Category: Uncategorized

  • My Interview with PBS NewsHour on the Southern Baptist Convention Sex Abuse Task Force Report

    How do you fit in thousands of peoples’ abuse & pain & cries for help over decades and decades in just a handful of minutes?

    Fellow survivors, I pray I served your stories & hopes well.I am with you. I stand with you. I am for you. I love you.

  • Mark Aderholt’s Criminal Record is Wiped Clean Today and Why I Supported the Plea Deal Instead of a Trial

    Mark Aderholt’s Criminal Record is Wiped Clean Today and Why I Supported the Plea Deal Instead of a Trial

    The History


    November 1996, age 16 and shortly after the sexual abuse began.

    Over the course of six months in 1996/1997 when I was 16 and 17 years old, a 25-year-old Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary student named Mark Aderholt sexually abused and assaulted me as a minor.

    In 2007, I turned him into his employer, the Southern Baptist Convention’s mission arm, the International Mission Board (IMB) who investigated him and found my accusations credible.  He was allowed to resign and went on to be a pastor at Immanuel Baptist Church in Little Rock, Arkansas, and then an executive in the South Carolina SBC. He listed people from the IMB as references on his resume.

    Aderholt

    In 2018 I learned he was never reported to authorities, so I reported him. 

    Two months later he was arrested for 3 sexual abuse felonies.  A year of motions for hearings went by and at the last minute at the last hearing, before a trial was scheduled, Aderholt’s defense attorney asked the prosecutors for a plea deal. The DA’s office took my input seriously as they determined what to do. 

    2000: Aderhotl at Travis Avenue Baptist Church, the same church my dad attended when he was 16 years old.

    Factors that Played in a Plea Deal vs. Trial

    We knew we had a strong case, yet we were concerned from the history of the Tarrant County Grand Jury that it would not move into an indictment because less than 50% of sexual abuse cases actually move past the Grand Jury here, especially cases that are many years past.

    But the evidence was so compelling that the Grand Jury who indicted him actually added a fourth felony charge in addition to the three he was arrested for—a very rare situation. Even with this, I was told how the trial process would be lengthy and emotionally re-traumatizing, and statistically, not hopeful.

    Me at 17 years old

    Many people have asked questions about the punishment not fitting the crime(s). I fully agree, and at the same time, want to explain what went into that process and decision in hopes of shedding light on the complexity of the criminal justice system, and its need for reform. Those accused of all crimes should, by all means, have the due diligence they are promised. However, the system is not set up in a way that provides the care victims of crimes need. With that being said, I feel fortunate both the detective who took my case and the assistant DA who brought the prosecution and stood up for me in court did wonderful jobs in caring, compassionate ways. This is not always the norm, but to imply the entire system is broken wouldn’t be truthful or respectful of those who are compassionate. Their jobs are not easy, and they carry a lot of responsibility.

    2019, I’m outside of Aderholt’s 1996 apartment in Arlington.
    Photo by Jon Shipley, Houston Chronicle.

    Criminal Considerations

    In the year Aderholt was arrested, only 1% of felony cases in Tarrant County go to a jury trial. The number of sexual assault cases is going up here, but the acquittal rate is also going up meaning the percent of sex assault cases is rising to the point of making it past the Grand Jury, yet more and more criminals are being acquitted.

    Almost half of the felony cases in Tarrant County result in “not guilty” verdicts.1

    Personal Considerations

    My daughter at her third birthday party, 2019.

    I had to consider my own health, how the trial would affect my daughter (who was 3 at the time), what it would be like to have every recollection of my abuse on public record where anybody could read about what happened in great detail, and the financial cost from spending time away from work and nursing school, which I already had to take a year away from during the investigation and resulting re-traumatization (not to mention, freak accident).

    It seemed as if the wisest choice for me would be to support the plea deal. I knew he would be pleading guilty to an assault charge (albeit a misdemeanor) and serving a maximum sentence for that, and I knew at the end of it, as long as he followed the terms of his probation, his criminal record would be clear and he would not be on any sex offender registry.

