Priests form bands of robbers,
waiting in ambush for their victims.
They murder travelers along the road to Shechem
and practice every kind of sin.-Hosea 6:9, NLT
While writing this blog and receiving email, I have come across more than one scenario involving a married pastor having sex with his (or her) congregant. Then a question is raised about how responsible the pastor’s affair partner is regarding such situations.
I place the primary blame for such instances of adultery upon the cheating pastor.
One thing I was taught in professional ethics at Yale Divinity School is how a power dynamic exists between a pastor and his congregant. That complicates “consent” just as it would between a therapist and his client. In other words, a pastor using this power dynamic is less an equal in the affair and more a predator preying on his congregant’s trust.
In other words, sex between a pastor and a congregant is–generally speaking–a case of ministerial misconduct and abuse.
The affair partner in such a situation is a victim as well as a participant in the affair. They are a victim of this pastor’s abuse of power. In so far as they had a choice and chose to engage in sex, the third party is responsible.
We are each responsible for our own choices and actions (e.g. 2 Corinthians 5:10). However, the person who exploits our weaknesses abusing a position of power–i.e. the pastor–bears responsibility for doing that as well (e.g. Mark 9:42).
To be clear: Married pastors have no excuse for such behavior, especially.
If they did not know better–as in were unaware of the Ten Commandments–then they had no business being a pastor in the first place.
As I have written elsewhere on this blog, I generally am harder on the married individual than the affair partner as it is the job of the married individual to keep outsiders OUT of the marriage.
Obviously, it should go without saying that having sex with a married person–whoever he or she may be–is wrong; it’s adultery. However, adultery cannot happen if a married spouse refuses to engage sexually with a third party.
And adultery will happen with a third party at some point if the married partner is hell-bent on finding someone. Just don’t let that someone be you! That is the message of Proverbs 5 and elsewhere on such matters.
Don’t be a young fool as engaging in adultery is foolish, foolish behavior.
A pet peeve of mine is when a married pastor has sex with a congregant and it is called an “affair” when in fact it is professional MALPRACTICE.
Tullian Tchividjian is a classic example of this. He had sex with two congregants that we know of, yet his apologists were looking to portray him as repentant, even though the second act of malpractice was revealed later. Perhaps predator is a better word!
Yeah, I agree, Loren. It is closer to a predator scenario.
That is how I feel about the whole David and Bathsheba situation as well! David lorded above her in every way and he wanted her!
It bothers me that so many “Christians” use that scenario to condon divorcing a spouse to marry an affair partner!
There was no divorce and God held David alone accountable for the sin. God did not label Bathsheba an adulterous or harlot. God compared her to a beloved innocent lamb that was stolen and sacrificed for selfish reasons!