meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

Greatest Hits: What Do You Do if You Find Out About Sexual Abuse Situations?

Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

J.D. Greear

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.9 • 624 Ratings

🗓️ 29 July 2024

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this edition of Ask the Pastor's Greatest Hits, Pastor J.D. shares four important things to keep in mind when responding to instances of sexual abuse.

A glimpse into this episode:

This is an extremely important question, so much so that after becoming SBC president, the first thing I did was appoint a Sexual Abuse Advisory Group to lead our denomination. They have been leading in dozens of ways—one of the biggest is they’re developing a curriculum to help churches answer this very question. Churches should be a safe haven for the vulnerable, so we need to do everything we can to make our churches safe for survivors and safe from abuse.

A few preliminary thoughts:

* Don’t be shocked it’s happening.


* Prioritize the protection of victims, not the guarding of your reputations.


* Your goal is not to meet the minimal requirements--but as a shepherd to protect your flock.

This is just the start of an answer, but here are four important things to keep in mind:

* Disclosing sexual abuse takes an enormous amount of courage, so we should honor that.

This may be the least understood aspect of sexual abuse—it results in a huge loss of voice for the victim. Abuse is usually followed by threats not to say anything, and that’s usually what happens.

What you need to know is that the first time you hear about an instance of abuse, chances are the person talking to you has been carrying this for years. They’ve been terrified about what people will think. They’ve assumed they wouldn’t be believed. To speak up takes bravery.

Now, there are important responses and action steps after you hear of abuse. But don’t be so quick to rush to the action step that you forget your first response—listening to a person, made in God’s image, reveal one of the most hurtful experiences of their lives. Listen, listen, listen.

* If you know of a report of sexual abuse against a minor, you are legally obligated to alert the authorities.

This is not a “Matthew 18” situation. This is a “Romans 13” situation. Because certain sins are not only immoral; they are also illegal. This is never clearer than in the case of sexual abuse against minors.

If you know of sexual abuse against a minor, no matter who you are, no matter who they are, your first response is to alert the authorities. Call CPS or call the police. You may not know all of the best next steps. But they do, and you need to bring them in. The safety of more children than you know may be on the line.

* If an abuser has access to minors at your church, remove the access immediately—and, again, call the authorities.

Statistics here are horrifying. Those who abuse minors don’t just do it once or twice. They do it repeatedly, even after they’ve been caught (if given the opportunity). So if you know about one case, you need to see that as dozens of more potential cases. This isn’t a gray area: Bring in the authorities.

We need to reject any understanding of grace that puts the vulnerable in harm’s way by giving abusers a chance to do it again

* Help connect the survivor to other resources.

If someone has disclosed to you, that’s an honor. And you will have a key role in their healing process. But you need to know you shouldn’t be shouldering this alone.

Questions are going to come up—pretty early—that are best processed through a counseling relationship. So one of the best things you can do for a victim is to get them connected to a counselor. This isn’t a handoff—you need to remind the victim that you are still there and want to process everything with them—but it allows other people more trained in abuse care to do what they do best.

Conclusion: It’s a gospel issue

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello everyone. I am Matt Love, and this is Ask the Pastor, and we're in the middle of our top 40 countdown.

0:13.9

We're not quite doing 40. We're only doing 10, but we're doing a top, top countdown of our most listened episodes in the history of the podcast.

0:20.7

We've made it to number

0:21.5

three. And like I said at the end of last week's episode, most of the questions we deal with are

0:26.6

serious and weighty topics. But this week isn't especially heavy and weighty topic. And so it's

0:33.8

always our desire to handle these sorts of questions with care.

0:47.9

And as we re-air this episode, we do hope that it'll just help raise awareness and give a little bit of practical help to some of you in the world that we live in.

0:50.3

As you're doing ministry, you're just operating in your church.

0:56.8

And so the topic today is, what do you do if you find out about a sexual abuse situation?

1:12.7

Yeah, this is an extremely important question and one that you want to be prepared for when it comes and not have it happen and then look back at the mistakes you made or just feel like you were unprepared.

1:16.5

In fact, this is so important that immediately upon being elected SBC president, the first thing

1:21.8

I did was a point of this sexual abuse advisory group to advise our denomination on where we were and what the status

1:28.9

of this, you know, this was in our churches and how we could improve. You know, in the Providence

1:33.2

of God, I'm glad we did that because later, six or seven months later, a report came out

1:37.8

a newspaper that just talked about a lot of cases of abuse in Southern Baptist churches. There's

1:43.0

48,000 Southern Baptist churches.

1:45.5

This article pointed out, I think it was 700 different cases over the last decade or two,

1:50.6

where they've been mishandled or just, it's heartbreaking. Because when you think about

1:57.0

somebody coming to a church in a place where they expect to hear the news about the gospel,

2:03.6

the God's love, and to experience somebody in that name abusing them. It's just, I mean,

2:08.3

just what greater thing of confusion could somebody experience in their faith? Before, I'll give a few

2:14.3

practical steps here. Before I do that, though, let me just kind of give a few thoughts that helped me as a pastor.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from J.D. Greear, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of J.D. Greear and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.