tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post8626755666985220703..comments2024-03-23T22:54:58.661-04:00Comments on FBC Jax Watchdogs: Mike Bianchi Tells Penn State to Stay Home - Where is the Societal Disgust Over Baptist Church Sex Abuse Cover-Ups?FBC Jax Watchdoghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10740366031265491559noreply@blogger.comBlogger37125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-12601753655562593072011-12-03T08:38:16.675-05:002011-12-03T08:38:16.675-05:00NYT > Center of Penn State Scandal, Sandusky Te...<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/03/sports/ncaafootball/at-center-of-penn-state-scandal-sandusky-tells-his-own-story.html?_r=1&hp" rel="nofollow">NYT > Center of Penn State Scandal, Sandusky Tells His Own Story</a>Rameshhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09728392311602332613noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-56025558692880278722011-11-30T15:54:25.658-05:002011-11-30T15:54:25.658-05:00This is not merely a problem of a few "bad ap...<i>This is not merely a problem of a few "bad apples." <b>It is a problem of having a barrel that facilitates the rot</b>. </i><br /><br /><a href="http://undermuchgrace.blogspot.com/2009/01/bad-apples-or-bad-barrels-short-and.html" rel="nofollow">Under Much Grace [Cindy Kunsman] > Bad Apples or Bad Barrels? The Short and Long Versions of Zimbardo on the Lucifer Effect</a><br /><br />and <a href="http://undermuchgrace.blogspot.com/search?q=zimbardo" rel="nofollow">more</a> ...Rameshhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09728392311602332613noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-14011290706977645492011-11-30T15:02:57.258-05:002011-11-30T15:02:57.258-05:00Watchdog,
I absolutely agree with you in your call...Watchdog,<br />I absolutely agree with you in your call for institutional accountability within the Southern Baptist Convention and within Baptist churches. There must be accountability, not only for those who physically commit these crimes, but also for those who turn a blind eye, keep it quiet, and cover it up. This is not merely a problem of a few "bad apples." It is a problem of having a barrel that facilitates the rot. Until Baptists are willing to do the difficult task of actually peering into their own barrel, and making systemic changes that promote accountability for all, the barrel will continue to stink.<br /><br />I wrote more about my own take on this in a column published today in the Associated Baptist Press, "Words alone won't stop Baptist predators":<br /><a href="http://www.abpnews.com/content/view/6970/9/" rel="nofollow">http://www.abpnews.com/content/view/6970/9/</a>Christa Brownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04560409585720043015noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-79502506979839146892011-11-30T08:27:56.740-05:002011-11-30T08:27:56.740-05:00Anon 11:43 PM
It IS possible to have a different ...Anon 11:43 PM<br /><br />It IS possible to have a different opinion without resorting to name-calling and being disagreeable. <br /><br />Seriously, if you don't like Tom's blog, then don't come and read it.<br /><br />I almost never take an opposite view from Tom. And... I don't think he is wrong in what he feels must be done to stop(or at least minimize)the debauchery of molesting/assaulting children. We only disagree on the methods, not the reason. Christians will disagree from time-to-time, but how we go about the disagreement says much about our character and our relationship with Christ.Katienoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-89899108787976816852011-11-30T08:23:31.772-05:002011-11-30T08:23:31.772-05:00Yet you all accept the fact that EVERYONE should p...Yet you all accept the fact that EVERYONE should pay for Adam and Eve's "crime" <br />"Reason is the greatest enemy that faith has." Indeed.Anonymousenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-67586759203746648302011-11-29T23:49:00.429-05:002011-11-29T23:49:00.429-05:00My oh my.My oh my.FBC Jax Watchdoghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10740366031265491559noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-63977572613118880602011-11-29T23:43:24.438-05:002011-11-29T23:43:24.438-05:00Bianchi is a blowhard asshole, sort of like the au...Bianchi is a blowhard asshole, sort of like the author of this blog.<br /><br />Those players at Penn State don't deserve to be punished for things they had nothing to do with.<br /><br />How absurd.<br /><br />You're a clown, Tom.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-74029894116757621782011-11-29T23:28:36.223-05:002011-11-29T23:28:36.223-05:00Tom,
