21-month old daughter playing in our living room with her dad or her grandma while I stay in our bedroom unable to move. Every time I hear “Mama?” and the response, “Mama’s sleeping” makes me not want to continue living. Please know I am safe. I am not suicidal although I have had suicidal ideations and that is why I am seeking this help urgently. I am afraid if I do not get the help I need soon, I will never get me back again. My daughter will never have her whole mama and my husband will never have the woman he married back.

After talking at length with counselors, my family, my spiritual family and law enforcement, we have concluded that I need to be stabilized in an inpatient trauma facility. Instead of going to the hospital I went to in 2010, we have decided that Onsite’s Residential 30-day Trauma Program in Tennessee is the right place for me to find this healing my heart and mind so desperately need. I will start treatment on Tuesday, May 15, 2018.

Before this all happened, Tim and I were saving to buy a house so that we can give our daughter a safe neighborhood to live and learn and love in. We had just paid our down payment on our house which now only leaves us with a little bit of savings when all of this happened. We will be using what money we have to help pay for treatment, but the total cost for the 30 days is $28,000. They are willing to work with me on this cost, and I want to let them know I am fully invested in my treatment and they deserve to be paid for the necessary and exceptional work they do.

I am asking for help. For any support you can provide.  That doesn't necessarily mean money, but money is needed. 

I think the SBC and the organizations for which this man worked, and the man personally should be held responsible for paying for this treatment and any other treatment I need for the rest of my life. However, the statute of limitations for the civil part of my abuse is long gone. I can not sue them for treatment costs.

I have pushed Tim, my best friends, and my advocacy group so far back against asking for help publicly. It seems opportunistic and wrong to me, but I have been assured this is the right thing to do and so I trust those that are thinking with a clearer mind than mine.

We can contribute $2,000 to this out of our own money. I need to raise $26,000 to cover the cost of the treatment. The cost of transportation, the cost of childcare, the cost of my husband having to take off from work, the cost of me losing work...these are all costs we can absorb, although they are a sacrifice. 

The cost of treatment for me is beyond reach for us, and so I ask your help. So that you know your money is going to pay for this treatment and that alone, I will provide every donor with my final statement from the hospital when my treatment is complete. You can donate through this page, through personal check, or even directly to Onsite. 

You all have given so much of yourselves to me and my family through the years and I pray this does not feel as if I am taking advantage of you.

Thank you for reading this, and for your prayers, and if you can, your donation.

With love,

Anne Marie Miller

Author of Mad Church Disease (by Anne Jackson), Permission to Speak Freely (by Anne Jackson), Lean on Me, and 5 Things Every Parent Needs to Know About Their Kids and Sex

Former Blogger at FlowerDust.net, AnneMarieMiller.com

**I have been asked by law enforcement to not publicly reveal this person's name to protect the integrity of this investigation.



As Anne mentions in her story, the internal investigation within the SBC concluded that this man sexually abused her as a child when he was 25 and a seminary student in Texas. He was allowed to resign his position with the SBC organization when the abuse was discovered. He then obtained a new job shortly after as a pastor at a large Southern Baptist Church. From there he moved on to his current, prominent position with the SBC in another state. Key individuals in the SBC are aware of his history of child sex abuse. I have seen the 300 page transcript from the internal investigation that concluded that this pastor sexually abused Anne. The leaders of this investigation never reported this abuse to police as required by Texas law. They covered it up and told a broken, hurting young woman to "let it go." 

I was very concerned and disturbed today when I discovered that he appears to be teaching youth at his current church. Dee and I feel morally obligated to do what we can to shine the light of truth and knowledge about this man. We have informed a pastor at this abuser's current church about our plans to write this post. 

We hope and pray that Anne will continue to heal. We hope that she can see justice done. We hope other kids will be protected from her abuser. It's time for action to protect kids. Words and policies are meaningless if not accompanied by action. 

Pastor Davey Blackburn says he and his church are an "overnight success" after the murder of his wife and unborn baby

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Pastor Davey Blackburn :: A Conversation from Fresh Life Church on Vimeo.













Anonymous said...
Davey posted on Snapchat that he had been telling his story all over the world this last weekend. He was at his Uncle's church where his interview was going to be played Sunday across several campuses. Resonate had over 300 people in attendance and Fresh Life was also playing it's video interview with Davey all over it's many campuses. He is on a narcissistic high this weekend, indeed.

He is confident, forceful and seems to think he has replaced Jesus in the modern evangelistic church but poor thing just can't stop stuttering when discussing the morning of November 10th. You know the morning, where the invisible Amanda finally shows up in the story in a pool of blood and still breathing.

http://freshlifechurch.com/series/single.php?id=81&tm=734

DB:"Yeah, uh, it was a Tuesday morning. Um, most Tuesday mornings are my long day uh at least during this season of life and so I'd wake up, go to the gym super early. Um, so this particular Tuesday morning, woke up about 4:30, spent some time in the word. Um, I remember um, actually, uh I remember sitting there at my couch and for some reason having this sense of praying over the protection of my family and uh Lord just please protect Amanda, please protect Little Evie, uh, make this pregnancy healthy and just spending some time there and, and grabbed my gym clothes, left for the gym and um, uh came back an hour and half maybe two hours later and I walked into my living room and found my, my wife face down in, uh, a pool of blood and um, she was still breathing but she was unconscious and uh in that moment and you know with, with with trauma and with uh, uh uh a tragedy and be being present in that, your world freezes and goes in fast forward all at the same time and um and so I'm panicking but, but, but going ok thinking that something had just gone wrong with the pregnancy maybe uh that, that everything was going to be fine if we just get Amanda to the hospital um. Levi interupts: "So your calling 911." DB: "calling 911, trying to." Levi: "pray" DB: "Exactly, the whole thing, the whole time the only thing I could do was say Dear Jesus, please. Dear Jesus, please. Dear Jesus please. Dear Jesus please. Levi: So it's bubbling up within you. DB: Exactly" um, I remember the E, EMS got there, um, and I felt completely out of control. Levi: "So you thought this was a premature birth or some sort of event?"DB: I thought some yeah exactly, something was going on, but I was sitting there with her waiting on the uh,paramedics,my, my mind was taking (snaps fingers)snapshots of the things in the room that were out of place and so I remember being able to recall that later when the investigators came to ask me about what was going on you know, how, how I found her." Levi: So, it wasn't a pregnancy, what had happened? Davey: "So, what had happened was someone had broken into our house and uh there were three gunshot wounds, um in Amanda and one was in her head. And so, um, I didn't find that out until we got to the hospital and so um, my world just kind of froze right there and um, um honestly, um, the family comes in and were all sitting around her hospital bed and the only thing we could think to do because we were completely out of control. Control is one of the greatest illusions known to man.














Speaking last weekend at his Uncle Ken Murphy's church, Davey said "we're going to be publishing a collection of Amanda's [private] journals."


Interview with Davey Blackburn from Cypress Church on Vimeo.

Chris Conlee resigns from Highpoint Church: new statement from Jules Woodson

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Statement from Jules Woodson:
Over the past 6 months, since I originally went public with my story, and through the resignations of the other 3 pastors involved, Steve Bradley of StoneBridge Church has refused to acknowledge or be held accountable for any wrong doing to include his failure to report my assault to law enforcement. 