    Recalling the abuse at Greenbriar Park in Fort Worth, TX, where in 1997, as Aderholt leaned up against me as I sat on the corner of a table like this, a car honked and flashed its lights at us. He said, “Let’s make this weird and give them a show.”
    Aderholt preaching

    The trial would not guarantee a guilty outcome, and would never allow me to hear him admit any guilt. At the hearing for his sentencing for his plea deal, hearing him say, “guilty” and facing some criminal consequence plus staying healthy for myself and my daughter was worth the trade-off to me.

    Something I truly believe is at the end of the day, if the “justice” a trial might bring to me, if that cost me my health, my ability to be present with my daughter, and my livelihood, would that really be justice for me?


    Pastor Dwight McKissick and Jared Wellman, 2019. There were so many other supporters and advocates at the hearing. I wish I had all the photos!

    The Hearing and Sentencing

    On July 2, 2019, 364 days since Aderholt’s arrest on July 3, 2018, with my family, a dozen or so friends and supporters from social media, some law enforcement folks, attorneys who became friends, and SBC pastors I met along the way present in the galley behind me, Aderholt was read all of his charges and pled guilty to an added fifth misdemeanor assault charge.

    He was brought by his attorney in front of the galley, between the judge and where I stood just a few feet away from him. He looked at the floor. I read my victim impact statement to him. He could not look me in the eye although I asked him to when I told him I forgave him and prayed he embraces the grace of God in his own life, that there is healing for him waiting for him to simply accept it. To end his lies. To make it right. 

    Aderholt in Court 297 at the Tarrant County Courthouse, July 2, 2019

    Today, he finishes his sentence and his record is wiped clean. 

    He is physically free from his criminal record, but I am spiritually free because of who I am in Christ. He has that choice too.

    I will close this statement with this:

    May God have mercy on us.

    Lord, hear our prayers.


    Additional Notes:

    Abuse of Faith, Part 4. Picture by Jon Shipley, Houston Chronicle

    The IMB, who failed to report the abuse to law enforcement after determining in a lengthy internal investigation that my allegations were credible.

    They initially did a terrible job responding to the abuse allegations and the arrest, going into a defensive, damage-control mode, inferring that I was even lying, a statement that has since been corrected. But when the interim president David Platt heard about it a couple of weeks later upon returning from remote Africa, within hours he was on the phone with me apologizing, asking for forgiveness for how the IMB responded, listening, and asking what he can do to make it right. He began the process of the IMB hiring an independent firm to conduct an examination of my case and every other abuse case reported to the IMB. Current president Dr. Paul Chitwood also asked to speak with me a few times and listened to my story and took my input.

    It has not been a perfect process and even considering the last SBC annual meeting, I have hope for the future and am encouraged by the good things brave survivors and pastors are fighting for.

    Hannah-Kate and Tiffany Thigpen (and another woman whose name I don’t know but is awesome too celebrate after the motion to put an independent task force over the investigation into the Southern Baptist Convention’s (SBC) Executive Committee (EC) had been adopted.. 

    The fact they have to fight for them is disheartening.

    But as He always does, I have no doubt God will shine a light on the truth and the evil-the evil sometimes disguised as pastors saying vile things to survivors, harassing them, even saying some are better off dead-will crawl its way back to the darkness from where it came.


    And to survivors: People often say, “you are so much more than your abuse!”

    I’d like to add to that and say, “You are NOT your abuse. The abuse you endured is not you.”

    I promise you the light will get brighter and brighter, and healing will come, even if you feel the emptiness that lives beyond the suffocating darkness you may feel you’ll never escape.

    I promise it gets better. Do not give up.


    To Mark: should you find your way to reading this, please know that God is pursuing your heart just as he pursues all of ours. I pray you experience the grace you preached about for yourself. I still forgive you, and I still pray for you to find the peace and freedom that I’ve found through Christ.

    To Mark’s family: I am sorry you have had to go through this difficult situation as well. You’ve constantly been in my prayers since the very beginning, decades ago. I pray for peace for your hearts too.


