Wednesday, February 22, 2006

The Corrosive Tentacles of Gothardism Widespread

One thing that I told myself and my people was that I was only going to spend a minimal amount of time on the topic of Gothardism. For me it is very unpleasant to have to read the materials and read the reports of so many who have been damaged and harmed by that error. I had hoped that by now I could have left off that topic and moved on to other more meaningful issues. But, alas, it is like an irritating rash that won't go away.

Now a dear family that we know and love is being directly affected by Gothardism. One of the daughters in this family is seeking a relationship with a young man who has been reared in a strict Gothard home and now the issues are coming to the forefront. The young man seems very mature and sees the error of some of his parents Gothardism. But the young man's family is rigid and unrelenting regarding "courting," and this threatens to derail an apparently godly relationship between these two youths. I am aware of at least another similar circumstance in my own milieu, and there are likely many others.

Indeed, while we were talking to the mother of the girl in a local restaurant the other day, a man in the booth next to us was eavesdropping on our conversation, in which I was going over some of my concerns about Gothardism. My view of Gothardism is not favorable, to say the least, but my criticism was not a mere rant but taken primarily from the perspective that Gothard does horrible things with Biblical interpretation to justify and rationalize his sometimes bizarre views. After that man had finished his breakfast, he stopped at our booth to tell us that he was a Gothardite and that he felt it necessary to stop by and defend Gothard's name. I expressed my strong view that Gothard's teachings were unorthodox and not Biblical; the man did not seem to want to engage the conversation further.

Out of that experience I concluded a couple of things. First, the teachings of Bill Gothard are widespread among evangelical people. This is a bit surprising to me, as I have said in another article, because his teachings so obviously and blatantly differ with orthodox evangelical faith that I would have thought that few would follow such error. But apparently I am wrong about that. I was reminded that even the churches of Revelation were stained by false teachers and false prophets, so why should I find it so strange in this day of dwindling religion among the masses? Indeed. But one thing that interests me is that Gothardism is not primarily a church phenomenon. The adherents of that way of thinking do not always learn Gothardism from the church. In fact, many churches have been split and even destroyed by zealots of Gothardism insisting that the church order itself according to the tenets of Gothardism.

Secondly, it is apparent that the adherents of Gothardism are bold and brash to defend their system. My wife said, "I wonder if that man would have been so bold to defend Jesus Christ?" Good question. They seem to thrive on controversy and hold tenaciously to their ideas even if one shows them the error of that way. The combination of ready acceptance among the weak in faith and the zealousness of converts to that way is especially troubling and dangerous. This is what the Bible means by the "blind leading the blind." This is nothing short of a cultish kind of system, following a man so blindly and with such devotion that they will imbibe open heresy and theological error to do so.

So, we are taking the advice of Jesus Christ as He dictated to John the letters to the churches of Asia. To the church of Pergamos He had words of condemnation because they tolerated the error of Balaam and foolishly tolerated the teachings of the Nicolaitans, which Jesus said to the church, "... which I also hate." He called that church to repentance, lest He come quickly and fight against them with the "sword of My mouth."

To the church of Thyatira, Jesus had John write that He hated the things of "that woman Jezebel," which they seemed to tolerate. Jesus warned them sharply to repent and turn from allowing false teaching in their midst.

In the same vein, I sense a strong need to oppose this false teaching called Gothardism. My own sense is that it is a pox on the church in today's world, just as those churches in Revelation had many problems and false doctrines with which to deal. But the battle will not be easy; the adherents of that view are excitable zealots who crave power. This is especially true of the men of Gothardism, who in my own experience thus far are frankly weak men who have no intrinsic personal power or influence and thus are ready to welcome any constituted power given to them by Gothard, as is done with the Gothardism notion of the "umbrella of authority," an entirely unbiblical concept which grants to the fathers of Gothardite families [and to Gothard himself, of course] near total authority and power over the members of the family. And like Gothard, they are unable, it seems, to handle confrontation by knowledgable men outside their own "umbrella of authority." This notion, along with many other of Gothard's views, is utterly un-Christian, really, and ought to be rejected outright and the proponents of such unbiblical views sternly scolded.

