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Are Christian leaders more likely to commit sexual sin?
Christian Post ^ | 02/19/2019 | Michael Brown

Posted on 02/19/2019 7:39:38 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Are Christian leaders more likely than others to engage in sexual misconduct? To the extent that they are truly Christian, the answer is certainly no. But to the extent they are still human, the answer is that all too many have fallen here. And because of their leadership role, their sin is all the more damaging. How many trusting parishioners have been injured for life?

Recent days have brought a fresh spate of charges against Southern Baptist leaders and Catholic leaders.

In the circles in which I travel – most frequently Charismatic and Pentecostal – there have been some very public, infamous scandals. That’s why I devoted a whole chapter to the subject of sexual immorality in my book Playing with Holy Fire: A Wake-up Call to the Pentecostal-Charismatic Church.

To be clear, I did not write the chapter with a self-righteous, holier-than-thou attitude. Quite the contrary. I live by the kindness of God 24/7, and I’m the last one to throw stones, knowing full well that “there go I but for the grace of God.”

As for those who have fallen, the last thing I want to do is heap further condemnation on their heads. I’m all for restoration, knowing that our God is a redeemer.

It’s also important to remember that for every leader who falls there are far more who do not fall. There are plenty of God-fearing, God-loving, men and women of integrity who practice what they preach when it comes to sexual morality.

But the question remains: Why do so many fall? And, if we’re honest with ourselves, what kind of weaknesses lurk within our own souls?

In my book – again, with an emphasis on Pentecostal-Charismatic circles, which account for at least 500 million believers today – I laid out some of the principle reasons we fall into sexual sin.

Here’s an abbreviated version, adapted from the book:

1) Idolatry. Throughout the Bible, where you find idolatry, you find immorality, and the ultimate idolatry is the idolatry of me. It’s the mentality that says, “The world revolves around me. I draw attention to myself. I am an object of people’s worship and adoration. God may be important, but so am I.”

Certainly, this sounds extreme, but when you are hailed as the anointed man of God, when multitudes hang on your every word, when you are more of a superstar than a servant, when your name becomes more prominent than the name of Jesus, idolatry is near. And with idolatry there is immorality.

2) Power. We charismatics know a lot about power – and I mean the power of the Spirit. We have seen God perform miracles through us and have felt His anointing flowing through our bodies. We have touched sick people with our hands and seen sickness and disease leave on the spot. We have watched people fall to the ground because of the Spirit’s presence in our lives, and crowds have surrounded our vehicles as we drove away.

This can be very humbling, as you realize you are nothing and He is everything. But it can also be very self-exalting, since you think to yourself, “Power is flowing through me.”

3) Revelatory Deception. Sexual temptation is bad enough, but if you add deception to the mix, it’s even harder to resist. One megachurch leader claimed that God told him he married the wrong woman, after which he allegedly pressured her to get a divorce, getting married to another woman seven days after the divorce went through. And who performed his new wedding ceremony? A pastor who himself was later caught in adultery.

It’s true that non-charismatics will be tempted to sin just as charismatics are tempted to sin, but they are less likely to use “the Lord told me” as an excuse to sin. It’s amazing what we can “hear” when the flesh really wants something!

4) Doctrinal Sloppiness.

A Facebook friend of mine wrote to me, sharing his frustration after a lengthy exchange with an African minister. He summarized the position of this minister as follows: “You know it, you cannot lose the anointing. The flesh is dead, you are a new creation, and sex cannot make you lose your anointing. The Bible is very clear on this, and the Bible cannot lie. You see, you are spirit, and you minister by the Spirit, but your body is flesh. So, whatever you do with your flesh cannot affect your spiritual power.”

With a doctrine like that, which exempts you from sinning because you are not your body, the sky (actually, the pit) is the limit for what your flesh can now do.

5) Unaccountability. Being part of a denomination does not guarantee doctrinal soundness or moral purity, and leaders can find ways to evade and avoid accountability if they so desire. But because so many of our charismatic churches are independent, and because so many are led by forceful leaders, we often have a recipe for extreme unaccountability.

I heard one megachurch pastor explain that when he didn’t like the way things were being done in his organization, he fired his entire board. They had no recourse against him and no way of holding him accountable for his actions, meaning he could steal money or sleep around, get caught, then fire his board and claim he was the victim. That is how he structured his organization.