As #ChurchToo stories continue to pop up in headlines nationwide, (i.e. Bill Hybels, Frank Page, Paul Pressler, Mark Aderholt, to name a few,) people are beginning to understand how damaging and traumatizing clergy sexual abuse can be...It is a gross abuse of power that violates victims physically, emotionally and spiritually. However, churches continue to minimize abuse by handling reports internally and with toxic theology that focuses on cheap grace and forgiveness over accountability and justice.
 

My goals in continuing to speak out are not self motivated for pity or attention but instead, to encourage other abuse victims who have been shamed and silenced by the church, to know that they are not alone. I want my story to help educate others and effect positive change in how the church handles abuse and treats victims.
 

I think Chris Conlee's resignation was a necessary step and I'm grateful he is no longer in the pulpit for now though I am confused as to why it took 6 months for Highpoint to realize this. I also feel that the leaders missed an important opportunity yesterday to affirm to the world that in moving forward, they will be a church that no longer tolerates abuse and will become a safe and supportive place for all victims. Instead, they were vague about the resignation in the official statement they released and told reporters who reached out that they were not commenting.


The New York Times:I Was Assaulted. He Was Applauded.


 

 

 

Abuse survivor Brooks Hansen also spoke out after Chris Conlee's resignation:


"Let it go": Southern Baptist Mission Organization, IMB, tells child sex abuse victim

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Fort Worth Star Telegram: Southern Baptist officials knew of sexual abuse allegations 11 years before leader's arrest

I collaborated with Dee Parsons on her new post at The Wartburg Watch about this story. Read more here.









  



Another fired Southern Baptist International Mission Board missionary doing church youth ministry and missions in the SBC

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Elliott Freeman

According to his bio on the Meridian University staff pageElliott Freeman graduated from the University of Oklahoma and received his Mdiv from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary.  He and his wife, Leslie, served as missionaries for 6 years in southeast Asia.  Elliott, Leslie and their 4 children are now members of First Baptist Church Sapulpa Oklahoma.



Meridian University is a biblical training school for missions founded by Ralph Speas and Tom Elliff. Meridian University is located on the second floor of First Baptist Church Sapulpa.
Tom Elliff served the International Mission Board, first as Senior Vice President for Spiritual Nurture and Church Relations from 2005-2009, then as President from 2011-2014. Tom served pastorates in Arkansas, Texas, Colorado and Oklahoma, and as an IMB missionary in Zimbabwe. Tom also served as president of the SBC Pastors Conference and two terms as president of the Southern Baptist Convention.


Meridian University Board of Directors


Records received by The Sapulpa Messenger show that Elliott Freeman (full name Preston Elliott Freeman) served with the IMB in Southeast Asia from September 13, 2006 to his termination dated July 6, 2012. 
Elliff was originally inaugurated as IMB President in 2011. Under his tenure, in July 7, 2012, the IMB FIRED an IMB missionary serving from FBC Sapulpa.  So abrupt was his termination that his family had no time to gather their belongings.  He was perp-walked off the mission field in China and instructed that he was banned forever from serving in the IMB.  His personnel letter, which was placed into the hands of The Sapulpa Messenger, can be seen below:

The Sapulpa Messenger shared with me the email exchanges from January 2016 with the IMB and a concerned FBC Sapulpa member. The member was inquiring about Freeman's termination from the IMB and concerns that his termination was due to issues of sexual misconduct, since Freeman would be involved with kids in the church youth ministry. 





The concerned church member received a reply from Roger Haun, director of personnel at the IMB. Roger stated that "if there is an end of service for reasons such as you state, all inquiries about that individual are handled by our Executive Assistant to the President, Dr. Clyde Meador." At the time of the email exchanges, Meador was executive assistant to then and current IMB president David Platt. Clyde Meador retired from the IMB in May 2016. 

The church member stated that the inquiry was for concerns that Elliott Freeman was terminated from the IMB for "sexual misconduct." Roger Haun's reply confirmed that David Platt's executive assistant Clyde Meador should handle this inquiry since it involved "end of service" for "reasons such as you state." The stated reason was "sexual misconduct."

Clyde Meador, executive assistant to IMB president David Platt, replied to the email about Elliott Freeman. He confirmed that Elliott Freeman was terminated by the IMB for "failure to maintain a lifestyle in keeping with the expectations of missionaries of the International Mission Board." He added that to "explain further the lifestyle issues, I would need a written authorization from Mr. Freeman to share that information with you."



Social media posts confirm that terminated missionary Elliott Freeman is involved with the youth ministry at FBC Sapulpa. His father Mitch Freeman is on staff at the church as the children's pastor. Did Elliott Freeman's termination due to issues of sexual misconduct involve sexual abuse of kids or vulnerable people? If so, has this been reported to law enforcement to be investigated? Did the IMB conduct another internal investigation like in the case of fired IMB missionary Mark Aderholt who was recently arrested for child sex crimes?

The student pastor at FBC Sapulpa is Keno King.


Post by FBC Sapulpa youth pastor Keno King. Elliott Freeman is circled by Watchkeep.




Elliott Freeman training students at FBC Sapulpa


























Prominent NYC megachurch, Redeemer Church, quietly fired pastor David Kim for sexual abuse: a survivor shares her story

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I’m sharing my story to warn people and reach out to other victims.

Trigger Warning: Sexual Abuse

Note: Yesterday, August 1, an email was distributed to the entire community at Redeemer Presbyterian Church and Redeemer City to City concerning the termination of one of its former pastors, David Kim. This email refers to “an individual who made serious allegations of inappropriate sexual conduct by David approximately 17 years ago, when she was a college student and David was the founding director of a campus ministry at her university.” I am that individual. In light of this email and the fact that I believe it gives an inaccurate impression of what happened, I feel compelled to share my story now.

When I was a college student at Princeton in 2001, i was sexually violated by a campus ministry leader, David Kim. I met David in fall 2000. I was a new Christian and had started attending Manna Christian Fellowship, where David was Executive Director. I met with him several times for spiritual guidance. In the spring 2001, I was alone off campus working on my thesis. David showed up at the house where I was staying. He said he was going to study with me, and I believed him. However, he had other intentions. 

First, he started rubbing my shoulders, but then he quickly progressed to touching all over my body, under my clothes, lying on top of me, and holding me really tight pressed up against his body. As this was happening, I went into shock and don’t remember much until the next day. My memory of what happened that night is in pieces, and a lot of pieces are blurry or blocked out. I was shocked, scared and confused. I trusted David as a spiritual leader who was teaching me about God. I never thought of him as anything else, and I couldn’t reconcile the man who many students revered with the man who was assaulting me. 

The next day David asked how I felt about the previous night. I expressed distress and explicitly told him I felt uncomfortable, conflicted and confused. I described two voices in my head: one screaming at me that what he was doing was wrong and dangerous and I should run; the other telling me that David was trustworthy and wouldn’t do anything wrong. His response to my distress was: “Well, nothing happened,” and he prayed with me. Once he knew he could do what he wanted and get away with it - he manipulated me into trusting him and not telling on him - he did what he wanted. He behaved inappropriately towards me multiple times until I graduated and moved to Texas.

This was never a consensual relationship. I was a new Christian, new to Manna, and a college student. David was a campus ministry leader and the first person who ever really taught me about God. I trusted him as a spiritual leader, and he used that position of trust to betray and abuse me. 