On a personal note, I cannot help mentioning that I think that Gothardism is almost always, when it is brought to my attention, a problem associated, one way or another, with homeschooling. That view, of course, will irritate many genuinely serious homeschooling families, but I cannot help but make the correlation. I will leave the details and analysis of that nexus to a future article for the time being. Could it be that the inherent isolation and segregation of homeschooling makes those families more vulnerable to errors like Gothardism? Something to think about.

I continue to read the box of Gothard's materials that I was able to obtain and will, I promise you, return to the series of articles that I began some time ago. It is a very busy time of ministry for me, and a kind of marvelous revival is breaking out among us. The blog is low on my list of priorities, so those who are waiting may have to be patient with me.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank you for your work and study on this subject. Many I am sure thank you for it. I would like to know more about this subject.
Andrew
A
Schutte

bob said...

I was raised in a fundamental baptist church, and while I was familiar with the name of Bill Gothard, our church did not endorse his program. Considering how popular he is/was among many independent Baptists, I am unaware of any "Gothardites" in rural northwest Illinois. He had an amazing following in the 80's, although from what I have read, his popularity is on the wane.

I am not surprised that you would find a correlation between Gothardism and homeschooling, for Gothard is among those who advocated that homeschooling is the only acceptable Christian education and has even developed their own curriculum, I would think it would be rare indeed to find a true "Gothardite" who does not homeschool, or at least utilize a Christian school of some sort.

Vic Edwards said...

Hey, Bob, thanks for the note. I received a note from a good friend on this very point. I apparently did not make my point as plain as I might have liked. Gothard's ATI program is, in fact, a home schooling program. But what I was trying to get at with my correlation of home schooling to Gothardism is that the people who decide to homeschool their children, without even knowing Gothard, have an already existing mindset that is vulnerable to Gothardism. I am thankful that your area has not been captured (taken hostage?) by Gothardism, but I suspect that many of the parents in your area who home school might readily accept Gothard's program if they were exposed to it. What do you think?

bob said...

I have only a very vague understanding of Gothardism, so it would be difficult for me to assess whether or not those within the homeschooling crowd would find it appealing.

Although I cannot say for certain, I think there may be a rather high percentage of homeschooling parents in this region. There would be a wide array of theogical persuasions within this group.

Those who homeschool in our church are rather eclectic in their utilization of materials and I think they would be skeptical of a program format. Our church also places a rather high view in regard to the local church, so I doubt that there would be much enthusiasm to embrace such an authoritative parachurch (if such it could even be called) organization.

Rachel only rarely attends any cooperative homeschooling groups, so I am really not aware of theological schemes driving the local homeschooling movement. I would suppose though that many homeschooling groups will have some similarities that may transcend their particular systematic theology.

The thing that I find interesting with Gothard is the very blind and devoted loyalty that many of his followers have. It reminds me somewhat of the devotions that the late Jack Hyles enjoyed among many fundamental baptists.



bob

Anonymous said...

Well, Vic, it's me again. This is a very disturbing subject for me, since our pastor has been very involved in Gothardism for many years - since Gothard started his seminars, in fact.


We have seen our church divided over this issue, and almost destroyed.


For a time, some were trying to promote courtship among our young people, but most of the kids were smart enough to reject it. It's very weird, the way that BG and his followers focus this.

BG is not the only one promoting a very odd kind of courtship. It's one thing to closely watch young teens. It's an entirely different thing to interfere in the lives of adult children. In Gothardism, children are never really free of their parents' control.


No, we shouldn't abandon our parents when we are adults, but there has to be a change in relationship. In gothardism, there is not even a normal, natural growing up allowed. Even young adults cannot be trusted to make good decisions about their future. It's very sick, IMO.