    1 Data between 2014 and 2018, when my case was brought forward.

  • Get a Free Copy of Healing Together: A Guide to Supporting Sexual Abuse Survivors

    Get a Free Copy of Healing Together: A Guide to Supporting Sexual Abuse Survivors

    Hey, mom (and the other four people who read my blog!)

    We’re (quickly) putting together a launch team for Healing Together: A Guide to Supporting Sexual Abuse Survivors.

    Free book, giveaways…

    The first sentence of the book is “Healing Together is not an easy read.”

    It’s hopeful and disturbing. It’s vivid without being gratuitous. It’s full of trauma-informed research and evidence-based sciencey things explained in a practical way. It’s hopeful. There’s humor. There are stats. It’s real. Because we need real hope.

    We need honesty when it comes to talking about trauma, abuse, and how we can actually and practically help people walk in those difficult times.

    You can sign up by clicking here!

  • Anne Marie Miller’s Victim Impact Statement after Guilty Plea from Mark Aderholt and Other Women Come Forward

    This morning, I had the opportunity to do something I never thought I would be able to do, emotionally or logistically: tell Mark Aderholt how the sexual abuse he inflicted on me as a teenager affected me, and that I forgave him. I did both at his hearing today at the Tarrant County Courthouse.

    Sarah Smith, who first shared my story last year after Mr. Aderholt’s arrest, wrote about the hearing here. She has become such a trusted friend in the last year. Just a day after coming back from an overseas (much needed) vacation, she traveled all the way up to Dallas to be present. The gallery was full of supporters: friends from twenty years ago and friends I met just today who have been fiercely encouraging over the last year. My family was there, and Tim stood by me as I read the statement. I am eternally grateful for everyone who was there in person or in spirit.

    I wanted to touch on a couple of things before you read the statement:

    • Mr. Aderholt was charged with a fifth crime: assault causing bodily injury. This is the crime he pleaded guilty to, and it’s a misdemeanor. I knew of this plea deal ahead of time, and knew of the sentence it likely carried. The judge did hand down the maximum sentence for this crime, but many people have expressed how the punishment is not fitting of the crime. He will not be on any registries and as long as he keeps the terms of his probation, there will actually be no record of his crimes on a background check.

      Over the last year, I have learned how unspeakably complicated the criminal justice system is. So many variables go into each and every case. While I think we all can agree that Mr. Aderholt is not facing the criminal penalty he should be, the DA’s office asked for my input and wishes during plea negotiations. This included taking into consideration the emotionally charged prospect of a jury trial, facing a relentless and brutal cross-examination by his defense attorney, the impact of a trial on my family and a potential verdict of not guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. I fully trust the prosecuting attorney and the final outcome. For what it’s worth, I do not believe this will be the last time Mr. Aderholt is in a courtroom. I know the court of public opinion (and media) are appropriately convicting of his actual offenses, should he apply for a job in ministry and the organization does a quick internet search.
    • You will notice in my statement a very important paragraph and relatively new development: I am not the only woman Mr. Aderholt has taken advantage of sexually. While these stories are not mine to tell, they are first-hand and disturbing. They have been authenticated by an independent party. The other women helped me write this and it was with their approval that I could share this in court. They can and should (and will) keep full agency of their stories. I believe there are even more people out there who have been affected by Mr. Aderholt’s manipulation.

    Others have come forward in the past few days and shared that you used their vulnerability for your sexual gratification, at times even doing so after you were told to stop.

    -Anne Marie Miller, Victim Impact Statement for Mark Aderholt
    • When I read the statement from Mr. Aderholt’s attorney, Justin Sparks, I literally almost threw up in my mouth. This does not reflect the plea agreement in the courtroom (the judge said something to the effect of “are you pleading guilty to this charge because you are guilty of this charge?” to which Mr. Aderholt agreed.) To hear that he still maintains his innocence and he agreed to this only for the sake of the lesser punishment and for his own “closure” is reprehensible and indicative of how truly deceived this man is.