By 2005, I had become immensely troubled by what David had done to me, and I was worried that he was doing the same thing to other girls. I sought help reporting David from a highly-respected, professional “Christian” counselor in Dallas, Daren Martin. After telling Daren about the PTSD symptoms I’d been experiencing, I told him what David had done to me. Daren’s response was: “What’s the big deal?” He said I was overreacting and that David hadn’t done anything wrong. He advised me: “Ask David if he has feelings for you.”
Since Daren was no help, I called David and confronted him by myself. His reaction was: “Who did you tell?!” I said I’d told a counselor. He freaked out and was mad that I had talked to anyone about it. All he cared about was that his secret was out. I was not at all equipped to handle confronting him by myself, and it didn’t go well, but I knew he needed to be held accountable. 

David reported to no one. He was the sole leader of Manna. There was no one above him for me to report him to. He was very resistant to the idea of accountability and kept making excuses. Finally, he agreed to talk to a local pastor. Our agreement, as I understood it, was that he would confess what he did to the pastor and the pastor would know what to do. A week or so later, he called and told me he had talked to the pastor. He also recommended I read a book about shame. I naively believed he had actually confessed to the pastor.

Shortly after my confrontation with David, I received a call from Daren’s office saying that he was no longer seeing clients. No explanation was given. I heard elsewhere that he had been caught sexually exploiting a client, among others. The Texas Department of State Health Services website confirms that Daren Martin surrendered his license for reasons “Related to sexual exploitation of a client.” This explains his horrendous counsel and failure to help me report David. Daren was a sex predator too.

Daren and David both gaslighted me. They both tried to manipulate me into believing that the sexual and spiritual abuse I had suffered was “nothing,” that I was overreacting, that it wasn’t even wrong. Around the same time, I disclosed that I had been sexually violated by David to three women at my church. By then, my health was rapidly failing, and I believed I had done as much as I could at the time.

In the aftermath of the abuse and my attempt to report and confront David, I struggled with a myriad of debilitating health problems: PTSD, breast cancer, Lyme disease, neuro-immune disease, migraines, chronic pain, etc. I had to withdraw from school three times and quit a job and volunteer work, all due to illness related to trauma. In contrast, David was rewarded with increasing power and success in his ministry career. He continued in his role as Executive Director of Manna Christian Fellowship. He also became the Director of Gotham Fellowship at Redeemer Presbyterian Church in NYC, the Executive Director of the Center for Faith and Work at Redeemer Presbyterian Church, and the Vice President of the Center for Faith and Work at Redeemer City to City. https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-kim-8135289

The recent outpouring of stories of sexual abuse and assault triggered memories of my own abuse and reminded me that there was never any justice in my case. I didn’t know what consequences, if any, David had ever faced for abusing his power and exploiting a student under his care.I met with the pastor who David had supposedly talked to in 2005. I asked if David had ever confessed to him. He said no. However, as soon as the presbytery told David about my report in May, David immediately called the pastor and convinced him that he had met with him years ago to discuss accountability, but he never told him what he did or to whom “to protect Jen.”

On April 30, I met with two pastors from the metro New York presbytery (governing body comprised of pastors and leaders of local churches in a region) and gave them a detailed account of the abuse both in writing and via video conference. They began forming a commission - a group of all male presbytery members who have no experience or training in investigating sexual abuse allegations - to do an internal investigation involving one of their own pastors. They asked me if I was willing, if they decided to have their own trial, “to testify before the commission, which would include answering questions by whoever would represent the defendant?” I told them that the process they outlined is incompatible with addressing sexual abuse allegations and would be re-traumatizing, and that I decided to go directly to Redeemer with my report instead.

On May 15, I notified the Director of HR for Redeemer Churches and Ministries and Redeemer City to City that I had been sexually violated by David Kim when I was a student and he was a campus ministry leader. Five times I requested an independent investigation by qualified investigators to determine if there were other victims. Five times they denied my request. They did not listen to my concerns. Instead they tried to control the process to protect themselves. Ultimately, Redeemer City to City quietly terminated David without informing anyone as to why. On June 6, the HR Director emailed me to say that David was no longer employed there and that “Our involvement in this matter has concluded.” I have emails documenting all my correspondence with the HR Director as well as the presbytery.

At the time Redeemer City to City (CTC) “concluded” their involvement on June 6, there was no investigation. No one notified the thousands of young adults this man has influenced in over two decades as a pastor and campus ministry leader. I questioned how many other victims there might be and how many other people have tried to report abuse at Redeemer and been treated like I was? 

On July 25, I shared a short summary of my experience and concerns with a limited audience on facebook. My post quickly spread to Redeemer. On August 1, I received a copy of an email that was distributed to the Redeemer and CTC communities indicating that they have reconsidered the way they mishandled my report. The email reveals that the individual who reported David was a female student in Manna 17 years ago. There are only a small number of people who fit that description, so I decided to identify myself and address some concerns I have with the information presented. 

The email states that when CTC confronted him, “David was forthcoming and, while he disputed several specific claims, did admit to having inappropriately crossed boundaries with the college student while he was a in a position of ministerial leadership... CTC and Redeemer HR... obtained additional third-party information that corroborated David’s acknowledgement of inappropriately crossing boundaries with the student.” I adamantly oppose the use of the phrase “inappropriately crossed boundaries” to describe what David did to me. That is a gross understatement. David targeted, groomed, assaulted, abused, gaslighted and silenced me. He used his position of spiritual authority to deceive and exploit me. And when I practically begged him to come clean in 2005, he again duped and silenced me. I assume he did not disclose his behavior to Redeemer when he was hired or to the PCA when he was ordained. He has not been “forthcoming.” His deliberate deceitfulness demonstrated over time is even more disturbing to me than the assault. 

While I’m encouraged that Redeemer and CTC appear to be moving towards greater transparency and better handling of reports, I’m discouraged at how long it has taken to move in that direction. Their initial response to me was wrong. Their email did not acknowledge that. And I still wonder how many others have received similar treatment or been deterred from reporting at all over the years. Moreover, no one has informed the Manna community, and they need to know. This happened to me when I was a student and David was a single, young man leading a campus ministry by himself with no oversight or accountability. 

Churches should be safe places for victims of sexual abuse to be heard and supported. Far too often, they are the places of abuse, and they are more committed to self-protection and silencing victims than to honesty and caring for those who have been harmed. The damage this causes is immense. For me, the abuse I suffered - both initially and when I first tried to report and confront him - destroyed my health and my life. The cost to me - physically, spiritually, emotionally, financially, relationally - is immeasurable. I still struggle with PTSD from it. I am compelled to speak out because I know I’m not the only one, and other victims need to know they are not alone. #MeToo #ChurchToo

David Kim is the founding director of Manna Christian Fellowship at Princeton University. 
Rev. David H. Kim is the founding director of Manna and has served at Princeton University for the past 17 years. During his time at Princeton, David developed this ministry to focus on how the gospel renews both private and public worlds. He is also currently on staff with Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Manhattan serving as the director of the Gotham Fellowship a nine-month Fellows program for professionals. David has degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, Westminster Theological Seminary, Princeton Theological Seminary, and is currently working towards a D.Min at Fuller Theological Seminary. He is an ordained minister of the PCA. He is married to Jane who he met during his time at Princeton.
Here is the cached version of Manna Christian Fellowship's "Advisors" page as it appeared on Jul 3, 2018. 


