Billy Graham's Grandson Responds to Sovereign Grace Ministries Lawsuit

by Sol Reform 9 Replies latest social current

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://www.christianpost.com/news/billy-grahams-grandson-responds-to-sovereign-grace-ministries-lawsuit-97590/#MO4kzTFO5tUJFsbU.99

    Billy Graham's Grandson Responds to Sovereign Grace Ministries Lawsuit

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    • c. j. mahaney(Photo: SBTS via The Christian Post)C. J. Mahaney, president of Sovereign Grace Ministries, speaks at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., on Thursday, Feb. 10, 2011.

    By Anugrah Kumar , Christian Post ContributorJune 8, 2013|2:33 pm

    Christian radio host Janet Mefferd talked with Boz Tchividjian, evangelist Billy Graham's grandson and founder of Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment, who strongly responded to the silence of evangelical leaders on the Sovereign Grace Ministries lawsuit.

    The issue is far from being over, Mefferd said on her show on Thursday, noting that the lawsuit against SGM - filed last November and involving multiple allegations of child abuse as well as conspiracy and cover-up charges - was dismissed due to the expiration of statute of limitations for several of the plaintiffs. But the plaintiffs' attorneys have now filed a motion for reconsideration.C.J. Mahaney, president of SGM until recently, was one of several defendants accused of permitting and covering up the sexual abuse of children in churches that formed part of the ministry

    .Janet Mefferd said ordinary Christians have been calling on evangelical leaders to address "American evangelicalism's biggest sex scandal to date." Tchividjian, former chief prosecutor in the Seventh Judicial Circuit's Sexual Crimes Division, responded by saying the response by evangelical leaders led to an "incredible disappointment."

    "It's nothing new; I think we've seen this type of response may be in different flavors from other Christians in the past ... including in the Catholic Church," said Tchividjian, professor of law at Liberty University School of Law in Lynchburg, Va."Do we not learn from the past at all?" he asked. "It's been a disappointment probably more than anything else ... knowing that there are many, many hurting Christians out there, survivors of abuse who are left completely abandoned in many ways by the evangelical community."Follow us SGM is an evangelical, Reformed, and charismatic network founded in 1982 that has about 80 member churches, located mostly in the U.S.Regarding The Gospel Coalition's continued silence about the scandal - as the ministry says they are waiting for the court's ruling before they respond - Tchividjian said they are trying to protect the institution and stay out of it.

    "The reality is this: since when have evangelicals ever looked to the law in determining whether they should speak about evil?"Tchividjian also mentioned statements by The Gospel Coalition and Together for the Gospel, the leaders of which are partners and friends with Mahaney. The statements, he noted, begin with acknowledgment of how horrible child sexual abuse and cover-up are, but the whole purpose is "supporting a friend of theirs."Mefferd pointed out that Together for the Gospel altered their statement that was first posted on May 23. By June 6, two sentences - "No such accusation of direct wrongdoing was ever made against C.J. Mahaney. Instead, he was charged with founding a ministry and for teaching doctrines and principles that are held to be true by vast millions of American evangelicals" - had been removed.And a paragraph, which read, "A Christian leader, charged with any credible, serious, and direct wrongdoing, would usually be well advised to step down from public ministry.

    No such accusation of direct wrongdoing was ever made against C.J. Mahaney. Instead, he was charged with founding a ministry and for teaching doctrines and principles that are held to be true by vast millions of American evangelicals ..." had been changed to: "A Christian leader, charged with any credible, serious, and direct wrongdoing, would usually be well advised to step down from public ministry. We believe this lawsuit failed that test."It's a problem of "transparency and truth, which the Gospel is supposed to be all about," Tchividjian responded, noting the statements have been changed without the public being notified. He went on to say that Together for the Gospel should also indicate that Mahaney was the senior pastor at one of their churches when the offenses allegedly took place and the families were allegedly discouraged from reporting the incidents."I wonder if these statements would have ever been published if C.J. Mahaney had been a pastor of a small country church,"