      Mr. Sparks’ statement is a complete lie. Mark did plead guilty to the crime of bodily injury. If he “maintains his innocence” that just proves he either lied to the judge (hi, perjury!) or he is lying through his attorney. One more notch in the deception belt. What is on record, his pleading guilty, is the truth. What he said in the courtroom is the only thing that matters. What he said to the media is what he pays his lawyer to do: spin the truth. “Mark agreed to this result because the original allegations were abandoned and for closure.” WRONG. He pleaded guilty because he said he did it. Check the court records. Defending someone to the best of your ability is your job, Mr. Sparks. By saying he took the plea deal for reasons other than his admission implies he lied under oath when he pleaded guilty.

      Also in Mr. Sparks’ statement, he makes it seem like the DA just gave up on the case and whipped out an offer. This is TOTALLY false. We had always prepared to go to trial. On the last docket, the defense approached and asked for time and if the DA would consider a negotiation as an alternative to an open plea (trial by judge). We agreed and they came back to the DA’s office with the desire to have the charge changed to a misdemeanor. He is taking advantage of the fact the DA’s office cannot comment on cases so he can literally spew any kind of false information without accountability. I’m here to tell you every insinuation in his statement is 100% false.

    I am so glad this is over. As I state, this is the end not because of any confession or admission of guilt (which, even though he said the word, “guilty,” he evidently didn’t mean it after all), or him asking me for forgiveness (he didn’t even look me in the eye one time in the 10 minutes I read my statement, even though I said I would like to look him in the eye to tell him).

    It is over because I have spoken the truth into the world and I have forgiven him. The only lies that have any power any more are the lies he tells himself.

    Thank you for all of your support and prayers over the years, especially this last one. I’m going to sign off for a couple days and cuddle my little girl and celebrate the end of this with my family.


    Honorable Judge Hagerman: I want to thank you for this opportunity to give this statement. I would also like to thank Mr. William Knight and Detective Charles Cisneros who wisely and compassionately utilized the criminal justice system to hold Mr. Aderholt accountable for his character and actions.

    And before I address the defendant, I want to express gratitude to my husband Tim for supporting me with enduring and sacrificial love during this turbulent time, to my family and friends, including those standing with me today in flesh and in spirit, for their encouragement, love, and prayers, and to our daughter Charlotte who gives me the strength to move beyond this trauma into a courageous and joy-filled life.

    Now, I would like to address the defendant, Mr. Mark Aderholt.

    My family moved from Abilene to Arlington a couple of weeks into my junior year of high school, and I was completely alone. I knew nobody outside of my family and my parents were desperately trying to make ends meet. I was questioning my faith for the first time in my life because of the way the church treated us before we moved. I grieved the rich community I left behind, so I tried to do the one thing I knew how to do in pursuit of finding friends: be the good Christian girl.

    Because we weren’t going to church, I reached out to several pastors on America Online trying to find someone who could help me start a See You at the Pole event at my school. You responded to my email and we met at a McDonalds at the Hypermart off Cooper and Bardin in Arlington. After my mom met you and went to do her shopping, we talked over french fries. When we were done, we went to find my mom and the two of you exchanged seminary and missionary stories before we went our separate ways.

    My See You at the Pole event failed completely and I was having a crisis of faith and identity. You encouraged me to not give up, and you invited me over to your apartment to talk and pray.

    Finally, I thought. A friend.

    I went to your apartment, a bottom floor one bedroom in North Arlington. As we spent time together, we got to know each other. You told me about Pampa and your time at Wayland Baptist and your mission trips and your school. You told me about your family and your sisters—one was my age, give or take. 

    We had fun: We went to Kroger in your blue Grand Am and bought ice cream. You took me to have dinner at Razoo’s in Sundance Square. You kissed me and we acted silly at Greenbriar Park when a car flashed their lights at us. “Let’s give them a show,” you said. I wanted to buy a yellow truck like the one you parked next to at your apartment. You said girls who drove yellow trucks were hot.

    I felt blessed to have you, this man of God, as my friend. We sat on your floor to watch a movie. As your arm brushed against mine—and then stayed there for a moment, I remember feeling nervous but excited. Did you want to be more than friends? You held my hand. You kissed me. And then you kissed me more. 