 David Kim's biography listed on the Ei Forum NYC website in 2014:
Executive Director of Center for Faith & Work, oversees all the ministries of the Center for Faith & Work as Executive Director and is the Pastor of Faith and Work of Redeemer. Prior to this role, David served as the Director of the Gotham Fellowship, developing and teaching its intensive curriculum while providing spiritual direction. Prior to joining CFW in 2007, David was a Chaplain at Princeton University, where he also served as the Founder and Executive Director of Manna Christian Fellowship for over 12 years. 


The Center for Faith and Work (CFW) is "the cultural renewal arm of the Redeemer Presbyterian Church in NYC, founded to equip, connect, and mobilize our church community in their professional and industry spheres toward gospel-centered transformation for the common good," as described at E & I Forum NYC.

Redeemer Presbyterian Church, with about 5,000 members, was founded in 1989 by pastor Timothy Keller. It is a member of the PCA, Presbyterian Church in America. Keller stepped down as senior pastor of Redeemer in July 2017. He is still actively involved in the ministries of Redeemer Church according to a story in Christianity Today
This move does not mean retirement for Manhattan’s most popular evangelical pastor and apologist; instead, Keller will work full-time teaching in a partner program with Reformed Theological Seminary and working with Redeemer’s City to City church planting network.

Redeemer City to City is a ministry of Redeemer Church that "prayerfully recruits, trains, coaches and resources leaders who start new churches and church networks in global cities." 

David Kim has two books listed on Amazon: Glimpses of a Greater Glory and 20 and Something, the latter published by Barna Group.






David Kim protected his Twitter account shortly after I shared Jen's story in a tweet yesterday in which I tagged him. 















Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary professor expresses concern that other kids are at risk for sexual abuse: Eddie Struble update

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From my 2011 post regarding sexual abuse concerns about Southern Baptist music minister/church leader, Eddie Struble:
A few months ago I was made aware of specific concerns about a minister credibly accused of the sexual abuse and stalking of at least one teenage boy of which I am aware. This music minister, Eddie Struble, was formerly on staff at Second Baptist Church, a Baptist megachurch in Houston, with a membership of more than 53,000. He left that position a couple of years ago and sometime after that was hired as the interim music minister at Humble Area First Baptist Church but is no longer on staff there, as of October 2010, and has moved to the Dallas/Fort Worth area. He also worked as a vocal coach atHits Theatre in Houston. Prior to working at Second Baptist, he was on staff at Bellevue Baptist Church in Memphis and Idlewild Baptist Church in Tampa.
I also have a few other posts about Eddie Struble.

Former Second Baptist Church of Houston minister accused of child sex abuse: more information and more questions

Amy, 

 Saw your blog on sexual abuse of children and teens and wholeheartedly support it, provided everything checks out. In the case of ES, everything said about him preying on a boy, a young man really (*of 16/17) is true. 

*editor's note: the Houston police department report states that the abuse began on 12/01/06 and continued until 10/15/09 which I believe would correspond to said victim's age as 14-17 years old.

Classmates know that he visited the boy in question daily at his home until the wee hrs.

 Many of us knew ES both from church where he had an impressive position as director of a large choir and orchestra, and also from the school that our own kids went to, where he liked to hang out at games. He knew almost all of the students there, was very 'huggy' with them, had their cell phone numbers etc. When the pastor was told about the above situation, the matter was referred to relevant church staff, who said they had ways of investigating such matters and to leave it to them. 

ES was removed from office somehow, but the church never reported back. When asked, they answered that 'it was true', as I suspect the police reports you show testify to. So the voicemail on your web site by Second is pertinently untrue, and a way of the corporate church to avoid legal responsibility since they did not report the matter (possibly to protect the family and ironically, feeding the rumor mill that keeps bringing up these questions).

[voicemail mentioned above embedded here]


 This had immediate unintended consequences, namely that ES applied to schools in the area, including ours. Luckily our kids' school was aware, even somehow responsible, since ES had actually traveled with the school's sports teams on a road trip or two (while not employed by them nor having any kids at the school himself, can you believe it!?! Our kids had been very aware of ES inclinations by then (the investigation by Second took 2 months) and had warned the classmates and the school staff, who by then became very concerned about the school's reputation and role in the matter).

 I believe he was finally served with a restraining order by the school since he kept showing up and contacting kids by phone and on Facebook etc. 

 A supporter 

Denying and Enabling Child Sex Abuse

Texas is a state in which it is mandatory for any citizen to report known or suspected cases of child abuse. Texas is also a state in which it is a crime for clergy to have sexual relations with a congregant. 
I was contacted last week by a former member of Birchman Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas. I will refer to her as Catherine (pseudonym). She is very concerned because she is aware of the abuse allegations about Eddie Struble and was compelled to contact me after she learned that Eddie is seeking a committee chair position with Texas Christian Homeschool Prom. I responded to Catherine asking for further information. She informed me that she had spoken to Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary professor Charles Carpenter about her concerns. Charles is a former Birchman Baptist member who allegedly witnessed an sexual incident involving Eddie Struble and a teen boy from Birchman Baptist Church. 

I emailed professer Carpenter last Friday with my concerns. I urged him to make a report to police. He replied a few times to my emails. His last reply was in response to my questions, "What happened? What did you witness?"

According to Catherine, Charles Carpenter witnessed Eddie Struble behaving inappropriately (kissing and fondling) with a teen boy who had recently turned 18, but there are concerns that grooming behavior had been going on for perhaps a couple of years. Eddie was a church leader in the music ministry, so he was in a position of trust. Eddie is 45 years old and married with kids. 

Emails from Charles Carpenter:







Note that Charles Carpenter states that "the person Eddie was with was not a minor nor did Eddie know him as a minor," yet in the same email, he states that he spoke to "concerned parents who have vested interest in this manner." He also states that he approached pastors Bob Pearle and Joey Tombrella "about what happened."Bob Pearle is the senior pastor at Birchman Baptist Church. 
I agree that others are at risk; and to prevent this I followed the biblical mandate to approach and explain to the pastoral staff (Bob Pearl and Joey Tombrella) what happened. If they decide to sit on the information that is there decision; and they may have information that I don’t. They may even be supporting and rebuking in ways I am not privy to. From what I gather they have taken some precautions. As to whether or not it is effective I don’t know.
Last Friday I also recieved a text from a former minister's wife from Birchman. I had called her husband about the concerns about Eddie Struble a few years ago when he was on staff at Birchman Baptist. She had asked Catherine for my number to contact me.



I have known about abuse allegations of boys by Eddie Struble since 2011 when I was contacted by some close friends who are former members of Second Baptist Church in Houston. My friends knew of the advocacy I had recently begun in an effort to expose and report a pedophile minister at my former church in Dallas, Prestonwood Baptist. I did some research and found the Eddie Struble police reports from 2009 and posted these on my blog. A few months later, I received a call from the mother of the victim contained in those reports. Eddie had abused her son for about 3 years, from age 14-17. A helpful youth pastor at their new church, after leaving Second Baptist, had helped them see that Eddie was a wolf in sheep's clothing. Eddie had even convinced the parents that he was a good influence and mentor to their son. They did the right thing rescuing their son and reporting the abuse. I do believe that if the victim (now an adult) were to decide in the future he is ready to proceed with prosecution, he could contact police, give them his statement and continue with his report.