    Tchividjian added. "I just think that ... people see through the fact that this is a friend ... this was sort of a good ole boy network in action ... What should they say ... I think we have to understand that Christian leaders have a spiritual responsibility to shepherd the entire flock, not just one party, and I never read in any of those statements any of these men speak about the need to love and minister and expend themselves in love to these particular 11 families."It is sad, he said, "that somebody who has been abused in the Christian community or is being abused in the Christian community will read these statements and do we think this will propel them to come forward or to remain silent?"Mefferd asked why Christian leaders should take a stand on the issue. "I think the way the church and Christians within the church respond to the darkness that surrounds child sexual abuse, will either draw survivors I've always said either into the arms of Jesus or will propel them away," Tchividjian replied."And I think sadly and tragically what we've seen in the last few weeks is that many have been propelled away. ...

    It's so important to speak out because the Gospel - we tell people we believe in the Gospel - and the Gospel is about being liberated, to be transparent, to be truthful and even to be vulnerable. I tell people all the time that God did his most powerful work when Jesus was transparent, naked, and vulnerable on the cross. And so we need to embrace that."The world and survivors are watching, he went on to say. "Survivors are watching and to say listen, we want to approach this issue truthfully, even if it requires some vulnerability on our part that's OK because our identity is not in me or what we do but it's Christ alone that gives us the ability to do that. And ultimately, if we do that, if we take the road of the Good Samaritan that says ... my holy business is not keeping me from getting down into the dirt and demonstrating and expending myself for those who are hurting ... if we can do that I still think there's a lot of hope that a lot of abuse survivors will see the authenticity of the Gospel at work and not just simply a bunch of individuals who are trying to protect a friendship or an institution.

    That's not the Gospel."A pastor who was at one time a close adviser to Mahaney recently compared the behavior by the SGM's leadership team, including that of Mahaney, during the fallout after the controversy, to that of President Nixon and his staff during the Watergate scandal of the early '70s. "I also expect C.J., the Leadership Team, the interim Board and the current Board will all get full pardons like Nixon by those who fill their shoes," stated Brent Detwiler.He told The Christian Post in March that as one of the original leaders at SGM, he was considered Mahaney's right-hand man. "Scandals in SGM continue one after another," Detwiler wrote in his blog posted recently."The lawsuit is moving forward. A new polity without biblical sanction will be put into place. Cover-ups will continue. Nothing has changed. It only gets worse. There are no Charles Colsons in this scandalous story," he told CP.Detwiler spoke to CP after about 20 churches decided to no longer be under the direction of SGM due to disputes over the leadership capabilities of Mahaney and its executive board.

    Read more at http://www.christianpost.com/news/billy-grahams-grandson-responds-to-sovereign-grace-ministries-lawsuit-97590/#WGvbc7UPYTwgmTDm.99

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    CJ Mahaney Drops Out of 2014 Together for the Gospel Conference Due to Sovereign Grace Lawsuit

    2 ShareBy Nicola Menzie , Christian Post ReporterJuly 2, 2013|6:19 pm

    • C.J. Mahaney, president of Sovereign Grace Ministries, is seen in this 2006 file photo.(Photo: Flickr/James Thompson)C.J. Mahaney, president of Sovereign Grace Ministries, is seen in this 2006 file photo.

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    Citing a desire to keep his peers from any "unfair and unwarranted criticism" stemming from a lawsuit filed against Sovereign Grace Ministries, C.J. Mahaney has announced his departure from the biennial Together for the Gospel (T4G) pastors conference he co-founded in 2006 with fellow evangelical Christian leaders Mark Dever, Albert Mohler and Ligon Duncan.In a letter dated July 1, 2013, and published on the T4G website, Mahaney writes:

    After much prayer, reflection and counsel I have decided to withdraw from participation in the 2014 Together for the Gospel conference.
    My reason for doing so is simple: I love these men and this conference and I desire to do all I possibly can to serve the ongoing fruitfulness of T4G.Unfortunately, the civil lawsuit filed against Sovereign Grace Ministries, two former SGM churches and pastors (including myself), continues to generate the type of attention that could subject my friends to unfair and unwarranted criticism. Though dismissed in May (and now on appeal), the lawsuit could prove a distraction from the purpose of this important conference. My withdrawal is not intended to communicate anything about the merits of the suit. My decision simply reflects the reality that my participation could create a hindrance to this conference and its distinct purpose of serving so many pastors. My strong desire is to make sure this doesn't happen. I believe the most effective way I can serve my friends who have supported me, and continue to support me, is by not participating in the 2014 conference.My enthusiasm for this conference is undiminished and I believe it will continue to be a powerful context for encouraging and equipping pastors in their efforts to serve their churches and proclaim the gospel. I am immensely grateful for the undeserved privilege to have been involved in previous conferences, and, most importantly, my ongoing friendship with these men I love and respect.

    Mahaney, currently leading Sovereign Grace Church of Louisville (Kentucky), had been overseeing the Sovereign Grace Ministries church-planting organization since its founding 30 years ago, but stepped down as president from the evangelical, Reformed, and charismatic network in April as it prepared to undergo a new executive organizational structure. Sovereign Grace Ministries also moved last year its headquarters from Gaithersburg, Md., to Louisville, where it shares affiliations with Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.Follow us The network had been fighting a lawsuit brought in October 2012 by former Sovereign Grace Ministries church members who claimed there had been a cover-up of child physical and sexual abuse and protection of accused abusers, allegedly at the hand of some leaders. Mahaney, Sovereign Grace Ministries co-founder Larry Tomczak and John Loftness, who resigned as chairman of the SGM board in February, were named among the defendants in the civil lawsuit.

    In May, a Maryland judge dismissed most of the suit due to plaintiffs having failed to file before the statute of limitations expired,

    among other issues. As Mahaney, 59, noted in his statement, the 11 plaintiffs have appealed the court's decision. In addition, the pastors and churches named in the lawsuit could face criminal charges since felonies, such as sexual abuse of a child, are exempt from the statute of limitations.Although Sovereign Grace Ministries has experienced the departure of several member churches from its estimated 80-member network due to handling of the controversy and lawsuit, several Christian ministers, such as Kevin DeYoung and Don Carson, stepped forward once the lawsuit was dismissed to express their confidence in and support of Mahaney. Speaking in a joint Gospel Coalition statement issued May 24, Carson, DeYoung and Justin Taylor insisted: "We are not ashamed to call C. J. a friend. Our relationship with C. J. is like that with any good friend - full of laughter and sober reflection, encouragement and mutual correction. He has regularly invited - even pursued - correction, and we have given him our perspective when it is warranted."While the admission of friendship may render this entire statement tainted in the eyes of some, we hope most Christians will understand that while friends should never cover for each others' sins, neither do friends quickly accept the accusations of others when they run counter to everything they have come to see and know about their friend. We are grateful for C. J.'s friendship and his fruitful ministry of the gospel over many decades."T4G trio Mark Dever, Ligon Duncan and Albert Mohler also issued a similar statement at the time, but it has since been removed from the conference website and Facebook page.Other prominent Christians, such as the Rev. Billy Graham's grandson and Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment co-founder, Boz Tchividjian, criticized both The Gospel Coalition and Together for the Gospel statements made in defense of Mahaney.

    "Why no mention that CJ Mahaney was actually the Senior Pastor at one of these churches where all of this horrific abuse allegedly occurred AND that [he] discouraged these families from bringing this matter to the God ordained civil authorities?"

