Hypocricy or defense? Another megachurch pastor gay
December 12th, 2006
What is hypocrisy? Is it simply the ego’s defenses at work? Or is there another element? Is the rash of homosexual radical Christian pastors just an accident, a sign that radical Christianity is fundamentally hypocritical, or yet another confirmation that defenses rule?
This question combines definitional, theoretical, and empirical elements. When is deception hypocrisy? The question is posed by yet another megachurch leader quitting over his homosexuality:
In a tearful videotaped message Sunday to his congregation, the senior pastor of a thriving evangelical megachurch in south metro Denver confessed to sexual relations with other men and announced he had voluntarily resigned his pulpit.
A month ago, the Rev. Paul Barnes of Grace Chapel in Doug las County preached to his 2,100-member congregation about integrity and grace in the aftermath of the Ted Haggard drugs-and-gay-sex scandal.
Now, the 54-year-old Barnes joins Haggard as a fallen evangelical minister who preached that homosexuality was a sin but grappled with a hidden life.
“I have struggled with homosexuality since I was a 5-year-old boy,” Barnes said in the 32- minute video, which church leaders permitted The Denver Post to view. “… I can’t tell you the number of nights I have cried myself to sleep, begging God to take this away….”
Sitting cross-legged in jeans and an open-collar shirt, Barnes spoke in his video about evolving feelings growing up in a firm moral family: from confused little boy to adolescent racked with self-loathing and guilt.
In their only talk about sex, Barnes said his father took him on a drive and talked about what he would do if a “fag” approached him.
Barnes thought, “‘Is that how you’d feel about me?’ It was like a knife in my heart, and it made me feel even more closed.”
When Barnes experienced a Christian conversion at 17, it gave him a glimmer of hope. But his homosexual feelings never went away, he said. He said he cannot accept that a person is “born that way,” so he looks to childhood influences.
Barnes said he asked God many times why he was called to ministry, to start Grace Chapel, carrying a “horrible burden.”…
Barnes described struggling with what he believes is the biblical teaching that homosexuality is an abomination. Over the years, he grew to accept that “this is my thorn in the flesh.”
Barnes expressed hope for a future where one can “be who you are” and be accepted and loved in the Christian community and also spoke about “separating some of the teachings from Scripture” from Jesus Christ.
Palmer said he wasn’t sure what Barnes meant, but Barnes told him that he believes God views homosexuality as a sin.
Barnes said he has been in counseling three times and never found anyone he could talk to.
His wife said on the video that she didn’t know about her husband’s struggles until he confided in her last week. The couple has two daughters in their 20s.
Char Barnes said she feels “like I’m living someone else’s life” but was grateful her husband revealed himself. The couple said they hope to stay in Denver. Near the tape’s end, Paul Barnes says, “This is what it is, it’s right, and it’s time.”
Church elder Russ Pilcher said the reaction at services Sunday was largely concern for the couple. “I thought, ‘Where did I fall short in making myself so unapproachable that he couldn’t come to me?”‘ Pilcher said.
Paul and Char Barnes will get counseling, but unlike Haggard, they will not go into seclusion or report to a board of reconcilers, Palmer said. He said it will be more personal and that church members will play a role….
Given the Haggard story, Pal mer was asked whether Barnes’ fall from grace would expose the evangelical community to further charges of hypocrisy.
“The criticism is valid if you look at perfection being the mark, because the next person who stands at our pulpit is going to be guilty of not being perfect as well,” he said. “Does that mean we have to change what we say about the word of God? We can’t do that.”
Entry Filed under: Culture, Psychoanalysis, Psychology, Religion, Sexuality
2 Comments Add your own
1. Sam | December 12th, 2006 at 5:39 pm
I believe the church needs a removal of the scales of their eyes to see truth in the grace and love that is Christ. I agree that the church has developed into an entity that strays from what it is to truly be a follower/pursuer of Christ. They are not to be discounted for the message of hope, love and salvation that is taught. However, the processes, regulations and formality of religion must be reconciled.
2. nelson medeiros | March 28th, 2007 at 4:21 pm
I read your article of the priests who struggled with there problem.
I also read the comment about the church needs to remove the scales from there eyes. I just want to say that If you truly believe in the ordinance of God and the trueness of the gospel, than you will know that anything is possible to those who believe and have faith. if this priest had truly believed in God’s power that he would have been healed from his obsessions with homosexuality. Or maybe it is just God’s plan for him and only God knows why. It is important to treat people with love and compassion, but if we truly care about someone enough to show them compassion, than we will try to teach them that homosexuality is an abomination and a sin and it is important to repent and see our sins with eyes open and ask the Lord for his forgiveness and strength to heal us from these diseases and he will grant us that much providing we have the faith.
No one is perfect but we must learn from Christ’s example he gave us through his sinless lifestyle and strive for perfection everyday and do what we know is right according to the gospel.
Godspeed and God bless!
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