M
MessianicMommy
Guest
Sacerdote, I do appreciate your input, but I have to say that across the bar, not all people who become Pastors have any experience in or education in psychology or counseling. A lot of christian women and men ask for advice with their religious authority first. If it doesn't "sit right", they reach out online quite often, whilst covering their internet tracks.
Myself, I've known about ten separate women in the last year alone who have left abusive spouses. Not all were escalating to physicalities. For the most part it was money and medical care being withheld from them, and gaslighting as well as other mental abuse. I can only thank G-d for the women on the forum who have either experience as survivors or as mandatory reporters and counselors who knew what to do and what resources to send them to.
I have personally seen an acquaintance of mine that I never had an inkling something was wrong hint at abuse to me prior to escaping from her abuser. She now blogs here.
She was not allowed to leave the house with all of the kids, ever. It was the grace of G-d and quick thinking women that helped her plan her escape before she was ever able to contact a DV shelter. Her pastor did not know, because her abuser had long since moved her away from family, from friends, and removed them out of the church to hold "house church".
I'd love to say this is just a small minority of how abusers work, but I've seen it over and over again since she got out.
Unless pastors or church counselors have an expertise in domestic violence prevention and assistance - odds are the help won't be coming from them.
I've seen several sisters become excommunicated or otherwise shunned from their churches for protecting their children because "the sanctity of marriage is a higher calling" and "you must submit, that he may be won".
The odds of a woman being involved in DV is one in four. And of the women not involved, she knows many who are, or may be related to those who are. In my family, there are four that I know of who were abused and two that I suspect are being abused. I've had three close friends in DV situations.
Until they are ready to hear it, they will not even be open to hearing the options available to them by law, or by Scripture. This is why it is imperitive that we be loosened to let them know, because even as wonderful as DV campaigns are, abusers have ways of hiding or masking reality so that they feel there is absolutely no way out.
If I'm recalling correctly, we've had two women in the last year post between Married Couples or the Women's forum about DV issues and we have constantly referred them to separation to get safe and contacting a DV shelter or hotline immediately and figuring out what their options are in their state/country of residence.
Truth be told, in many states, the protections offered by separation are not the same as divorce. Only the man or woman in a DV situation can determine with help of DV counselors and their lawyers to determine what protection measures they need to employ while the police slowly run their end of paperwork.
Many pastors (at least in the areas I hail from) do not have any experience with this. The ones I know, told these women I knew to stay in their abusive situation. It's a travesty really.
Myself, I've known about ten separate women in the last year alone who have left abusive spouses. Not all were escalating to physicalities. For the most part it was money and medical care being withheld from them, and gaslighting as well as other mental abuse. I can only thank G-d for the women on the forum who have either experience as survivors or as mandatory reporters and counselors who knew what to do and what resources to send them to.
I have personally seen an acquaintance of mine that I never had an inkling something was wrong hint at abuse to me prior to escaping from her abuser. She now blogs here.
She was not allowed to leave the house with all of the kids, ever. It was the grace of G-d and quick thinking women that helped her plan her escape before she was ever able to contact a DV shelter. Her pastor did not know, because her abuser had long since moved her away from family, from friends, and removed them out of the church to hold "house church".
I'd love to say this is just a small minority of how abusers work, but I've seen it over and over again since she got out.
Unless pastors or church counselors have an expertise in domestic violence prevention and assistance - odds are the help won't be coming from them.
I've seen several sisters become excommunicated or otherwise shunned from their churches for protecting their children because "the sanctity of marriage is a higher calling" and "you must submit, that he may be won".
The odds of a woman being involved in DV is one in four. And of the women not involved, she knows many who are, or may be related to those who are. In my family, there are four that I know of who were abused and two that I suspect are being abused. I've had three close friends in DV situations.
Until they are ready to hear it, they will not even be open to hearing the options available to them by law, or by Scripture. This is why it is imperitive that we be loosened to let them know, because even as wonderful as DV campaigns are, abusers have ways of hiding or masking reality so that they feel there is absolutely no way out.
If I'm recalling correctly, we've had two women in the last year post between Married Couples or the Women's forum about DV issues and we have constantly referred them to separation to get safe and contacting a DV shelter or hotline immediately and figuring out what their options are in their state/country of residence.
Truth be told, in many states, the protections offered by separation are not the same as divorce. Only the man or woman in a DV situation can determine with help of DV counselors and their lawyers to determine what protection measures they need to employ while the police slowly run their end of paperwork.
Many pastors (at least in the areas I hail from) do not have any experience with this. The ones I know, told these women I knew to stay in their abusive situation. It's a travesty really.
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