    Tchividjian reportedly wrote on Facebook. "Omitting such a fundamentally important fact from this statement is a fundamental error."He added, "This lawsuit is less about the abuse and more about an institution that took steps to protect itself and its reputation over the victimized souls (and bodies) of little ones."Mahaney, who pastored Covenant Life Church in Gaithersburg, Md., for about as long as he led the Sovereign Grace Ministries network as president, stepped down from the church-planting network for about six months in 2011 amid accusations of "pride, unentreatability, deceit, sinful judgment, and hypocrisy." He was reinstated as president the following year after a board review cleared him of the accusations.The next Together for the Gospel conference, meant to help encourage local churches and pastors to reaffirm the central doctrine of the Christian faith, is scheduled for April 8-10, 2014, in Louisville, with featured speakers including Ligon Duncan, Albert Mohler, Mark Dever, David Platt, John Piper, Kevin DeYoung, Thabiti Anyabwile and Matt Chandler, among others.Advertisement

    Read more at http://www.christianpost.com/news/cj-mahaney-drops-out-of-2014-together-for-the-gospel-conference-due-to-sovereign-grace-lawsuit-99252/#3qfA15Jfb0ChDM0M.99

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://www.religionnews.com/2014/05/18/megachurch-pastors-leave-reformed-evangelical-network-amid-child-abuse-scandal/

    Megachurch pastors leave Reformed evangelical network amid child abuse scandal

    Sarah Pulliam Bailey | May 18, 2014

    | 11 Comments (RNS)

    Two pastors have left a Reformed evangelical group after a pastor from the Maryland megachurch they oversaw confessed to covering up sex abuse claims, the latest chapter in a public struggle over evangelicals coming to terms with abuse within their ranks.

    Pastors Joshua Harris and C.J. Mahaney left the leadership council of The Gospel Coalition, a central hub for the Reformed evangelical movement, after a trial involving child abuse at Covenant Life Church in Gaithersburg, Md., which both men have overseen.

    C.J. Mahaney, who has left the Gospel Coalition council after a trial involving child abuse in the church, in a 2006 photo Photo courtesy of james.thompson, via Wikimedia Commons

    A criminal trial that concluded last week raised questions about what pastors at Covenant Life knew about the abuse and why steps weren’t taken to stop it. Nathaniel Morales, 56, was convicted Thursday (May 15) of sexually abusing three underage boys between 1983 and 1991 when he was a youth leader at Covenant Life.

    During testimony, former Covenant Life pastor Grant Layman suggested that he withheld information from the police about the abuse allegations against Morales.
    “Did you have an obligation to report the alleged abuse?” public defender Alan Drew, who represented Morales, asked during cross-examination. “I believe so,” Layman said. “And you didn’t,” Drew responded. “No,” Layman said.
    Layman, who is Mahaney’s brother-in-law, stepped down from his role at Covenant Life in March.

    Mahaney and Harris are among a coterie of evangelical leaders who are trying to push the movement toward an embrace of Reformed theology, which has traditionally been the domain of Presbyterians and other followers of John Calvin, the 16th-century French theologian. Reformed theology differs from some evangelical teaching in key aspects, particularly on the question of salvation, and it has roiled life within the Southern Baptist Convention, where 30 percent of pastors now consider themselves Calvinists, or Reformed.

    The allegations of abuse cover-up that have dogged Mahaney’s leadership — he was never personally accused of abuse — in recent years have also cast unwanted attention on the Reformed network he helped start and have sent leading Reformed pastors rushing to his defense.

    Mahaney founded Covenant Life in 1977 and now leads Sovereign Grace Church of Louisville, Ky., which is also the home of Sovereign Grace Ministries, a national association of 80 Reformed evangelical churches.

    Mahaney could not be reached for comment, but Harris tweeted Monday that he needed to focus on repairing the Maryland megachurch, which he inherited from Mahaney in 2004: “I resigned the @TGC Council because I don’t want the present challenges at my church to distract from this terrific ministry. Godspeed, TGC!”

    Mahaney and Harris are no longer listed on The Gospel Coalition website, which boasts of leaders such as Al Mohler, president of Louisville’s Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; Tim Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City; and Mark Dever, pastor of Capitol Hill Baptist Church in Washington, D.C. An employee at The Gospel Coalition said no further comment was expected.

    Harris said in a tearful sermon on Sunday (May 18) that he has asked the church’s board to consider placing him on administrative leave while the church continues to investigate the issue. “We have a zero tolerance policy of abuse of any kind,” Harris said, urging people to go to the police if they know of any abuse.

    Harris said that because of a separate civil lawsuit, church leaders are unable to speak openly about what pastors knew what when. “Right now, we’re still getting conflicting information,” Harris said.