Over the years it seems that so many people have had very credible, serious concerns about abuse by Eddie. Some even know victims personally. Please, if you suspect or know of abuse, call police immediately or utilize the cyber tip line reporting tool at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. I believe that there is a trail of Baptist churches that have handled these allegations about Eddie internally and failed to make a mandatory report to law enforcement. It is not the job of pastors to investigate abuse allegations. That must be done by law enforcement professionals after a report is made. I have reported the information shared with me about this abuse.


There are police reports from Houston police department and a corresponding report from Spring Valley police department











Former children's minister at The Village Church indicted for 2012 child sexual assault in TX at church camp

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This is is very concerning:
We anticipate and understand questions about why Matt Tonne left staff and whether this case had anything to do with his transition. We removed Matt from The Village Church staff in June of 2018 for other reasons, and we communicated those specific issues to our staff, as well as to members and volunteers in his ministry department at that time.
Were there red flags that The Village Church has not disclosed as the reason for children's minister Matt Tonne's termination in the summer of 2018? According to a Facebook post from Matt Tonne's wife Kristen Tonne, Matt was asked to leave the staff at The Village Church because of "some sin reasons." 
So back to the past few months, some not pretty things happened. My husband was asked to leave the staff @ TVC after being on staff there for over 11 years because of some sin reasons I won’t get into on social media. {if you want to know, just ask us. Come straight to us. We are an open book}.


She also posted in September 2018 that she had almost lost her husband Matt to suicide in May 2018 after "months of suffering so hard." 



Kristin shared that their family is now attending Valley Creek Church in Flower Mound, Texas. 





According to The Village Church statement, Matt Tonne turned himself in and is now out on bond. 



Along with Dee Parsons at The Wartburg Watch, I previously covered a disturbing case at The Village Church in which church leaders harassed a young woman who left their church and obtained an annulment from her husband whom she had reported for child pornography. 



The Village Church is a Southern Baptist megachurch with several locations in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. It is also part of the Acts 29 Network. The lead pastor is Matt Chandler who is president of Acts 29 Network. 

I received an email today from a longtime member at The Village Church with email communication information from May and June 2018 regarding Matt Tonne.

From: "Matt McCauley" 
Subject: Update Regarding Matt Tonne
Date: May 23, 2018 at 3:26:55 PM CDT

Kids Village volunteers and families, 
You are receiving this email because we love and care for you, and part of that care involves informing you of significant news directly affecting Kids Village and its staff. 
As of today, Matt Tonne is taking a leave of absence from staff for personal reasons. I’m sure this information raises questions, specifically regarding his care and how Kids Village will be affected. We ask that you extend trust to us, knowing that Matt’s Home Group, KV staff, and the Elders are caring for him and that Kids Village will continue to provide excellent programming for our elementary children. During Matt’s absence, we will be bringing in some temporary help for VBS, weekend services, and other needs in the elementary ministry. 
We are so grateful for Matt and his 11 years of service to The Village Church and know many of you have been blessed by his faithful work. We encourage you to pray for him and his family during this time. Additionally, we will be collecting cards to be delivered to Matt if you wish to write him a note of encouragement. You can drop your card or note off at the Kids Village check-in desk during services this weekend or next weekend. This will by far be the best and most helpful way of communicating with him. 
As always, if you have questions please feel free to contact us. Jenny Kisner and I are happy to hear from you by email, phone call, or in person. 
Grace,
Matt McCauley
Family Minister--The Village Church Flower Mound Campus 

The June 15, 2018 email from Matt Chandler to church members stated that Matt Tonne was removed from his position at the church as a result of an alcohol abuse problem.


Hello Kids Village Volunteers and Families, 
I need to give you a difficult update regarding Matt Tonne. I wish I could share this news in person, but due to the amount of people involved it's best to share this with you via email as an update to our earlier news about Matt's leave of absence. 
Last week we removed Matt from his role as associate elementary minister in Flower Mound. This decision is the result of an alcohol abuse problem and is heartbreaking for all of us. Matt's preference was for you to know the specific reason for his removal rather than receiving a vague and general update about it. 
We have offered ongoing care for Matt and his family as a Covenant Member of The Village. Our hope and prayer is that he finds complete freedom, and that this action will be a severe mercy that leads him to Christ for healing and hope. If you know Matt well, please feel free to encourage him. If you don't know him well, this isn't a good time to connect with him.  
In this transition, we have brought on Jenna Marshall and Jenni Hamm to assist us through VBS. 
We know this news may be difficult to hear because of Matt's faithfulness over the years. The Elders and Pastors prayerfully believe this is what is best for both the Tonne family and the Church. If you have questions about this news, or need help on how to share this news with your kids, please let me or Jenny Kisner know. Thank you for your prayers for the Tonne family and for us as we move forward.

Christ is All,
 
Matt Chandler

Matt Tonne's criminal trial date is pending.

Story in The Christian Post

Bill Hybels admits to purchasing and viewing child pornography in his book Christians in a Sex Crazed Culture

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Bill Hybels' book Christians in a Sex Crazed Culture was published in 1989 by Scripture Press Publications which was purchased by David C. Cook publishers. Cook is currently listed as the publisher for Hybels' book in which he admits to purchasing and viewing child pornography in the guise of research. This is criminal. All child pornography materials that Bill Hybels allegedly obtained needed to be immediately turned over to law enforcement.



  • Did Hybels or his assistant report to police the source from whom they obtained these criminal materials?
  • Did Hybels or his assistant turn over these materials to police?
  • Does Hybels still possess the videos?
  • Scripture Press Publications published the book in which he admitted to crimes of purchasing and viewing child pornography. The president at the time was David Hall. Scripture Press allowed this? Did they report Hybels’ crimes?
  • David C. Cook is now the publisher of this book. Does he know? If so, has he made a report to police? Why is this book still in publication?
As a pastor, Bill Hybels was not qualified, nor was he legally able to do “research” of child pornography. This is all kinds of disturbing, wrong and criminal.

I have made a report to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. 

New York Times: Bill Hybels built an iconic evangelical church outside Chicago. A former assistant says that in the 1980s, he sexually harassed her.
Bill 
hat in the 1980s, he sexually harassed her.




Former Highpoint Church pastor Chris Conlee allegedly fired for physical assault of female staff member

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According to a local, trusted source, Highpoint Churchin Memphis fired its founding pastor Chris Conlee for assaulting a female staff member. Instead of reporting the assault to the police, church leaders paid Conlee and another disgraced, sexually abusive pastor, Andy Savage, about $700,000 in severance pay, according to a church financial statement of activities.

This statement is only available to Highpoint Church trustees.


The "employee settlement expenses" are listed under Non-operating income (expense). Also listed are "professional consultation and legal fees of $251,019. 

At the time of the public release of Jules Woodson's story of sexual abuse by her then youth pastor, Andy Savage, Highpoint Church was a member of the Southern Baptist Convention. They have since removed their church from the convention. 

Did Highpoint Church elders tell the congregation that their financial donations were going to pay off abusive pastors?




