17Sep

The Outcome

Part IV
(Preface here, Part I here, Part II here, Part III here)

Since leaving home, I have struggled my way to forgiveness countless times. Each memory starts the struggle over again, so my mind has gotten pretty good at sticking its fingers in its ears and chanting “La la la, I’m not remembering this!” So why, in my effort to forgive and forget, am I bringing up the past I don’t even want to think about?

It’s for women like my mom who may not particularly want kids or have the ability to teach them well but who are being guilt-tripped into thinking that God wants them to birth and educate an unlimited procession of children.

It’s for men like my dad who take as gospel that God is giving them both the responsibility to control their children and a Get Out of Jail Free card to use whatever means necessary.

It’s for parents who think they are supposed to ignore the mental anguish of making their own babies suffer because souls are on the line.

It’s for sincere-hearted people who are told they are unworthy to interpret God’s influence on their lives and agree to let more charismatic people tell them what to believe.

It’s for children who feel in their heart of hearts that they should never have been born because that is the message imprinted every day on their bodies and minds.

I have gotten in touch with some of the other survivors to come out of the cult that influenced my childhood, and the behind-the-scenes truth could not be farther from the idyllic appearance that drew my parents in. It was much as you would expect knowing my story. There was rampant abuse perpetrated by church leaders and parents alike. Families were threatened, coerced, and manipulated into staying on the compound. People with illnesses or injuries were forbidden from seeking medical help. The families that looked so pristine at church meetings hurt each other horribly behind closed doors. The one that particularly inspired my parents recently escaped the group’s confines and fell to pieces on the other side; the parents are now divorced, the children that left with them are bitter, and the children and grandchildren that stayed behind have disowned the rest.

Another family that we had close ties with also crumbled. Their situation was not as extreme as ours, but they took the doctrine of isolation very seriously and crippled their children’s relationships outside the family. Their oldest daughter, now in her mid-twenties, is pregnant with her third child and going through her third divorce. She does not have custody of her other two children, and she wants nothing to do with her old home. One sibling has taken her side; the others look as lost in photos as her parents.

And my family? Before my parents finally abandoned their crusade against imperfection, one sibling attempted suicide multiple times. One became an expert manipulator and a bully. One acted out on friends with the same violence we encountered at home. One became an unapologetic atheist. One suffered from a compulsive stress-related disorder. A few developed learning disabilities. I had unrelenting nightmares. Holidays and special occasions were battlegrounds. To this day, we don’t discuss personal things, and we don’t bring up the past. We’re a far cry from the shiny, happy family my parents envisioned, and I understand all the more why God doesn’t use force to make us into better people: because it simply doesn’t work.