    In a statement released last year, Covenant Life leaders said they didn’t know about the abuse until “many years later.” Nearly a year ago, Mohler, Keller and others came to Mahaney’s defense after he was accused in a lawsuit of covering up sexual abuse of children. Mahaney announced that he would pull out of a conference called Together 4 the Gospel due to ongoing lawsuits, though he was seated in the front of the audience with conference leaders.

    Mahaney took a leave of absence from Sovereign Grace Ministries in 2011 after other pastors in the network charged him with “expressions of pride, unentreatability, deceit, sinful judgment and hypocrisy.”

    Six months later, the group reinstated Mahaney, declaring full confidence in him. In October 2012, the same month that a lawsuit was filed, Mahaney stepped down from Sovereign Grace Ministries to focus on pastoral ministry. Two months later, Harris’ Maryland church voted to leave the Sovereign Grace network.

    In a sermon a year ago, Harris acknowledged that he had been sexually abused as a child, telling the congregation amid the ongoing lawsuit, “Please don’t allow the circumstance to draw you away from faith in Jesus.”

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform
    Tullian Tchividjian Blasts Sovereign Grace Ministries ...

    www.christianpost.com/.../tullian-tchividjian-blasts-sovereign-grace-minist... 4 hours ago ...

    article has been pulled
  • cultBgone
    cultBgone

    Maybe if one of the gb or wts leaders was related to a famous evangelist who counseled US presidents, we would see their names and photos in major newspapers as they are sued by the abused jws. For now, those stories sadly and wrongfully never seem big enough to gain national exposure.

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    Christian Post has reposted article

    Tullian Tchividjian Blasts Sovereign Grace Ministries Handling of Sex Abuse Scandal; Prematurely Departs The Gospel Coalition

    By Morgan Lee , Christian Post Reporter May 21, 2014 |5:49 am (Courtesy of Tullian Tchividjian)

    Tullian Tchividjian is slamming Sovereign Grace Ministries for its handling of a sex abuse scandal, while announcing this week that his participation with The Gospel Coalition will unexpectedly end on Thursday.

    Tchividjian, whose brother, Boz, is the founder of Godly Response to Abuse in a Christian Environment, a group that investigates sexual abuse in churches and ministries, spoke out against TGC's actions in light of the Sovereign Grace Ministries sexual abuse scandal.

    C. J. Mahaney, who founded the SGM, along with other ministry leaders, was hit with a civil lawsuit last year alleging that they conspired to "permit sexual deviants to have unfettered access to children for purposes of predation and to obstruct justice by covering up ongoing past predation." While the lawsuit was thrown out due to statute of limitations, Tchividjian said that unlike many of those connected to TGC who considered Mahaney a friend and claimed that he had "been the object of libel and even a Javert-like obsession by some," he saw the situation differently.

    In his eyes, given that Mahaney's brother-in-law and fellow former pastor at Covenant Life Church had confessed to knowing about sex abuse claims and withholding that information from police last week, the SGM pastor was guilty. "Give me a break. These people, they're family. Of course he knew," Tchividjian told The Christian Post.

    "C. J. was, for many years, the micro-managing head of the organization and nothing happened under the umbrella of Sovereign Grace that he wasn't made aware of, so for anyone to say, 'Well he didn't know,' that's totally naive." Tchividjian added that he was "pretty disturbed" when Don Carson, Kevin DeYoung, and Justin Taylor published a statement on TGC website in May 2013 which defended Mahaney, saying that it looked "like the good-old boys club covering their own."

    "I thought it was premature. I thought it was insensitive. I communicated with the guys who wrote this statement that I was disappointed, that I thought it was unwise and premature and that they needed to clarify that their statement was not a statement from The Gospel Coalition, per se, but was their own personal statement," Tchividjian explained. "There were some of us on the coalition, or who were associated with it, who didn't want to be associated with their defense of C. J.," he continued. "I've just been sort of disgusted by the whole thing."