Our pastor's son in-law has seen his family divided and destroyed by this kind of teaching. This young man's mother is extremely controlling, and he had to pretty much escape from her, along with his wife and kids. His brother recently committed suicide because he was so damaged and so depressed about the way he had been raised - in the ATIA program, BTW.


Sometimes I think that our pastor is beginning to see through all this, but I can't be sure. It takes a lot of work, and many years of study to break free from the Gothard think and the Gothard speak.


So, any healthy young adults should put some distance between Gothardized parents and themselves. In these cases, it's the parents who have to grow up and let go, IMO.

Vic Edwards said...

Thanks, anonymous, for your thoughtful comments. It seems that your personal experiences with Gothardism have been painful and though I know you to be a quite stable and thoughtful person, Gothardism seems to have robbed you somewhat of the joy of your salvation. That system seems to do that a lot. Thanks for your comments and your counsel on this matter. The circumstances you report are disturbing to my soul. How can so many follow a system or practice that has such devastating effects to people's souls? To hear of a young person who commits suicide because of Gothardism is almost too much to bear. On the other hand, looking at the cultish indoctrination from the literature I have, it does not actually surprise me, though it disturbs me deeply. I always apprecitate your feedback. I will be posting some new stuff soon.

Vic

Anonymous said...

Hello, Vic,
How are you doing? We are doing well.


Yes, Gothardism robs one of joy.


Maybe it sounds too harsh to tell a young adult to distance himself from his parents in some extreme cases. As a pastor, you probably cannot give such advice. However, there are many testimones of destroyed lives coming out of Gothard's ministry - destroyed homes, suicide, destroyed churches and ministries, and much, much more.


It is very bad teaching. Of course, from the IBLP, you hear only glowing testimonies of how the "ministry" has helped people.


I'm praying for you, Vic, that God will give you wisdom.


Thank you for caring about those who are coming out of this mindset, and for those who need to be confronted with the errors.

Those wonderful doctrines of grace are just what the doctor ordered.
:-) It is the perfect antidote to Pelagian errors such as Gothard's.


The thief comes to steal, kill, and destroy. Jesus came to give life. That makes all the difference, and it's all by grace alone.


God bless you, Vic, and please take care,
Donna Louise

Anonymous said...

I read all the way to the personal reflections post but didn't see any examples on exactly how Bill Gothard twists scripture or how he is just generally a bad influence. Or why a version of courting they promote is weird or unbiblical. Or a look at even a basic tenant of "Gothardism." I think providing an example would strengthen your position.

Anonymous said...

Wow--just ran across your site--when I was just out of high school in mid 70's--our church got involved in BG---not good. Has never been the same church since,,,,don't have time to go into it right now.. But I do love your wife's insight of the gothardite at the cafe..."Would he be so willing to stand up for Jesus Christ?"----Great!!

Anonymous said...

I am an escapee from a Gothardite family...you said "Could it be that the inherent isolation and segregation of homeschooling makes those families more vulnerable to errors like Gothardism? Something to think about." The truth is, Gothard, the "Institute" and other Gothardite family members coerse, ridicule and manipulate you into homeschooling your children-it's not the wrath of God you fear, it's THEIR wrath; also, in keeping the children isolated, they will never learn to see the truth about the teachings of Gothard...how DARE anybody question the teachings of their authority! I have escaped, but the Gothardites are still trying to manipulate me back and keep me quiet. To anyone wanting to know more about Gothardism, I HIGHLY recommend the book "A Matter of Basic Principles" by Veinot and Henzel. It is a straightforward approach to many of Gothards principles, along with documentation, and testimonies with supporting documentation. When I read this book, I realized I wasn't alone in all of my experiences with this group and it's members.
If you are attempted to be recruited by a Gothardite, run like H...! Like an analogy in the book to Star Trek, their thinking is not radically different than: "We are Borg...You will be assimilated...Resistance is Futile" By the way, the whole Character First! movement is designed to make that happen.