Convicted child sex offender Cynthia Denise Stewart is music and worship director at a Southern Baptist church in San Antonio, TX

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In 2012, Cynthia Denise Stewart was sentenced to six years in prison in Texas for online solicitation of a child. She texted nude photos of herself to a 15-year-old boy and spurred illicit conversations on Facebook. Stewart was a counselor at an elementary school in the Judson Independent School District in San Antonio, Texas. Stewart was ordered by state District Judge Juanita Vasquez-Gardner to register as a sex offender.

*update: since my post went up, Denise has been editing her Facebook profile. I archived it here earlier today. 

Stewart, who worked at Olympia Elementary in Universal City, has been in custody since November, after parents of the boy approached authorities with printouts of their son's Facebook chats. In the online conversations, Stewart is seen telling him to delete all conversations because she could lose her job, court documents state.
Weeks after she was taken into custody, Judson trustees voted unanimously to fire her.
Under a plea agreement reached last month, Stewart pleaded no contest to online solicitation of a minor, a third-degree felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison, in exchange for prosecutors remaining silent on her application for probation.
At the defense's request, Vasquez-Gardner added later that she might “possibly” retain jurisdiction of the case, which would leave open the possibility for Stewart's early release from prison — at the judge's discretion — on shock probation in the next six months. Shock probation is a reduction in a sentence given after a person serves several months in prison to “shock” them into behaving lawfully.
Neither the teen nor his parents confronted Stewart during the hearing. But in a letter to the judge, the parents described the defendant as a child predator who used her friendship with the family and background in counseling to groom their son.
“Prior to our discovery, Cindy would often ask me about my children, specifically our 15-year-old,” the letter states. “We appreciated her concern, since she often reminded us that she is a counselor and knows how to motivate kids.”
The decision to approach law enforcement was difficult given the attention they knew the case would receive, the parents said.
“But we knew we couldn't live with her being in the school setting with children in the future,” they wrote.
Denise Stewart, according to her Facebook profile, currently works at Weidner Road Baptist Church in San Antonio, Texas as the music and worship director. Weidner Road is a member of the Southern Baptist Convention



Not Caring Well: Pioneer Drive Baptist Church on the arrest of Christian musician Jeff Berry

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Christian musician Jeff Berry was arrested yesterday in Tennessee.
A man known as a former church music leader in Texas was arrested on a fugitive from justice charge in Williamson County on Monday. Jeff Berry, 55, is behind bars on a $10 million bond. The Williamson County Sheriff’s Office booked him on a fugitive from justice charge. He’s being held for an indecency with child by contact charge, according to a sheriff’s office spokeswoman.
...
Court documents filed by Berry's wife in Williamson County Chancery Court accuse Jeff Berry of moving to various churches as a music leader and "molesting under-age boys over the years."
According to the affidavit, Berry's wife filed for divorce and said she spoke with parents from an Abilene church, who suggested that their son was sexually abused by Berry in middle school. She also detailed in court documents that the couple's son gave her the names of four different men who claim they were sexually abused by Berry when they were minors.
...
Berry also worked for World Vision in Franklin and has since been placed on administrative leave. 
KTXS reported that Berry is best known in Abilene as the worship leader at Grace Bible Study in the late 1990's. Berry is accused of sexually abusing a 14 year-old-boy in 1996 while working at Pioneer Drive Baptist Church and leading worship at church camps. Pioneer Drive is a Southern Baptist Church in Abilene, Texas. Jeff helped direct Grace Bible Study for 11 years.

Earlier today while researching Jeff Berry's connections in Texas, I discovered a page with his bio as a board member for Baylor University's Center for Christian Music. This page has since been removed. 




Jeff Berry received his MBA from Baylor University, and after teaching Economics and Entrepreneurship in the Business school at Baylor University, founded CrossWind Ministries in 1994. For 11 years, Jeff helped direct Grace Bible Study, a non-denominational bible-study for college students in Abilene. Starting with 50 students in 1994, Grace grew to over 1500 students attending the weekly gathering.
Over the years CrossWind developed into a multi-faceted ministry organization comprised of Jeff Berry Band, Curiously Strong Music Publishing, and Reality Weekends, an intensive discipleship weekend for students.
Berry and his band led in thousands of settings across the United States and in England, Germany, Turkey, South Africa and Scotland. For 3 years beginning in 2004, they began leading worship at The Heights Church in Dallas, TX as well as for Dallas Baptist University, while he was serving as an adjunct professor in their Music Business program.
According to his bio on the Baylor website, Jeff Berry led worship at The Heights Church in Richardson, Texas for 3 years beginning in 2004. The Heights is a Southern Baptist Church. 

Jeff Berry is very well connected to leaders in evangelical and Southern Baptist circles. In a blog post, he mentions his connection to Southern Baptist megachurch pastor and Acts 29 president Matt Chandler.
Worship was always one of the key ingredients along with great teaching over the years from Steve Hardin, Matt Chandler and Luke Norsworthy.     I have so many amazing memories over the years of our worship time –  of students transparently worshiping before their creator.

The Tennessean gives more information about Jeff Berry's career timeline: Property records show that Berry moved to Franklin, Tennessee in 2011 from Murphy, Texas. 

Pioneer Drive Baptist issued 2 statements about the arrest of Jeff Berry:
After KTXS broke news of the arrest, the church emailed a letter to the congregation.
In it, Pastor Stan Allcorn called Berry a friend. He asked people not to speculate until we know all the facts and to have compassion for all involved.
Email to the congregation
Dear Church Family,

On KTXS news last night it was reported that a former employee of Pioneer Drive Baptist Church, Jeff Berry, was arrested and jailed in Nashville, Tennessee, on a child sex crime. The alleged offense dates back to the mid-1990s in Abilene. Our employment records reflect that Jeff Berry was employed as a music intern at Pioneer Drive for nine months in 1985-86 and was re-hired for a similar position on September 1, 1995. He continued in this position until May, 1996.

Jeff Berry is the 55-year-old son of Pioneer Drive members, Russell and Paula Berry. We love this family deeply. Just as our church rejoices with fellow members in good times, we also stand beside them offering prayer and strength in difficult times. This is exactly what we will do for the Berrys. They represent the best of our church and we will remain by their side.

We also pray for the alleged victims. Our hearts go out to any and all who have ever been abused in this way and to their families as well. May God bring healing and peace to their minds and souls.

Jeff Berry is my friend. I love him as a Christian brother. We have served in revivals together on two occasions. I am praying earnestly for Jeff today and will continue to do so.

We do not have all the facts surrounding this situation. We do not know the full story. I would urge against speculation and for compassion toward all involved. I would also remind us that God can bring good and even victory out of the most troubling and tragic circumstances. Please join me in praying for Him to do so now.

Grace to you,

Pastor Stan
The statement to the media said "Pioneer Drive is committed to the safety of our children and does not take these matters lightly."
Full Statement to the Media
A former employee of Pioneer Drive Baptist Church, Jeff Berry, was arrested and jailed in Nashville, Tennessee, on a child sex crime. The alleged offense dates back to the mid-1990s in Abilene. Our employment records reflect that Jeff Berry was employed as a music intern at Pioneer Drive for nine months in 1985-86 and was re-hired for a similar position on September 1, 1995. He continued in this position until May, 1996.

Pioneer Drive is committed to the safety of our children and does not take these matters lightly. Our hearts go out to any and all who have ever been abused in this way and to their families as well. We pray for God to bring healing and peace to their minds and souls.