    Speaking about his departure from The Gospel Coalition, Tchividjian said his departure came with little warning, though he explained that he made the decision eight or nine months ago to leave in August. A project started by New York City's Redeemer Presbyterian pastor Tim Keller and Canadian Reformed theologian D. A. Carson in 2004, TGC asked Tchividjian if they could host his blog in 2007. The Presbyterian pastor explained that his involvement with TGC had been limited to speaking at its conferences and his blog posts, though he was initially attracted to its vision.

    "I think the original messaging of The Gospel Coalition, from when it was founded in 2007, has morphed," Tchividjian told CP. "Mine hasn't. My goal has always been in every post to preach the radicality of the Gospel of grace." Yet while "no one from The Gospel Coalition formally reached out to me or questioned anything I ever posted or asked me to clarify anything I ever posted," Tchividjian noted that he began to feel a shift in the site's theology and how his doctrine was being received based on what other contributors were posting.

    "I was told the other day that conversations about me and about what I had been saying had been going on for a year, which I didn't know about until the other day," said Tchividjian. Around the same time, Tchividjian founded his own ministry, Liberate, which he describes as connecting "God's inexhaustible grace to an exhausted world." Two months ago, he informed TGC editors that he intended to move all of his blog content to his new site, adding that "they seemed fine with that."

    Last week, Tchividjian said he was informed via a friend on TGC's council that the group's leadership wanted his blog posts removed "ASAP." According to Tchividjian's contact, TGC leadership was hoping to have his content removed because the website was relaunching on Monday, but noted that part of its decision seemed to "be personal, some of it theological." Tchividjian told his friend to inform TGC leadership that he already intended to remove his content in August, but that his site was not ready yet; after talking with leaders, his friend told him he had until Monday. TGC leadership ultimately gave him until this Thursday.

    "My frustration was, I was never reached out to, called or emailed from any of the powers that be, saying, 'Hey listen, there are a couple of us that have some questions that have been raised, would you care to clarify?' said Tchividjian. "Or ask me questions! Or even invite me to this meeting, if my name was on the docket!" Billy Graham's grandson said that he was also frustrated that he had never received personal feedback or criticism about the content of his posts from TGC leadership, saying that the thrust of everything he wrote was about God's grace and had never been "harsh" or "divisive."

    "To me, it's somewhat disconcerting that 'Jesus plus nothing equals everything' is much more controversial in some Evangelical circles than 'Jesus plus something equals everything,'" said Tchividjian. "I've been widely known as talking about grace without 'buts or brakes,' that God's grace is much more radical than anything we could ever imagine and that we could never over-exaggerate it." Tchividjian, who considers himself Reformed, said that as is, TGC was "not as big of a 'coalition' as it would appear."

    "They want to say that they're very multi-denominational and all, but they're really not," said Tchividjian. "It's Baptist and Presbyterians, but it's a particular flavor of Baptist and Presbyterians, it's not even all inclusive of all Baptists and Presbyterians." The Christian Post's attempt to reach The Gospel Coalition's Executive Director Ben Peays for comment was not returned by press time.

    http://www.christianpost.com/news/tullian-tchividjian-blasts-sovereign-grace-ministries-handling-of-sex-abuse-scandal-prematurely-departs-the-gospel-coalition-120062/

    Early life and education [ edit ]

    Born in Jacksonville, Florida, Tullian Tchividjian, as he is called, is the son of Virginia Leftwich (Gigi) Graham and Dr. Stephan Tchividjian, a clinical psychologist, who is of Swiss-Armenian ancestry. Tullian is a grandson of evangelist Billy Graham and his wife, Ruth. [3] A graduate of Columbia International University (in philosophy), he earned an M.Div. degree at the Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando. He is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America. [2]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tullian_Tchividjian

  • Vidiot
    Vidiot

    I remember when Graham's grandson first dropped the pedo-problem bomb to the public a few years back.

    I hate to say it, but I wasn't surprised; fundagelical Christianity (like the WTS) is inherently heirarchal and authoritarian.