When Christians use the word “grace,” I don’t fully understand what they mean, but I know I experience it every day, both in my ability to wield it and in the gentle way God is centering my life around hope. I have to think that if my parents had encountered that kind of grace (or understood it for what it was), our family would be drastically different today… none of us condemned by impossible ideals, none of us trapped into violence, none of us terrified or broken by each other’s hands, none of us still living under the thumb of that old bully Shame. The scandalous truth is that perfection is a myth and that’s okay. I believe our capacities for kindness and understanding increase dramatically when we accept that, and it adds one more poignant hope to my list: that my family’s story is not yet finished.

~~~

Additional reading:
Sparrows Flutter
by Hillary McFarland
Why Good People Do Bad Things Inside a Cultish Church
by Elizabeth Esther
To Those Who May Be Shocked, Disappointed, and Hurt by the News of My Apostasy
by Vyckie Garrison
Barry’s Post
by Barry Bishop
Patriarchy and Our Daughters
by Taunya
In Which I Discuss the Unthinkable
by Laurie M.
Christian Brainwashing?
by Betsy Markman
Word Games
by Lewis Wells
Christian Families on the Edge
by Rachel D. Ramer
Antidotes to Spiritual Abuse
by Eric M. Paździora
Moving On
by Darcy

“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” (by Jesus)

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12 comments

  1. I have to think that if my parents had encountered that kind of grace (or understood it for what it was), our family would be drastically different today… none of us condemned by impossible ideals, none of us trapped into violence, none of us terrified or broken by each other’s hands, none of us still living under the thumb of that old bully Shame. The scandalous truth is that perfection is a myth and that’s okay. I believe our capacities for kindness and understanding increase dramatically when we accept that, and it adds one more poignant hope to my list: that my family’s story is not yet finished.

    The fact that you realize this is seeing, understanding, and living grace. Beautiful post. Blessings to you.

  2. Wow. Bethany, you have endured so much. I believe that your family’s story is not finished yet as well. Thank you for sharing your incredible story. Like I said yesterday, I admired you and looked up to you before I knew your story, and now even more so. I still have so many questions, but I will save them for when you decide to write more about this. Hugs and smooches to you! xo

  3. Thanks for including me in your links! I admire the grace and maturity you show in your telling of this story.

  4. Thank you for sharing so much of your story, Bethany. It means a lot to me and to all those who your words reach.

  5. Your story is very compelling and eye-opening. I’m sorry for your experience. Thank you for being willing to share it. I look forward to reading and learning more.

  6. I think perfection is not a myth, as myth contains truth, but a damn lie. A lie. It’s not possible. It’s an ugly word, especially for those who hold themselves to some unattainable example. Perfection is a tyrant, a dictator – not a loving God. I wish I could erase it out of the Scriptures, and substitute ‘completeness’, which I understand to be a better translation in most cases.

    Once again, I want to celebrate your honesty, your authentic voice, your daring to throw open the cellar doors and let the light in on the basement of your secrets. I know the power of telling your story, that it gives hope to someone else, enough hope to give them power and a sliver of grace, that it all works together for the good…

  7. wow. powerful. thank you for sharing. thank you for being willing to dig up the guts to share. there’s often a different ‘truth’ behind closed doors.

  8. it is hard to reconcile a loving God with an abusive childhood/past. it took me years. this is where i finally came to in my mind to reconcile: God gives us each the freedom to choose Him, even when our choices hurt others, even when they hurt little girls. while working thru the abuse of my childhood, God gave me many visions. through those visions, God showed me that even though my parents were abusing me, He was still there, and He was still protecting me from the worst it could have been. i dissociated from the sexual abuse and have no desire to try to unlock that. i am thankful. i believe God gives children coping mechanisms to survive such horrible things. some are meant to stay burried. we don’t have to remember everything. we only need to remember what God brings to our mind for His purposes and our healing. we do not need to force what God does not intend – that would be from satan, not God. God wants to love and heal and do a good work in our lives. i struggle with the true love of God daily and probably always will.

    may your journey continue to be filled with the love of your husband and your children and the REAL one, true, God – the God of Love and Healing and Comfort and Peace and Joy. shalom.

  9. Hillary – Living grace is so very different from having the theory of grace hammered into our heads, isn’t it? There is so much more room to breathe, make mistakes, find forgiveness, and love freely.

    Eric – You’re welcome, and thank you!

    Lewis – Thank you for sharing your experiences as well; the more honest light shining on that culture, the less its pious appearance will be able to hide the dark details.

    Sam – I still don’t understand how anyone, especially a Christian can knowingly embrace the idea of perfectionism; wasn’t that exactly what was stifling the people living under Jewish rule when Jesus came along? From what I saw growing up, families like mine usually held the children to perfectionist standards while the parents had neither accountability nor consequences. It was a double standard and all that much more a damn lie, as you said.

    Ame – I completely agree. I was only able to write all of this down when I stopped pushing at the memories and trying to decide what level of detail to share and, instead, just wrote as the gentle nudging on my heart directed. I will probably also struggle to understand God’s love for the rest of my life, but I’m so grateful that I’m nowable to struggle. For all the downs, there are also ups, and for all the times when rage blinds my vision, there are moments when I feel that love clearly and am overwhelmed by peace. I’m so glad you stopped by.

  10. Liz – Oops, I somehow missed replying to your comment. Here’s what I want to say: YOU mean a lot to me. Thank you a million times over for your encouragement!

  11. Bethany, I just read all four parts of your story. I too am curious what cult you guys were in? My email is jumpers2jeans@gmail.com

    I very much appreciate you sharing your story with the “world”. It can indeed be hard to be vulnerable and open oneself to almost the whole world to see.

    But you are helping others out there…to know that they aren’t alone.

    When I was going through my most worse times, there were hardly any websites or blogs dedicated to these issues.

    I am proud of you for sharing your story, and look forward to getting to *know* you better through bloggy land. 🙂 ♥

  12. I am so glad you finally are out of that cult…but you do not have to be in a cult to be judged or mistreated by other Christians. My husband experienced much hurt in regular churches as did I—we no longer attend church but we know Jesus is Lord…
    1- we were different in that we had cats instead of kids. (I did not want any!)
    2- I rode my horse to church and my husband was called in to face the pastor and answer what was wrong with his wayward wife?
    3- my husband was also replaced as minister of music without them even telling him, he went to church one day and there was a new music leader
    and many other things we now attribute to people being people and why Jesus went to the cross for them and us.
    to level the field, those people only did a few wrong things to my husband whereas I have spent 38 years treating him wrongly.
    please send me the name of the cult you were in.
    thanks esbee@1starnet.com

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