I really do understand your point. I'm ...Tom,<br /><br />I really do understand your point. I'm not criticizing you for it. The sexual abuse of children is something that can't be labeled properly because there are no suitable words to describe how wrong it is. The victims never fully recover even when they extend forgiveness to their abusers. I can't begin to understand how anyone would cover this up. But I know they do. <br /><br />I also understand that strong and bold actions are sometimes needed to shake-up organizations who create a sick climate and who make the plight of victims even worse. It's shameful.<br /><br />Even so, Christians are supposed to be people who are just towards others. In my mind we owe everyone charity until they prove us wrong. The tipping point for me is the judgment of our Savior. Would he hold me accountable for something I had no part of? I don't think so. <br /><br />Nobody wants pedophiles held responsible more than I do. But this isn't the right way. I understand Bianchi's moral outrage, but can't agree with his solution. As a victim, I couldn't personally take part in harming innocent people, possibly crushing their own hopes and dreams for something they had no part in. It might be effective, but it's still wrong. <br /><br />I sincerely appreciate your point of view Tom. I know you are a good person and committed Christian. This disagreement does not change my opinion of you. I hold you in the hightest respect. <br /><br />God Bless......Katienoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-79971202234852137502011-11-29T22:07:06.736-05:002011-11-29T22:07:06.736-05:00Well said, WD. To me a similar example is the dive...Well said, WD. To me a similar example is the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disinvestment_from_South_Africa" rel="nofollow">divestment campaign</a> against the apartheid regime of South Africa.Rameshhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09728392311602332613noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-9252649429611736402011-11-29T21:47:47.565-05:002011-11-29T21:47:47.565-05:00Katie - I do understand your view about punishing ...Katie - I do understand your view about punishing just those who committed the crime.<br /><br />But if we keep this in the context of NCAA football, then why does the NCAA punish entire football programs for the misdeeds of a booster, or two or three players who cheat? Why penalized incoming freshman, keeping them from playing in a bowl because the coach is a louse or some players took money from an agent?<br /><br />Or why does the EPA fine an entire company for the misdeeds of one or two employees who violate some environmental law?<br /><br />Because the NCAA realizes that they must send a strong signal to the INSTITUTION when it demonstrates behavior that goes way out of bounds. When the institution does not have controls to prevent very aberrant behavior, the institution itself must be punished, and this includes people who are part of the institution but not directly involved in the misdeeds.<br /><br />The facts and testimony given in the grand jury report in the Penn State demonstrate they are a broken institution from bottom to top in the matter of sexual abuse. A grad assistant sees a rape of a small child, and he goes to the head coach. The head coach when told doesn't go to the police. Yes, perhaps the players should pay a price for the misdeeds of the institution they represent, just as many football teams over the years have had to live with sanctions that keep them out of bowl games, when none of the players were directly involved.<br /><br />And my main point here is not to call for Penn State to be banned from a bowl game. It is to express my understanding of Bianchi's moral outrage, and to commend him for it, and to call for similar outrage by Christians over their institutions that have behaved even worse than Penn State in such matters.<br /><br />Bianchi is a sports writer. He doesn't want to have to face writing about Penn State's scandal in his city if they were to come to Orlando because it sickens him so much. He wants Penn State REPAIRED, and he knows that the best way is to punish the institution.<br /><br />And how this translates over to churches like Prestonwood and Trinity Baptist and even Bellevue Baptist with Steve Gaines, is obvious.FBC Jax Watchdoghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10740366031265491559noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-69690747576361997102011-11-29T19:56:54.283-05:002011-11-29T19:56:54.283-05:00I couldn't agree more with Katie when she says...I couldn't agree more with Katie when she says not everyone should be punished.<br /><br />For Mike Bianchi to say that Penn State shouldn't play in any bowl because of the recent events that have transpired is ludicrous. Who would you hurt the most by taking such an action? THE FOOTBALL PLAYERS. They were not responsible for Sandusky's actions or the inaction of the Penn State administration to handle the situation. Punishing them should not be a part of the solution to the scandal.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-25549779501444483032011-11-29T18:53:14.093-05:002011-11-29T18:53:14.093-05:00Kati, your post was quite excellent.Kati, your post was quite excellent.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-89774289237689076722011-11-29T17:48:06.106-05:002011-11-29T17:48:06.106-05:00Watchdog, you think Trinity pastor Tom Messer is ...Watchdog, you think Trinity pastor Tom Messer is a "fine" man ? It's on the public record that he covered up child rape for many years. No, he is not a fine man. He should be in prison.