    The very nature of authoritarian groups enables the institutionalized sexual victimization of young people; it's virtually unavoidable and quickly becomes endemic.

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://www.christiantoday.com/article/cj.mahaney.i.have.never.conspired.to.protect.a.child.predator/37641.htm

    CJ Mahaney on scandal: 'I have never conspired to protect a child predator'

    Published 23 May 2014 | Carey Lodge Email Print More Sharing Services Share Wikipedia

    C. J. Mahaney has been involved in an ongoing lawsuit regarding the cover up of sexual abuse at Covenant Life Church. CJ

    Mahaney has broken his silence on the two-year sex-abuse scandal that has rocked Sovereign Grace Ministries (SGM), a coalition of 80 Reformed evangelical churches. SGM and its leadership have been embroiled in controversy for some time following allegations of a child abuse cover up in its former flagship church, Covenant Life Church (CLC).

    Nathaniel Morales, now 56, was convicted on May 15 this year of sexually abusing three underage boys between 1983 and 1991 during his time as youth pastor at Covenant Life. During his trial, questions were raised as to whether or not the leadership of the church knew about Morales' transgressions. In a separate civil lawsuit, Mahaney - who founded Sovereign Grace and was lead pastor of CLC during Morales' employment - was accused of being aware of the youth leader's crimes and failing to take action against him.

    Mahaney was named as a defendant in the lawsuit which alleged that he and several other leaders of SGM, including Larry Tomczak - who was also accused of repeatedly physically abusing a woman across two decades, beginning in her childhood - conspired to "permit sexual deviants to have unfettered access to children for purposes of predation and to obstruct justice by covering up ongoing past predation", though this case was dropped in May 2013 due to the statute of limitations.

    However, on May 20, Mahaney's brother-in-law Grant Layman, another former pastor of CLC, admitted in court that he may have withheld incriminating information about Morales from the police. Billy Graham's grandson Tullian Tchividjian has expressed his belief that this proves Mahaney has lied about his role in the cover up. "CJ was, for many years, the micro-managing head of the organisation and nothing happened under the umbrella of Sovereign Grace that he wasn't made aware of, so for anyone to say, 'Well he didn't know,' that's totally naive," he told the Christian Post.

    "These people, they're family. Of course he knew," he added. The lawsuit against Mahaney and his colleagues is due to be appealed next month. As a result of these controversies, Mahaney and Joshua Harris – bestselling author of 'I kissed dating goodbye' and currently pastor of CLC – have formally left The Gospel Coalition (TGC). Mahaney has now released a statement in which he addresses the lawsuit brought against him for the first time.

    He denies the allegations and says he "look[s] forward" to a time that he can discuss it more freely. "For nearly two years now, I have remained silent about a civil lawsuit brought against various parties including myself. During that time, many have urged me to respond publicly and address the accusations against me," he writes in the open letter published May 22.

    "I look forward to the day when I can speak freely. For now, the simple and extraordinarily unsatisfying reality – for myself and others – is that in the face of an ongoing civil lawsuit, I simply cannot speak publicly to the specifics of these events.

    "Even with those constraints, however, let me be clear about this: I have never conspired to protect a child predator, and I also deny all the claims made against me in the civil suit." Mahaney continues: "I am deeply grieved for those who suffered abuse while part of Covenant Life Church, as well as those beyond the church who were abused—and I continue to pray for justice to be served on their behalf and for God's healing grace in their lives.

    "I'm saddened, too, by the confusion and damage that has resulted from public comments and speculation about these events. Still, my trust remains in the Lord, who comforts the brokenhearted and promises in his justice and in his time to right every wrong," he finishes.

    Brent Detwiler, one of the four founders of Sovereign Grace Ministries who stepped down in 2009 following a fall-out with Mahaney and who has since openly criticised the church's leadership and handling of the abuse scandal, has responded to his former colleague's statement with a comment on his own blog.

    Arguing that Mahaney's denial is "contrary to ALL the evidence in my opinion and in my possession", Detwiler says it didn't surprise him that the former head of Sovereign Grace has not admitted any wrongdoing. "He has no choice but to deny on the advice of his lawyers...What else can he do at this point? Confess? Now that's an idea!"

