Fellow labourers
What are yout thoughts?
Pax Vobiscum
Robert A. Stewart J.P.
Pastor
The Trouble with Confessing in Church
As blogger Anne Jackson's new book makes clear, our church culture will need to change before individual confession won't turn into gossip.
Michelle Van Loon, guest blogger
I’ve come to believe that an institutional church is not a safe place for one person’s confession.
Several years ago, while we were attending a small nondenominational church, Pastor Donn* announced at the end of Sunday worship that we would have a special mid-week meeting. “It’s important that all members attend,” he emphasized. “We have an important family matter to discuss.”
Most of the hundred or so members who showed up Wednesday watched Pastor Donn summon the Hickmans, respected leaders in the congregation, and their pale 16-year-old daughter, Missy, to the front of the sanctuary. He put his arm around Missy’s shoulders and told us he’d summoned us in order to snuff out gossip about Missy before it had a chance to begin.
He then asked Missy to confess her sin to us. Without lifting her eyes, the tearful, trembling young woman told us she had just found out she was pregnant. Missy’s boyfriend, the birth dad, did not attend the church and wasn’t present that night.
I couldn’t deny that the congregation rallied around the Hickmans throughout Missy’s pregnancy and into the first years of motherhood. But Missy was never again just Missy. She became Missy the project, Missy the Girl Who Got Pregnant and Stood Up in Front of the Entire Church. And while the meeting effectively cauterized gossipy tongues and rallied prayer and practical support for the Hickmans, it also served to make Missy Exhibit A whenever the church’s youth pastors gave an abstinence sermon for the next year or so.
Missy’s own Hester Prynne experience taught me that personal confession is too big to be entrusted to an entire institution. In a church setting, I think public confession should be prefaced with a spiritual Miranda warning: Anything you say may well be used against you. Your confession might easily become a shorthand way to brand you: “Jeff? He’s the embezzler.” “Cindy is an alcoholic.” “Missy got pregnant at 16.”
Anne Jackson responds to this troubling church culture in a new book, Permission to Speak Freely: Essays and Art on Fear, Confession, and Grace (Thomas Nelson, 2010). Jackson asked her blog readers this question: What is the one thing you feel you can’t say in church? The book captures the flavor of the hundreds of answers she received, ranging from, “I had an affair on my wife and I still think about the other woman,” to, “Even though I’m a staff member at my church, most of my deep and significant relationships are with people I met online,” to, “I was raped by a counselor . . . I thought he was a friend.”
Jackson includes her own prose and free-verse poetry on the subject of fear and confession. She details her own confessions about the sexual abuse she experienced as a teen, her addiction to pornography, and her square-peg experience as a church employee in order to give readers, as a friend of hers called it, “the gift of going second.”
Jackson’s book is a helpful response to institutional unwritten rules that are more hospitable to silence and shame than to confession. However, I was struck by the fact that most of Jackson’s confessions first occurred in the safety of one-on-one relationships. Once she experienced a grace-filled response from her hearer, she became emboldened to confess the truth about herself in more public settings, such as speaking gigs or on her blog.
Jackson’s goal is to provoke churches toward creating a culture where members can speak freely about their mess. And that’s to the good. But her own story demonstrates that public confession of individual sin is the final step in a process that must first begin with God and then move to a small, safe community of one or two others. Jackson’s admissions of sin in Permission to Speak Freely are not really confessions as much as stories about confessions that have already occurred.
A church can and should facilitate a culture of confession by making space for these stories. That space can’t be manipulated into existence (as was the case with Missy), and will not happen at all if church leaders do not acknowledge that spiritual transformation is a continuous process, not a programmable product.
But the real work of confession isn’t the work of the church. It is the work of me coming to the end of myself and telling the unvarnished truth to God and you, and of you responding with compassion — and, perhaps, a story of your own.
Michelle Van Loon is the author of two books on the parables of Jesus, and blogs at TheParableLife.blogspot.com. She has written for the women's blog on Why Boys Fail, Hutterite communities, and church 'volunteers.'
