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The spirit of temple prostitution in the modern day church
The spirit of temple prostitution in the modern-day church.
Author: Gerda Venter
MA (Soc.Sc) Social Work (Clinical), UJ, SA. (SAQA Accredited)
Dmin, TICU, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA.
© 21 February 2021, Copyright: All rights reserved
In the Bible we often read about the practice of temple prostitution. As a modern church we tend to lift our eyebrows and think – thankfully, that does not exist anymore. Really? We are just fooling ourselves. Lulling ourselves into a spiritual sleep and into a denial of reality. Just like Israel of old at times fell into temple prostitution and started to worship the pagan gods of fertility, with atrocious sexual rituals in the temple and in the context of spirituality and worship, sadly we must acknowledge that this pattern still exists to this day within the church. Inside the body of believers. Over the years we have seen many of our faith giants in all denominations fall into gross sexual sin. The question remains, why? It is remarkable that we as a body of believers do not have answers, we are just shocked and ashamed when this happens and often just turn a blind eye. Many lose their faith, stating that if big leaders fail in this manner, how can there be a God? Rejecting all truth in the wake of the failures of men and women reflects on how we measure God. We measure Him, judge Him based on the successes or failures of those professing to believe in Him. How sad is that? We sit in judgement of the Creator based on the fallen image of God in man.
On the other hand, we are all too quick to blame the devil. We give him the credit for managing to lure us away into sin with his deceit. We are mostly cowards in this regard, denying our own free will in choosing our behaviour and actions. We play the blame game – it is the devil’s fault. He likes getting the credit and feels honoured by the power we assign to him. The truth is the devil cannot make us do anything. We choose to react on his suggestions and the temptations he dishes up for us wrapped in nice, often religious, giftwrap. That is the only power he has. He can tempt us. The word of God says that He that is in us, is stronger than he that is in the world (1 John4:4). Do we even believe that? If we do, no temptation will be of any consequence to us – because we will know that the God in us is bigger than the god who brought the temptation and therefore, we can overcome. However, we entertain the thought, we create back doors that sound like “those who have no sin throw the first stone”, but we conveniently ignore the part of the same story that Jesus said, “go and sin no more” (John 8). We entertain the momentary pleasures of the temptation – and then we are hooked - and we do not care because we do not have a ‘reverent and obedient fear of the Lord’ anymore (Is11:2). We focus on the fact that God is a God of love and forgiveness (which He unequivocally is) but it is only half a truth. He is also ‘n holy and just God in Who’s presence we cannot come unless our sin is dealt with. We understand grace to mean that we have a license to sin, whereas grace is a call to holiness. Law and grace are not opposites. Law and lawlessness are opposites. Grace and ‘disgrace’ are opposites. Law and Grace are two horses pulling the same carriage.
Let us put denial aside and have an honest look at what temple prostitution looks like - also in our modern-day paradigm. When Israel practised temple prostitution, they did not have to frequent the pagan temples down the road. No, the shocking truth is that they incorporated it into their own religious practices within their own temple. There was an unholy mixture of spirituality and sexuality devoid of God-given, God-intended holiness. On the holy mountain of God, they defiled the place of His presence. They exploited the innocent for their own gain. It normalized sin because it was brought into the known and into the arena of worship. You did not have to go and look for it, you just had to go to church. The priests practised it. The pastor preached it. The church promoted it. The congregation accepted it and kept quiet.
It operates on spiritual principles. It ALWAYS has a spiritual component because it IS A SPIRIT. It cannot do its job unless it starts with the spiritual. It ALWAYS starts with a spiritual discussion, a fellowship, a mentoring/discipleship/fathering/friendship/counselling relationship. It builds a trust relationship first, often tapping into the wounds of the past under the pretense of wanting to help the victim heal. Any discussion with a survivor of this kind of sexual and spiritual abuse will reveal that they have been groomed and step-by-step pulled into a web of lies that is often described as a seduction.
The victim often does not see the perpetrator coming because it is someone they know, do not expect something immoral from, love or have come to trust. There is a general expectancy of trustworthiness because it is within the church. It is someone they regard to be in a position of spiritual authority, who knows better and hears from God way better than they do. Their gut feeling (Who most often is the voice of the Holy Spirit) is being seared by doubt and second guessing and confusion because how can something that seem so right on a spiritual level be turning out so utterly wicked and deprived? It is the priest or the prophet, the pastor, the cell-or youth leader, with the result that by the time the victims realize that they are being preyed upon, they are already wrapped in the guilt and have often bought into the lie that this is all their fault, and something is hugely wrong with them. They believe (sadly very often rightly so) that no-one will believe them because they are the broken, sinful, deprived, and wicked, who falsely accuse the ‘anointed of God’. After all, this wonderful spiritual leader was only ‘trying to help’.