    "I was on the SGM Board of Directors for 25 years and worked closely with CJ I was the number 2 leader in SGM from 1998-2007. resigned in 2007 as a matter of conscience. I have no knowledge of Mahaney ever reporting, or instructing his staff to report, suspected or known paedophiles to law enforcement. That is my sworn testimony," he wrote. "I now have knowledge he did not report known paedophiles. That too is my sworn testimony.

    "This statement by Mahaney is meaningless. It is a public relations piece. Mark my words. No one will be deterred from going after the truth and holding him to account."
  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://thewartburgwatch.com/2014/05/23/a-victims-family-provides-a-startling-counterpoint-to-cj-mahaneys-statement/

    A Victim’s Family Provides a Startling Counterpoint to CJ Mahaney’s Statement

    Posted on Fri May 23, 2014 by dee Crying Child-USAF On May 22, 2014

    CJ Mahaney released a statement about the pending civil lawsuit brought against him and others. This statement was made following the reports of the testimony given by his brother in law, Grant Layman, during the Nate Morales trial. In his statement, Mahaney said the following:

    I’m saddened, too, by the confusion and damage that has resulted from public comments and speculation about these events.

    It is the opinion of TWW that damage has also occurred to the victims and their families as the numerous allegations of child sex abuse and cover up within Sovereign Grace Ministries have been met with apparent disdain by some religious leaders. For those readers who are not aware of the details of this controversy, we heartily recommend that you visit the well written SGM Crisis Timeline at this link.

    Also, in the subsequent statement from the family, you will read of Wallace's Story and Noel's Story. At the request of the family, we direct you to this link at Sovereign Grace Survivors. You will be able to read those stories along with others. It is the hope of TWW that the full truth in this matter will be brought to light. Today, TWW was apprised that documentation, along with a statement by a victim's family, was available to provide a counterpoint to the statement made by CJ Mahaney.

    It is our hope that the evidence, on both sides, will one day be presented before an objective audience. It would seem to us that all parties of good faith and conscience would desire the same. TWW believes that celebrity Christian leaders have the backing of other well known leaders. Furthermore, these personalities have a plethora of grass roots fans.

    Who provides a voice for the victims and their families who are often marginalized and/or shunned by the very churches in which they sought hope and comfort? believe that blogs are providing information that might have been ignored by those who control the microphones.

    Within these blogs, supportive communities have arisen to support those who have struggled.

    As always, TWW stands with the victims of child sex abuse and their families.

    Please join us in daily praying for those who have been abused, let down and left hurting. May the God of all comfort be with them.


    A Statement by Wallace and Happymom

    I have never conspired to protect a child predator, and I also deny all the claims made against me in the civil suit”. CJ Mahaney

    In response to CJ Mahaney’s recent statement, we offer this rebuttal.

    • We met with CJ in January 2009 to discuss our daughter's molestation and how Sovereign Grace Church of Fairfax had handled it.
    • There were 3 meetings with CJ and we have emails to verify this.
    • He also sent us an article, When Child Sex Abuse Occurs: Considerations for Pastors.
    • Details of our family's meetings are in “Wallace’s Story” April 8, 2011.
    • CJ mentioned in one of his emails that he found Noel’s story “heartbreaking”. Her story was made public on December 31, 2008.
    • Kenneth Maresco (CLC pastor) was also involved with 2 separate meetings that we had with Sovereign Grace Church of Fairfax.
    • Both men were well informed on the situation regarding the Fairfax church.

    Please the keep victims and victim's families in your prayers. Wallace & Happymom

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    A class-action lawsuit originally filed in October 2012, and twice amended, claims that church members were taught to distrust secular authorities and that to discuss abuse allegations with other church members amounted to gossip.

    When authorities were called, it alleges, church leaders helped accused predators avoid arrest, while requiring victims as young as 3 to meet with and “forgive” their abuser.

    http://www.abpnews.com/culture/social-issues/item/28739-sbc-leader-enters-twitter-fray

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