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-59032601544352630422011-11-29T14:53:34.546-05:002011-11-29T14:53:34.546-05:00I've been giving this some thought since WD po...I've been giving this some thought since WD posted this. I refrained from posting because I hold WD in the highest of esteem. I rarely disagree with him.<br /><br />On this issue I have some serious reservations. I'm a survivor of child sexual assault by a family member. It clearly never leaves the psyche and colors all manner of surrounding issues. I have learned that Jesus is the source of all healing. <br /><br />On this, however, I think we are going overboard when we punish every single person affiliated with Penn state as part of the problem. Institutional corruption is nothing new and should be dealt with in a precise manner. Let's punish those who contributed and turned a blind eye towards this particularly heinous crime.<br /><br />I've not been shown any evidence that every football player on the Penn State football team even knew about this problem. Why are we punishing them? This smacks of Jimmy Carter and the Olympics or even the Duke LaCrosse case. It's wrong to throw the baby out with the bath water. <br /><br />I understand Bianchi's point regarding Penn State as an entity, but not with putting blame/punishment on innocent people. I can't imagine that Jesus would deal with this problem in this way.<br /><br />Unbelievers love to pin the blame of the Inquisition on all Christians. But clearly all Christians had no part in this detestable action by the Catholic Church, and later the reformed believers. Guilt by association is used quite regularly by Christians. Anyone want to be deemed guilty of the heresy of Gail Riplinger or Peter Ruckman just because they also claim to be Christians? Or perhaps we are proclaimed irrational nuts because they associate us with Benny Hinn or even Ergun Caner. <br /><br />I understand I will be attacked and told I don't know Jack about football or even the gospel. That's okay with me. I prefer to not be caught in error on judging people I don’t know.Katienoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-35831943011991704942011-11-29T13:18:49.380-05:002011-11-29T13:18:49.380-05:00I have read the transcripts where a good interview...I have read the transcripts where a good interviewer was able to elicit statements from a four year old girl that was sufficient for a conviction for forcible oral sex on her by a teenager, another where a six year old clearly showed anal rape. All without a bit of physical evidence. And all where there were adults in the victim's families trying to protect the teenage offenders!Arcenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-80133984068164627872011-11-29T11:42:54.227-05:002011-11-29T11:42:54.227-05:00Very interesting article about mega churches and t...Very interesting article about mega churches and their possible decline:<br /><br />http://www.tennessean.com/article/20111120/NEWS06/111120006/Some-fear-megachurch-bubble-may-soon-burstAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-25988232107428696242011-11-29T10:41:54.733-05:002011-11-29T10:41:54.733-05:00Here's how you deal with sexual abuse allegati...Here's how you deal with sexual abuse allegations...Call DHS. Then do whatever you have to do to get emotional and spiritual help for the abused.John Wyliehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16095740536301292747noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-6648769887514163442011-11-29T10:36:01.550-05:002011-11-29T10:36:01.550-05:00Sorry arce your comment is why most children don&...Sorry arce your comment is why most children don't report sexual abuse- because when it comes right down to it there is no physical evidence, it is one persons word against another's.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-28185014774218283532011-11-29T10:15:50.396-05:002011-11-29T10:15:50.396-05:00If there is a suspicion, then the potential child ...If there is a suspicion, then the potential child victim should be interviewed with a trained sex abuse investigator who knows how to conduct an interview with children. There have been multiple cases of child care workers being wrongly accused, and some convicted, based on suggestive interviewing later shown to be false by such things as physical examination of the child, which everyone opposed except the allege perpetrator, but which showed that there had not been the type of abuse the interviewer alleged the child had so clearly described.Arcenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-68339884665853894672011-11-29T08:55:42.054-05:002011-11-29T08:55:42.054-05:00#1 Interesting that there are "plenty" o...#1 Interesting that there are "plenty" of instances where pastors have called police on sexual predators in their congregations. (also kinda scary of there are the number that "plenty" implies.)<br /><br />#2 Anon 8:21 - there are just no words...Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-33142624666170609032011-11-29T08:21:44.087-05:002011-11-29T08:21:44.087-05:00A person is innocent until proven guilty.
