Join our Newsletter
If you like The NakedJournal, you'll enjoy my weekly newsletter about deconstruction, freedom, and life in general.
This drawing is inspired by the Ouroboros Snake... of the snake eating its own tail.
What came first? The chicken or the egg? What came first? The thug or the theology? I read Tony Jones' thoughts on Mark Driscoll.
Jones has always admired Driscoll, maybe envies him a little, wants the best for him, believes he can be redeemed, and suggests that things can be restored.
What I found most interesting though is that Jones believes the problem with Driscoll is theological.
That is, did Driscoll become the focus of concern because of his theology? Or was it because of his behavior?
I'm concerned that Jones' post reflects the refusal of the church to understand spiritual abuse. It neglects the pathology of its abusive leaders. I don't think this is being fair to the victims or the perpetrators of spiritual abuse. People are victims of not just a bad theology, but a pathological cruelty.
I don't think Driscoll's theology made this happen. Driscoll "embraced" his toxic version of theology because it aligned with his moral compass. It fit his personality. It worked for him to achieve his goals. Then it manifested the worst in him. Then he continued to develop his toxic theology in order to make more room for his pathological behavior. Mars Hill Church too.
Jones' sentence, "It could have happened to any of us." is true, because I believe we all participate in this dynamic. Theology is our creation. It is a reflection of our drives and desires.
Then, not satisfied to only be the product of our drives and desires, it also becomes the producer of them. Theology is a vicious cycle of our desperate need to understand and control our universe.
Step into this cycle at any point and you can see that we are both the root and fruit of our theology and pathology.
And yes, it spins out of control by manifesting itself in toxic, controlling, and abusive behavior. Nothing can be done about bad theology because of free thought and speech.
But we can do something when this manifests itself in bad behavior. Cruel theology is a nuisance. Cruel behavior is unacceptable.
When Driscoll thinks bully to his people, we can say please stop. But when he actually bullies people, we can step in and say you will stop now!
I don't think this is a theological issue. I think it is a pathological one. Not just for Driscoll and Jones, but for the entire church.
If we would be healed, our theology would take care of itself.
1080 comments
Hi Doug and welcome to my blog. I actually think blogging is an excellent way to discuss serious and important issues. Even though I use cartoons to convey meaning, I also do a lot of writing. And I spend lots of care and time on both because, well, these are serious and important issues. I’m not sure how else I can participate in the conversation, particularly about the abuse of power, etc., in the churches, besides through blogging. I do, however, happen to know that blogs are terribly annoying to those who would like to continue their wrongdoing. In fact, this is one of Driscoll’s complaints… that the internet is to blame for his unjust demise. Yay internet! Yay blogs!
Why would Doug NOT want to completely ignore Julie’s story? Addressing it with any honesty or integrity would make things, shall we say, awkward between him and TJ, and that’s to be avoided at any cost. We cannot afford to compromise the bromance!
Also … shaking my head at Doug COMPLETELY ignoring Julie’s story, and instead trying to control the narrative by shaming everyone engaged in discussion here. (Although if we need to"transcend" commenting in blogs, I propose Doug lead by example)
Somebody please tell me what it means to “transcend blogging”. My fallopian tubes get in the way of thinking about hard smart man things.
Of course, Doug’s desire to quiet things down likely has quite a bit to do with his relationship with Tony Jones. Seems pretty clear.