We fully intend to cooperate with any local authority and encourage others who have information regarding this circumstance to do so as well.
The statement emailed to the church congregation illustrates why it takes so long for victims of beloved ministers, especially those with elite connections, so long to come forward if they ever do. This is a textbook church response in how to discourage other victims from coming forward to police thereby enabling an alleged child sexual predator.












Another child sex abuse case disclosed at The Village Church Texas

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Last week, I was notified, along with other advocates, that The Village Church sent out an email to members at The Village Church Fort Worth campus notifying them of an important meeting taking place on Thursday night October 10. The email stated that the matter involved the student ministry. The language used seemed to me that this was abuse disclosure.


At the time of the meeting, I dialed into the announced teleconference number. A recorded message stated that the church teleconference was not available but to attend the upcoming church services on Sunday to hear the information. 

Blogger Anna Keith wrote about this case in a detailed post
On Sunday 10/13/19, according to a member who was present, the parents were informed that a children’s & youth volunteer by the name of Andy Landrum had confessed on Wednesday 10/9/19, to ‘having some inappropriate sexual contact with a child and also having tried to videotape children at his place of employment (a school). According to Mr. Landrum, no incidents occurred at The Village Church. The church immediately contacted CPS & the authorities.

 Andy Landrum was a volunteer for the last few years at The Village Church in the student ministry until his confession to staff last week. Anna Keith wrote in her post that Andy volunteered particularly on Wednesday nights.  He also led a small group of junior high boys (approx ages 12-13), along with TVC staff member Neal Batman, who is the Student Minister at the Fort Worth Campus. A parent whose son attended a youth retreat at The Village Church in 2016 reached out last week to Anna about a concerning issue that came up at the time. Student Minister Neal Batman and Andy Landrum hosted a group of boys for this retreat at their home where they were living together. Andy spoke openly with the boys at this retreat/sleepover about his struggle with pornography and invited the boys to talk to him if they were experiencing the same struggle. 

Andy previously wrote on his blog in 2015 about his addiction to pornography. That post has been deleted since Anna Keith wrote about it a few days ago. Only one post remains up on his blog. All posts prior to June 2019 have been removed.


Screenshot of Andy's blog on No Eden Elsewhere

Screenshot 10/17/19



The entire, now deleted blog post, on Andy's porn addiction can be viewed at No Eden Elsewhere.

Yesterday more information about Andy's confession was revealed. The emailed statement was also posted on TVC website. Notice that they now state that the confessed sexual abuse *does* involve someone from the church, contradicting their earlier assurances to parents that no one from TVC campuses was involved.


We want to make you aware of a situation regarding criminal sexual misconduct by a Fort Worth campus volunteer. 
Andy Landrum, a member of The Village Church Fort Worth and volunteer, has self-disclosed hidden sin that required his disqualification and removal from any volunteer ministry and involvement within The Village Church and any of its campuses.
The week of October 6, Andy had several meetings with elders and pastors of TVC Fort Worth. He revealed that he has attempted and acted on sexual sins and criminal acts of voyeurism at his former place of employment, as well as with one individual who attends The Village Church Fort Worth. 
Upon Andy’s confession, The Village Church promptly contacted Child Protective Services and the Fort Worth Police Department. His current and former places of employment have been notified, along with the one victim within TVC, who is being ministered to by the staff and pastors from our Fort Worth campus. As a volunteer with the Fort Worth Student Ministry, Andy attended ministry events that involved all TVC campuses, including The Village Church Denton, Northway Church, and Citizens Church. 
From the beginning, we have been proactively cooperating with law enforcement officials. If anyone has information about specific criminal offenses perpetrated by Andy, we urge you to contact Detective Andrew Owen at 817-392-4361. We will make you aware if any new information comes to light, as it pertains to TVC, via an update on our website. 
We desire to assist you as you process this information. We know this may be triggering or traumatizing for some individuals. If you need counseling resources, please reach out to our Director of Care, Summer Vinson Berger, who can refer you to specific places for care.


It was reckless in my opinion to have repeated the claim of a confessed child sexual predator in a statement initially emailed to parents that there were no victims from The Village Church. It is also very concerning that only current members have received notification. One former member whose son attended a sleepover retreat with Andy Landrum stated that she did not receive an email.



If you have any information about abuse by Andy Landrum or suspicion of abuse by Landrum or others, please make a report to police. The detective handling the Landrum case is Detective Andrew Owen at 817-392-4361 at the Fort Worth Police Department. You may also utilize the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children's cyber tipline

TVC does not state Landrum's current place of employment or where he was employed at the time of his confessed crime at his work. I found a link that mentions his employment in 2014 at the Fort Worth Independent School District









Andy Savage, confessed sexual abuser, starting a new church in Memphis

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I received a message yesterday from a local source in Memphis, Tennessee, that Andy Savage is starting a new church, Grace Valley Church. I was sent a link to Andy's message from an interest meeting with prospective new members. 



Andy Savage is a former pastor at Highpoint Church in Memphis who resigned in early 2018 after confessing to sexual assault of a teen girl who was a member of his youth group while he was on staff as a youth minister at a church in Texas. I wrote about Jules Woodson and her story here on my blog along with Dee Parsons at The Wartburg Watch.



According to a Friendly Atheist post on Patheos, a website for Grace Valley Church was launched on September 24, 2019. 
According to Whois, the website was created on September 24. This is been in the works since at least then. Which would mean it took Savage 18 months to go from leaving a church in disgrace after admitting to sexually assaulting a child… to starting a brand new church in the same city. (Not that their experiences were the same, but it took Ted Haggard nearly four years to begin a new church after he, too, resigned in disgrace. Mark Driscoll also took 18 months between resigning from one church and starting another.)






Jules Woodson issues statement in response to Andy Savage starting a new church

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Jules Woodson - Twitter

Andy Savage sexually assaulted me when I was 17 and he was my ordained youth pastor. He admits to sexually assaulting me. He admits that it was abuse of power.  Less than two years after this abuse was exposed, and he resigned from Highpoint Church, he has filed non-profit paperwork to plant a new church “Grace Valley Church.”

When Andy sexually abused me, two other pastors, Larry Cotton and Steve Bradley failed to oversee Andy’s repentance, and failed to teach Andy that he had forever disqualified himself as a pastor, according to 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 2 in the Bible. I have listened to Andy Savage’s speech to the potential members of “Grace Valley Church,” which was published online. Andy Savage is using manipulative approaches and what are considered “grooming” tactics to gain interest and support for his church.  In his speech, Andy appeals to vulnerable, broken people and broken lives who are in need of the gospel; he asks for people to share their secrets with him and the church; Andy chuckles while saying “I got my hands on the wrong thing” referring to his past sexual abuse of me.


While it is true that we are all sinners, that God’s grace is amazing and available to all of us – including Andy Savage – there is a difference between repentance and restoration to the body of Christ and restoration to being a pastor. A pastor who sexually assaults a minor in their care is who Jesus talks about in Luke 17. Morally, ethically, biblically, Andy Savage is not qualified to be a pastor. Because he has abused people when he was given a position of power, part of his repentance and restoration is to NOT be put into that position of power ever again.