Need I explain how this kind of mindset and leadership style opens the door wide to sexual sin? Need I explain how lack of accountability is a seedbed for moral failure?

To the extent I believe that I will not get caught, to that extent I think I can get away with anything. To the extent I feel that no one can hold me accountable for my deeds, to that extent I am digging my own spiritual grave, and to that extent I forget that I will one day give account to God.

Again, I do no write these words to condemn. And be assured that I’m preaching to myself before I preach to anyone else.

But one day we will give account to the Judge. Better to get our house in order today, while there is still time to repent, then on that day, when it will be too late.

Am I being too sober about this?

Just ask the victims of clergy sexual abuse.


TOPICS: Current Events; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: chrisian; leaders; sexualsin

1 posted on 02/19/2019 7:39:38 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
“Recent days have brought a fresh spate of charges against Southern Baptist leaders and Catholic leaders.”

Based upon deflection of own criticism. I'm not a rock thrower. We are all sinners.

Let's not contribute to the division among Christians. I told a group of Christians of denomination other than my own recently when I attended their Sunday school, “There will not be Methodists, Baptists (my own), Lutherans or Catholics in Heaven; only Christians.”

2 posted on 02/19/2019 7:46:40 AM PST by Texas Fossil ((Texas is not where you were born, but a Free State of Heart, Mind & Attitude!))
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To: SeekAndFind

1 Timothy 3:2-5
A bishop must be blameless, however sin knows knows no bounds
and in this age of hired teachers and preachers who knows if
they are actually believers or not, hired preachers are not
@to be trusted..


3 posted on 02/19/2019 7:53:44 AM PST by ravenwolf (Left lane drivers and tailgaters have the smalles,t brains in the hi h wordsi to your mom.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I remember reading about the early days of the Billy Graham Crusade. He actually had an advance team that would go into his hotel rooms before he did to make sure that no women were hiding inside.

When I first read that I thought he was weirdly paranoid.
But in light of many things that have happened, he was just smarter then the others by quite a lot.


4 posted on 02/19/2019 8:02:01 AM PST by Buckeye McFrog
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To: SeekAndFind

To the author.... although those behaviours are wrong, the focus should not be on Christians singularly.

There are things far worse and we do not need to unnecessarily beat ourselves up.

In the word of islam I can go to a number of nations and witness pedophilia on a national level. Because of Mohammet being the model man, child brides are legal and available in almost every islamic nation.

IT is an ongoing practice and has been for 1400 years. In islam I can also beat my wife/ wives (who have no rights) for any reason I see fit.


5 posted on 02/19/2019 8:03:06 AM PST by himno hero (had'nff)
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To: SeekAndFind

Not really, maybe made more public. That being said, leaders have access to so many people, so many in closed quarters, so many alone in a building AND some may be on some sort of power trip, justifying what they are doing.

Some “victims” get a kick out of bringing down a Christian leader, too.


6 posted on 02/19/2019 8:08:51 AM PST by madison10
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To: SeekAndFind

Are Christian leaders more likely to commit sexual sin?


Only if it’s absolutely convenient.


7 posted on 02/19/2019 9:26:53 AM PST by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: SeekAndFind

They ain’t nothin harder than a preachers dick.

Something I heard my uncle Herman say many long years ago.


8 posted on 02/19/2019 9:32:40 AM PST by Bobalu (12 diet Cokes and a fried chicken...)
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To: SeekAndFind
Are Christian leaders more likely than others to engage in sexual misconduct?

Those who are in positions of leadership within Christianity will be under direct and sustained attacks from the devil.

They will be hit by what are called the "Three M's":

  1. Message (the clarity of the Gospel),
  2. Money (cares and comforts of the world)
  3. Maidens (sex with those not ones wife).

They must be on guard and prepared to fight these attacks because they WILL come.

9 posted on 02/19/2019 8:09:54 PM PST by boatbums (Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to His mercy he saved us.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I do not see Christian leaders having any more propensity to abuse women and children than any other leaders. But people in higher positions (socially, morally, fame, etc) do have a greater chance of getting away with abuse. See Bill Cosby.


10 posted on 02/19/2019 8:13:50 PM PST by Yaelle
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