The atrocities amount. This is not a one-time ‘indiscretion’. It is deliberate, careful planning. Day by day, week by week, month by month, year by year it pulls the innocent and wounded into its web and devours them, causing a slow death in spirit, soul and eventually body. Until nothing is left to fight with, and the victim succumb to the seduction, keep quiet and just let it happen. A handful move out of the relationship more broken than before. Sadly, they often move on straight into the trap of another abuser, and so the pattern is repeated.
Yes, there is a predator and a victim. But there is also a village, a church, a board of directors, a congregation, a friend, a mother, a sister, a wife, that allows this to happen and continue. There are the fellow priests that never hold the priests or prophets or pastors accountable, who keep a blind eye to the glaring red lights. There are those who silently turn and leave. There are those who become angry and do nothing. There are those who tell the victim to rather stay quiet because in their minds “it will do damage to the church, or to God’s kingdom”. There are those who are told that divorce is sin – in all circumstances and situations. Never mind that God also hates spiritual and sexual abuse – that is not even considered. There are several indirect victims in these cases – the predator’s wife, children, family, the ministry team, the church elders, colleagues, members of the congregation, supporters of the ministry, fellow believers etc. The effects of sin are never to the individual alone, it is always experienced corporately. The burden to address this is very often left squarely on the shoulders of the victim alone. The victim would not have been a victim if there was a community that was willing to protect the innocent, but instead we protect the guilty. There is the conspiracy of silence. It always needs a special friend. It needs a friend to lure into its dark web. It needs friends to cover it up with a conspiracy of silence. It needs a network of friends to protect and give it permission to operate. The conspiracy of silence protects the predator and creates a place for this spirit to thrive. Are we willing to face this and speak up in a godly, biblical way?
The purpose of this spirit is to destroy and perverse the planned and intended intimacy between Jesus as our Bridegroom and us, the church, as the Bride. Abuse causes us to shy away from intimacy, associating it with exploitation and pain, stealing our innocence and ability to believe, trust and be vulnerable. We need those qualities in our relationship with our Bridegroom – what better way to destroy this than to use the spiritual to open our hearts and then exploit it for personal, perverse gain?
So how do we as the church respond and move forward from here?
- Our number one place to start is to acknowledge the existence of this spirit in the church. We need to understand that it can ONLY operate within the fellowship of believers. It cannot operate outside of the church because it needs and uses the spiritual connection to gain power, retain its hold and cover-up its evil. We need to look that fact in the eye and tell it: “I see you...” If we deny it, it will continue to run rife within the fellowship of believers. Keeping it in the dark gives it power, bringing it to light disempowers it.
- The root iniquity is to use spiritual influence to incite wrong. It is to gain, hold and use spiritual power to pursue, conquer, exploit, and abuse. The spiritual component is used as a smokescreen to cover up the wrongdoing.
- We need to identify the open doors for this, repent and ask God to close them.
- We need genuine repentance about allowing this to infiltrate and set up home within the church. We need to repent of normalizing sin with watered down religiously sounding good excuses.
- We need to repent about allowing it to thrive under a conspiracy of silence. We need to repent about silencing and persecuting the whistleblowers with phrases like “do not speak against the anointed of God.” The silent accomplices are as guilty as those actively pursuing this atrocity.
- We need to repent of calling what God calls good, bad, and what God calls bad, good
- We need brave Godly leadership who will face and root out this iniquity fearlessly.
- NB! We do need to make sure of the facts, otherwise good godly men and women would be destroyed through false accusations. Unfortunately, this is a reality too. A false accusation in this regard is as good as the real thing. We need to be as shrewd as serpents and as innocent as doves. However, false accusations are by far in the minority.
- We need accountability and honesty – with ourselves, with others and in the church or ministry.
- We need to know that there is hope. Hope for healing, hope for restoration, and hope to overcome. Be wise and seek professional counsel for this issue, we very often cannot walk out of this completely on our own. We need the wise support of others.