Kids li...A person is innocent until proven guilty.<br /><br />Kids lie too.<br /><br />How would you like it if some kid accused you and you were completely innocent?<br /><br />Oh, you say, why would kids lie?<br /><br />Money!!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-55955293586712226512011-11-29T08:08:34.383-05:002011-11-29T08:08:34.383-05:00Not sure where you have been for 50 years but I...Not sure where you have been for 50 years but I've known of plenty. Thank goodness.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-70781037646177727432011-11-29T07:54:14.670-05:002011-11-29T07:54:14.670-05:00"...I actually believe that the average (not ..."...I actually believe that the average (not mega) Baptist pastor has more than enough sense to call the police when there is sexual abuse in the church."<br /><br />We would all hope that to be true. But it seems like all the cases I read about involve a cover up on the part of the church or pastor, hoping it will go away.<br /><br />In my 50+ years, I've never heard of a pastor or staff member calling the police on a sexually abusive church member, deacon, giver, Sunday School teacher, etc.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-32141374666104029452011-11-28T23:34:02.724-05:002011-11-28T23:34:02.724-05:00Does the average pastor know how to handle sexual ...Does the average pastor know how to handle sexual abuse? I doubt it, considering the appalling opinion they take regarding spousal abuse.WishIhadknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12487727353887788291noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8384632623933772727.post-66318198017839407702011-11-28T22:32:22.235-05:002011-11-28T22:32:22.235-05:00Anon 12:56 - really this is not about individual p...Anon 12:56 - really this is not about individual pastors and how many of them do or do not know to call the police when they become aware of allegations of sexual molestation.<br /><br />It is about the institutional culture in which they operate that will dictate whether they will or will not take the right steps.<br /><br />I would say that 100% of the pastors who when asked if they would report sexual abuse allegations in their church to authorities, would say "yes".<br /><br />But as we seek often times they don't do it. They don't report them, and they don't even alert other churches of the perps. Why don't they do it? Why weren't the police called at Prestonwood when they became aware of sex abuse allegations against John Langworthy? They are all smart, educated, religious men, whose bible tells them that those who hurt children will be better off with a boulder tied around their neck cast into the ocean.<br /><br />But they did not call the police.<br /><br />I can say the same thing about Trinity and their pastor. Fine men by all accounts, but they made the wrong decisions because their institutional culture was to protect the "man of God" and to protect the blessed "ministry" of their institution.<br /><br />This is why Congress is going to get involved, and will make mandatory very severe penalties for those who don't report allegations of abuse to authorities. <br /><br />My point: too bad that our citizens, our press, and the people in churches are not requiring church leaders to be held accountable for their inaction. Too bad that more people like Bianchi don't express outrage over abuse cover ups in our churches.FBC Jax Watchdoghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10740366031265491559noreply@blogger.com