When a trusted pastor appeals to people to be vulnerable and to share secrets, that can be a gift to help repentance and grow a person’s faith. These are the things that Andy asked of me when I was a child to groom me for sexual abuse. He is using the same method to start Grace Valley Church.


Twenty years ago, Larry Cotton and Steve Bradley supported Andy Savage.  Andy Savage is not starting Grace Valley Church without the help and support of others. Andy Savage and his supporters are setting a precedent within the church that men who have preyed upon the flock can still belong on the pulpit. This is dangerous, this is wrong and I believe that Andy’s message of “cheap Grace” leads people astray from the truth of God’s Word.


Media coverage of news about the launch of Grace Valley Church:


Baptist News Global
“Regarding this new church, it is very important to me that you help me maintain that this is not about me,” Savage said in the audio of a meeting reportedly held to gauge interest in moving forward with the launch of Grace Valley Church.
“Churches very easily become about their pastor, and I’m not going to do that,” Savage said. “I’m refusing to do it. I will not walk down that road. This is not about me. This has to be about what God is going to do in the lives of people who recognize they are in a valley. That’s what this is about, and that can’t be done by me, not by myself. If that vision captures your heart at all, then I would love for you to go on this journey with us.”
The blog that broke the story, Watch Keep, started out in 2010 with postings on things like favorite recipes and travel photos. That changed on Oct. 13, 2011, when Amy Smith wrote about her efforts to speak up and warn about her former youth music minister, John Langworthy, at Prestonwood Baptist Church in Dallas.
Christian Post

Commercial Appeal

Patheos

Fox 13 Memphis

The Wartburg Watch

Religion News Service

WMC5 Memphis





The systemic epidemic of sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention: Wes Feltner and passing the trash

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Wes Feltner is a Southern Baptist pastor currently at Berean Baptist Church in Minnesota where he has been since 2014. He is lead pastor of Preaching and Vision.  


I became aware of alleged sexual abuse by Wes Feltner yesterday upon reading the stories of two women who have come forward to tell their stories. Their abuse took place while Feltner was their youth pastor at First Southern Baptist Church in Evansville, Indiana. 

Megan's story

JoAnna's story 






Brought to the Light
Brought To The Light was created by two abuse survivors for victims and survivors, as well as a support tool for their friends and family navigating the aftermath of abuse.  After 17 years of guilt, anxiety, shame and blaming themselves, these two brave women have stepped up to share their stories with the intent to ‘bring darkness to the light’ and spread awareness of the abuse that sometimes happens inside the walls of churches, homes and workplaces, how to recognize it, find a voice and begin healing…

From Megan and JoAnna on why they are coming forward now...

WHY COME FORWARD NOW?

It’s been 17 years, why now?  Simply put—God’s timing.
Here are the events that unfolded in early October 2019 that reopened wounds and unleashed undealt with emotions from the seemingly distant past.
First Baptist Church of Clarksville, Tennessee was in search of a new lead pastor. When a local resident heard the name of their lead candidate, Wes Feltner, she felt compelled to share her knowledge of his past. Her sister was on a joint youth winter retreat in December 2002 with Joe Donahue’s and Wes Feltner’s youth groups. On the trip, two young women confided in her that they were in relationships with their youth pastor.
Wes Feltner’s candidacy was protested to the search committee, and Joe Donahue’s contact information was provided. The Pastor Search Committee chairman then asked Joe Donahue to reach out to the victims to see if they were willing to speak to the Chairman. Via Facebook, Joe reached out to JoAnna and Megan. Megan immediately deleted the friend request because she remembered Joe was Wes’ best friend in 2002. JoAnna responded, reached out to Megan, and both girls agree to talk with the chairman and submitted written statements to be shared with the committee.
Both JoAnna’s and Megan’s statements were provided to the Pastor Search Committee Chairman for First Baptist Church, Clarksville. Joe, concerned that the information was not being fully share with the entire pastor search committee, also shared the written statements with a committee member directly.
Even with the new information, it seemed as though the chairman was pushing Wes’ approval process forward.
An email response from the committee chairman seemed to attempt shaming the abuse victims into remaining quiet:
… At the core, it is important that you control your information. Don’t let anyone, not me and not these others, coax you to share this beyond what you and your husband decide to do.  You have more to lose than any of the rest of us.  In this search process, which is similar to a corporate hiring process, we scour the Internet for details.  You don’t likely want this situation to be what your kids and your future employers find at the top of the search about you, and I fear that Joe’s further publication of it would do just that. In modern day HR, and in society in general, people take sides in stories and there may be as many that point an accusing finger at you, even as inappropriate as that may be.
Again, I am sorry that through this search process we brought up this topic into your life.
Megan and JoAnna state that this is not the first time a church has been notified of abuse by Wes Feltner.  
2002: First Southern Baptist Church, Evansville, IN:  After the winter youth retreat, Pastor Don Moore met with the families of the victims—they were told they had “been duped” and that in order to “protect the church” they should not speak about what had happened.  Feltner “resigned” but was allowed to move on to another church without any known hinderances from the church.
2003: Oak Park Baptist Church, Jeffersonville, IN: Families and the wife of the Head of Deacons from First Southern Baptist Church in Evansville called to inform the church of the events that took place and that Oak Park should not hire Feltner; the church did not listen and he served there for over four years.
Around 2014: Berean Baptist Church, Burnsville, MN: Former Youth under Wes Feltner at First Southern Baptist Church spoke with the Executive Pastor at the time—it is unknown if any investigation was performed. 
The executive pastor at Feltner's current church, Berean Baptist, is Tony Manning.  

Why is Wes Feltner seeking to leave Berean Baptist Church now? He's a candidate for pastor at a smaller church, First Baptist Church Clarksville, Tennessee. According to a news story in the Star Tribune in 2017, Berean Baptist was one of the top ten fastest growing churches in the nation. For a pastor that has a history of allegations of sexual abuse and using his position of trust to abuse, this prospective move raises many red flags. Has another victim come forward to his current church in Minnesota? Is Berean Baptist trying to pass the trash to Tennessee? 

Last Sunday, the chairman of the pastor search committee, Paul Batson, at FBC Clarksville spoke about their candidate for pastor, Wes Feltner. Other members of the search committee are Jason Daugherty, Steve Girsky, Licia Massa, Donna McIntosh, Bob Palmer, and Beverly Parker.

Paul Batson referred to the two women, Megan and JoAnna, as adversaries, for speaking out about the abuse by Feltner.



Paul Batson is president of TSW Automation in Nashville, Tennessee.



According to Wes Feltner's bio on his website, he earned his B.A. from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, a M.Div in Theology, and a Ph.D. in Leadership from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (SBTS) in Louisville, KY. He states that he is an adjunct professor at Lancaster Bible College and Seminary and Capital Seminary and Graduate School, in Lancaster, PA; and The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY.

In an online search, Dr. Feltner was listed as a professor in the 2013 Southern Baptist Theological Seminary doctoral studies viewbook


Feltner was also listed as an adjunct professor in the SBTS 2018-19 academic catalog. His dissertation on the relationship between pastoral influence tactics, follower outcome levels, and types of congregational change is posted online at SBTS. The president of SBTS is Albert Mohler





Feltner is listed as a graduate adjunct professor in the 2019-20 graduate catalog at Lancaster Bible College. The president of Lancaster Bible College is Dr. Peter Teague.






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