- Transformation Prayer Ministry South Africa: Dr. Anel Keuck-Rademeyer, email: anelrademeyer@gmail.com
- Ellel Ministries https://ellel.org/za/ , +27 12 809 0031 | Fax: +27 12 809 1173 | Email Address: info@ellel.org.za
- Traumatic Incident Reduction Association (TIRA-SA) http://tirasa.co.za/ email: info@tirasa.co.za
- Tears foundation: https://www.tears.co.za/ 24/7 helpline: phone: *134*7355# and follow the prompts or call us on 010 590 5920 or send us a message on email: info@tears.co.za
- Lifeline SA http://lifelinesa.co.za/ National Counselling Line 0861322322
- Gerda Venter, Free2Celebrate, https://free2celebratetheking.blogspot.com/ email: free2celebrate@gmail.com
Sunday, 28 February 2021
Sunday, 17 January 2021
New years message for 2021 Part 3: Building Kingdom in a time of adversity
Moses
In Exodus 33:7-11 we read that Moses built a tent of meeting outside the camp where he and anyone else could retreat to, to speak to the Lord. I can imagine the hustle and bustle in the tent camp of thousands of Israelites, and nowhere to find a place to just be in God’s presence. Moses saw this need and built a place of meeting with God. It was here that God met him and where God spoke to him face to face as with a friend. It was here where Joshua stayed in the presence of God when Moses went back to work. It was here where the pillar of cloud by day and the fire of God by night was a visible sign of God’s presence with the people. Later, God formalized this temporary tabernacle when He gave Moses instructions how to build the tabernacle of His presence that eventually became the blueprint for the temple of Solomon in the Promised Land.
Hezekiah
In 2 Chronicles 32:2-4:30 and 2 Kings 20:20 we read how king Hezekiah built a tunnel that diverted the Gihon water springs into the pool of Siloam, so that the city will have water inside its walls. He was building in a time when they faced the mighty Assyrian army who was on its way to besiege Jerusalem.
Daniel
Daniel was but a teenager when he went into captivity to Babylon. He served in the court of several of the Babylonian kings with no hope to ever have the ‘normal’ life he must have dreamt of as a young boy. As far as we know he never had a family and never went back to Israel – yet he continuously built God’s Kingdom, even at the threat to his own life. He built with righteousness and integrity within an occult and corrupt government system to such an extent that the gentile king Nebuchadnezzar had to acknowledge that his God was the one and only true God.
Jeremiah
Jeremiah brought God’s word to a people in a time that nobody wanted to listen. No matter how much he prophesied, the people accused him of bringing fake news, while the fake news was hailed as truth. He is called the weeping prophet because he cried before God on behalf of the people and in the face of the hopelessness of him preaching but nobody hearing. God also sent words of hope to the people in captivity through Jeremiah that He will once again restore them when they return to Him – for some this only came true in the next generation, yet it was a word of hope for them to hold on to.
The Disciples
Jesus’s disciples built Kingdom with enthusiasm and passion through many trials, tribulations, and persecution. Paul says in Philippians 4 that he had learned to be content with what he has, for he has known lack, abundance, and distress. Paul was shipwrecked, Peter and many other disciples were imprisoned. Paul was assaulted and left for dead. All the disciples except for John died in service of the Messiah and was executed for their belief – their knowing – that Jesus had been resurrected. They built kingdom despite danger and even when facing death.
And so we can go on and on reading and learning from people who came before us who faced immense hardships and still built the Kingdom of God, because the Holy Spirit was with them, strengthened and encouraged them with the presence of God. Finally, let us take the following truths and lessons from the above with us into this year that now looks as challenging as climbing Mount Everest:
1. Let us build a “tent of meeting”, a place where we can go to encounter Him and let Him speak to us face to face.
2. God introduces Himself to us in the word as the “Fountain of Living Water” (John 4). Let us bring that spring of living water into the protection of the walls of the city where the enemy cannot get hold of it, for it is our “wellspring of life”.
3. Let us build with integrity in an environment where corruption and the darkness of occultism is growing day by day. As the darkness grows, let our light shine even brighter.
4. Let us bring hope to a world that has lost hope – proclaiming God’s goodness even when we do not see it manifest in our own life and time, holding on to God’s promises even when they will only manifest in the generations to come.
