Many Women Targeted by Faith Leaders, Survey Says

September 10, 2009 – One in every 33 women who attend worship services regularly has been the target of sexual advances by a religious leader, a survey released Wednesday says.

The study, by Baylor University researchers, found that the problem is so pervasive that it almost certainly involves a wide range of denominations, religious traditions and leaders.

“It certainly is prevalent, and clearly the problem is more than simply a few charismatic leaders preying on vulnerable followers,” said Diana Garland, dean of Baylor’s School of Social Work, who co-authored the study.

It found that more than two-thirds of the offenders were married to someone else at the time of the advance.

Carolyn Waterstradt, 42, a graduate student who lives in the Midwest, said she was coerced into a sexual relationship with a married minister in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America for 18 months. He had been her pastor for a decade, she said, and told her the relationship was ordained by God.

“I believed him because I was looking for direction and for help,” said Waterstradt, who ended the relationship years ago and entered therapy. The pastor was removed from the clergy.

Waterstradt said she has suffered lasting psychological and spiritual consequences from the relationship, including depression and a deep distrust of organized religion. “It’s very difficult for me to walk into a church,” she said.

A growing number of denominations are moving to do something about such problems, particularly since the Catholic Church’s highly publicized sex scandal involving its clergy.

At least 36 denominations have policies that identify sexual relations between adult congregants and clergy as misconduct, subject to discipline.

The Rabbinical Assembly, the international association of Conservative rabbis, uses investigating panels to look into complaints against rabbis. It notes that the “power imbalance between clergy and those to whom they minister makes it clear that sexual contacts in these situations are by definition non-consensual.”

In the United Church of Christ, ministers must attend a workshop on clergy sexual abuse every three years, and those seeking jobs in the ministry must have their names checked against government sex offender lists, said the Rev. J. Bennett Guess, spokesman for the 1.2 million-member denomination.

Locally, the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia requires clergy members, other employees and volunteers to receive training in prevention of adult sexual misconduct and prevention of child abuse, spokesman Henry Burt said.

The diocese “takes very seriously its obligation to make its churches and institutions safe places for children and adults to grow in their faith in the church,” Burt said.

Lawmakers are also taking note. Clergy sexual misconduct is illegal in Minnesota and Texas. Texas law, for example, defines clergy sexual behavior as sexual assault if the religious leader “causes the other person to submit or participate by exploiting the other person’s emotional dependency on the clergyman in the clergyman’s professional character as spiritual adviser.”

For its study, Baylor used the 2008 General Social Survey, a nationally representative sample of 3,559 respondents, to estimate the prevalence of clergy sexual misconduct. Women older than 18 who attended worship services at least once a month were asked in the survey whether they had received “sexual advances or propositions” from a religious leader.

The study found that close to one in 10 respondents — male and female — reported having known about clergy sexual misconduct occurring in a congregation they had attended.

Researchers say they don’t know whether the incidence of clergy sexual misconduct had changed over the years. Nor do they know whether sexual wrongdoing by clergy is more, or less, frequent than in other well-respected professions.

But, Garland said, “when you put it with a spiritual leader or moral leader, you’ve really added a power that we typically don’t think about in secular society — which is that this person speaks for God and interprets God for people. And that really adds a power.”

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2 Responses to “Many Women Targeted by Faith Leaders, Survey Says”

  1. Simone Henry says:

    I am deeply saddened to read this article. I can honestly say that I don’t have any first hand knowledge of a particular pastor/clergy in my church organization who is guilty of such a thing, but I do know that it has happened and will probably happen again.

    The church today is so different from what Christ intended when He instituted it. It just goes to show how sin permeates every area of our lives on this earth and that trusted clergy are not exempt from the wiles of Satan. Women church-goers would do well to remember that fact and stop putting their pastors on undeserved pedestals. The only one we are to reverence is God. God’s word should be the first and last in our lives and not some pastor’s who is fighting the same temptations we are fighting. If the pastor’s word does not agree with the Bible, reject it! God, who instituted monogamous marriage between one man and one woman, did not tell your married pastor that a sexual relationship on the side is what He wants for your life!

    This brings me to my next point: We modern church-goers do not study the Bible enough for ourselves. We rely much too heavily on the word of our pastors for Truth. I’m not saying that all pastors are bad. However, I am saying that because they are human, they are susceptible to the corrupting influence of Satan if they open themselves to it. Part of being a Christian means that it is our responsibility to study the Word for ourselves so that we will have the power to discern the evil of Satan around us (even in the Church).

    I will pray for Sister Waterstradt (mentioned in the article) that her faith in God will be restored and that she will eventually no longer fear organized religion. I truly believe that organized religion is God’s will (i.e. the five books of Moses, the New Testament Church, His will that His work be done decently and in order). What’s the alternative? Disorganized religion? Also I believe Mr. Burt’s (of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia) statement of the Diocese’s desire for “adults to grow in their faith in the church” is fundamentally flawed and is a big part of the problem that is the subject of this article. Our faith should be in God first and foremost. Jesus never asked us to have faith in the Church, but in Him. New Testament apostle, Paul, told his church members to follow him has he follows Christ. The inference being that if he’s not following Christ, don’t follow him. The same goes for clergy today.

    There are many awesome, committed, Spirit-filled pastors out there in churches around the country and throughout the world. I am thankful for them and their ministries and praise God that Satan can’t corrupt them all.

    Respectfully submitted,

    Simone Henry
    TheChristianJukebox.com

  2. Kaspar Arnulf says:

    I have been noticing how the American Golfer Tiger Woods has triggered a great number of mistressess etc. to come out and tell on anyone of any kind of leadership. Of course those that are Christian are the ones of most interest to me, However the marital or relationship problems in most of the Cases are not about the infidelity. To the members of the Church and its congregation Telln on the Way Leadership Men have pursued them. Or leaders Using Text or social net The Biggest part of the anger or shame towards their behaviors is the Fraud it seems to largely exhibit.
    Many of these Faith Leaders have used texting and social networks to seduce their prey. A wounded person in Church seeking Christ can be lead to find anyone interested in them for ministry as a form of Someone loving them thus the boundaries are then less visible to which ever person the Devil finds weaker,his goal is to destroy.

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