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This is sad but true. However as the article points out, it is not a black and white issue of gossip and stigmatization because of immaturity. But often plays out as development projects or sermon illustrations among the more 'educated'. With the advent of social networking, one does not have to stretch the imagination to see the posting of such soul-baring sharing by persons with less than spiritual intents, who might want to make a public statement about the once-sullied persona of Bro. or Sis. So-and-so. Of course, the concept of story-telling (and sometimes downright embellishment) for many confessors is not lost among many Apostolics.
ReplyDeleteDo we need confession in church? We need it as much as the gospel being preached. Are we ready to truly demonstrate selflessness in loving? Somehow, I think we were left in elementary school with this one. Except one has the tenacity to recover from either of the scenarios described earlier, that person might be better off wrestling with God Himself on most issues that might require open confession in church, and confess to a few trusted friends.
A good follow-up question might be: where are all the persons that have been "reclaimed" over the past year? 6 months?
Shalom
Paul
Little Sis. Naomi wrote:
ReplyDeletePastor,
Quite interesting reading. However this is oft repeated in our churches and in our society. Persons in an attempt to relieve their burdens or in compliance with the biblical injunctions will confess only for it to become 'table talk'. Others will spread the gossip by asking prayer for so and so, then tongues go wagging. People like to feel superior so they use every opportunity to belitle someone else.
I have always felt that one good way to stop gossip is to be up front about the matter, this usually kills the gossip. People will talk for a while, but in true human fashion they will move to the next hot item as soon as that is raised. Public things should be dealt in some public fashion, private matters privately. However there are some matters that may need to receive guarded 'publicity' (one or two) for the purpose of accountablity e.g. in the matter of pornography, affairs, stealing etc.
As part of the teaching portfolio people will need to understand that confessions are a part of relieving a guility conscience. In order to avoid the public matter avoid the sin as each sin will always have consequences. In matters that cannot be avoided each person will have to be encouraged not to be put off by gossipers. Gossipers will need to be shown their sin and everyone gets a lesson in true love - not being judgemental and forgiving. Those who are preaching and teaching on a ethical basis should not refer to real/obvious situations except where permission is granted. People can be sued.
May you be guided by the wisdom of God in these matters.
These are my few words in Jesus Name.
NJF
King Rich wrote:
ReplyDeleteConfess your faults one to another, and pray one for another, that you may be healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much. (James 5 vs16) If we take the word of God seriously then room must be given for the actions to be taken.
I however agree with the writer that it should be the last action after starting with God, the bible outlined the benefits but we as Christians are always willing to put the blood of Jesus on trial all over again to satisfy our religiosity.
Richard
Beldene (The fight is fixed) Williams wrote:
ReplyDeletePastor and fellow brethren,
Thank God for His love and mercy. Oh how I just love God's mercy. For His mercies aye endure, ever faithful ever sure.
Where would many of us be today had it not been for God's love, mercy and forgiveness?
I can't understand why most people pick out certain sin and put it on top of others. They look at adultery, fornication etc as BIG sin, but malice and envy, hate and such the like as little sin. As the writer rightly said in the reading "spiritual transformation is a continuous process". Why do we think we should drag anyone to the altar when we ourselves should kneel before God in repentance? We need to remember the story of how Jesus dealt with the woman caught in adultery.
May God be merciful unto us as we kneel at the alter in repentance.
Dr. Kirk wrote:
ReplyDelete“…the real work of confession isn’t the work of the church. It is the work of me coming to the end of myself and telling the unvarnished truth to God and you, and of you responding with compassion — and, perhaps, a story of your own.”
I found the above extract from the article interesting.
Confession can be made only when we are tired of carrying the burden of secrets – the gnawing guilt and shame eating away at our insides which though we pray to God, won’t go away because it must be said not only to God but also to another human being who must reciprocate; Reciprocity based on understanding and love fosters healing. Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for another, that ye may be healed. James 5:16
When I confess to you, will you confess to me?
Kirk Barham
Sandra Martin wrote:
ReplyDeleteConfessing to the church not necessarily ALL the people that make up the church. And it is true: confession does bring about healing and peace.