5. Let us build in the face of adversity and persecution – well knowing that this life is a temporary journey in a temporary dwelling, but that we are citizens of a heavenly Kingdom and our citizenship is everlasting.
©HG Venter January 2021
Sunday, 10 January 2021
New years message 2021 Part 2: Called to build and plant
1. The Master Builder
In Ps 127:1,2 we read:
“Unless the Lord builds the house,
They labor in vain who build it;
Unless the Lord guards the city,
The watchman stays awake in vain”.
God
is the actual builder – He employs us as labourers to build His Kingdom
with His resources to accomplish His agenda. If not so – we build in
vain. Unless He guards the city, those that are called to be the
watchmen to make alarm when the enemy approaches, do so in vain. We need
to get our perspective right. We do not build God’s Kingdom – He builds
His Kingdom. We are merely labourers working under His direction and
instructions! Anything we build apart from what is on God’s agenda is a
waste of time, energy, resources, has no purpose and will not last.
2. The Foundation, The Cornerstone and The Rock
In
Ephesians 2:19-22 we read that our foundation is the apostles and
prophets (through whom God’s Word was given to us) and Jesus is the
cornerstone that anchors the whole building. The building is described
as fitting together and growing into the holy temple in the Lord. We
are being built together as a dwelling place of God. When we depart
from the foundation of truth that was laid, and from The Cornerstone,
then the holy temple, the dwelling place of God cannot host His presence
anymore.
In Mathew 7:24-25 Jesus told the parable of the man
who built his house on a rock vs the man who built his house on the
sand. The house that was built on the rock could withstand the rain and
the wind and the storms, the house that was built on the sand collapsed
when the storms came against it. In Ps 62 and Ps 18 respectively David
says that the Lord is his rock, salvation, fortress, strong tower. His
deliverer and the One in Whom he trusts.
God Himself is the
Foundation, the Rock, when we build on Him as labourers in His Kingdom,
we are building something lasting that will bear good fruit for His
Kingdom.
3. How are we to build and plant?
Often our question is how do we practically build God’s Kingdom in the spirit? In Mathew 6:33 The Word tells us: 33 But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.
Isaiah
58 in its entirety gives us very practical direction as to how and what
to build as God’s labourers. I summarize, but please read the whole
chapter.
- Blow the trumpet – warn my people of their sins.
- Do not get stuck in religious activity that is void of heartfelt sincerity and obedience to God.
- Set people free by loosening the bonds of wickedness, lifting burdens, let the oppressed go free, break yokes.
- Share your bread and extend your soul with the hungry.
- House the poor and the outcast.
- Dress the naked.
- Take away the pointing finger, i.e. accusation and judgement.
- Do not speak wickedness.
- Keep ourselves from doing our own pleasure, keeping our own ways and speaking our own (idle) words on the Lord’s holy day.
Then we will:
- Become a light shining in the darkness.
- The Lord will guide us continually.
- He will satisfy our soul in drought.
- Strengthen our bones.
- We will be like a well-watered garden whose waters do not fail.
And we will build:
- The old waste places.
- We shall raise up the foundation for many generations.
- We shall be called the repairer of the breech and the restorer of the streets to dwell in.
And finally:
- We will delight ourselves in the Lord.
- He will cause us to ride on the high hills.
- He will feed us with a good heritage.
- For He has spoken it.
Adding the image of sowing and planting to this picture of building, Hosea 10:13 confirms the same principles:
“Sow for yourselves righteousness;
Reap in mercy;
Break up your fallow ground,
For it is time to seek the Lord,
Till He comes and rains righteousness on you”
How
do we sow and plant? We must sow righteousness so that we will reap in
mercy. We need to break up the fallow ground – and seek the Lord until
He rains righteousness on us! Nothing we plant will ever grow into
fruition without the rain of God’s righteousness. To receive His
righteousness-rain we must seek the Lord and the ground needs to be
prepared to receive the rain, so that what is sown will grow and bear
fruit.
Our way forward should be to seek the Lord until He rains
righteousness on us. Then we can plant and build in righteousness, from
the right perspective of being a labourer in God’s Kingdom, labouring
for the King’s purposes and in obedience to the King.
Next week
we will look at a few people in the Bible who were builders in spite of
living in times when they were facing adversity to the point of their
future looking bleak and without much to look forward to – and yet they
continued to build the Kingdom of God.
Come worship with Rend Collective: Build your Kingdom Here
© Jan 2021 HG Venter