    On the floor next to your TV, you were on top of me kissing. You rolled off of me for a moment and propped your head up on your arm. You asked if I was a virgin and I awkwardly said yes. You told me you weren’t, that you lost your virginity when you were 13, but it was a mistake you wouldn’t make again.

    You continued kissing me and your hands wandered all over my body. No boy had ever touched me the way you touched me, or in the places you touched me. And you were no boy. You were a man, almost a decade older than my sixteen years. I was afraid to say no, afraid that I would lose one of my only friends. 

    We met many times over my junior year in high school. And out of nowhere, you ended it.

    You told me you were engaged and getting married later that year to a girl you met overseas. She was coming back to the states in the summer and could never find out about us. 

    That was the moment everything changed. Beyond violating my body, when you told me to never talk to you again, you broke my spirit. 

    The world was no longer safe and even the Godliest of men could not be trusted. I was just a body with breasts and hips and thighs and other things too intimate to name. I felt ashamed of what we did, humiliated in my naïveté. You didn’t care that I was already lost and alone and hurting when I met you. In fact, you took advantage of my vulnerability. I was the least likely person to tell anyone what you did. And although it took some time, you were mistaken.

    When I turned 25 and was mentoring a 16 year old girl, I had a revelation just how inappropriate it was for you to pursue a romantic relationship with a girl who had only recently earned her drivers license. I realized you intentionally and dishonorably harmed me and violated me in the most intimate way. This wasn’t a bad break up: You manipulated me. 

    You sexually abused me.

    I told leaders at the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention what you did, and after they investigated it, they determined I was telling the truth. But they let you resign and over the next decade, you were promoted in your career in the SBC. I could never reconcile why they’d let you do that. It didn’t make sense. Now we know that you continued advancing because you were dishonest with everyone about your past. 

    When the #MeToo movement was going viral on social media, I was mostly offline, busy as a new mom, changing diapers and starting nursing school.  As I looked down at my daughter and reflected on an article a friend sent, I thought to myself, “What am I going to tell her when she’s older? How am I going to make the world safer for her?” Surely there was something more I could do. 

    I decided to report you to the authorities and go public with my story, knowing it would be a step to reclaim the truth in this false narrative you directed for so long. Knowing it was a step to put an end to the power of your dishonesty. 

    On July 3, a year ago tomorrow, you were arrested.

    I am grieved your family has experienced such pain because of your actions. However, you also need to know the dramatic and traumatizing way your disregard for me as a woman and as a sister in Christ has affected me.

    Nine years ago, I checked myself in to an inpatient counseling facility. I was diagnosed with complex post-traumatic stress disorder because of what you did to me.

    I wanted to heal: I wanted to be able to not have a panic attack or feel a searing pain between my legs when I had sex. I didn’t want to shake with fear every time I saw a mid-nineties blue Grand Am. I wanted to drive down Highway 360 to visit my parents without getting nauseous when I passed your old apartment. I didn’t want to feel dread driving by Greenbriar Park every time I went to spend time with my grandparents. Even this year as I would visit my dying grandmother, I would see that park. Something as sacred as her final days were cloaked in the shadows of evil from when you sexually abused me.

    During the investigation last year, there were days I couldn’t get out of bed because of my anxiety. Our daughter, who had just taken her first steps, toddled to the bedroom door saying,  “mama, mama” and my husband would redirect her saying, “mama’s sleeping,” even though I wasn’t. I was so exhausted, but yet I couldn’t stop crying. I thought my husband and daughter would be better off without me: a broken, hopeless person.

    Mark: you need to know that what you did to me made me want to kill myself many times. I even tried once a few years ago, but I couldn’t figure out how to work the gun. 

    On Mother’s Day last year, about a month after the investigation started, I headed to Nashville and went to inpatient therapy again because of my suicidality. While I was there, you were coming home from a mission trip, telling people about a fabricated lawsuit you were supposedly settling with me: a woman from your past who was suing you—something, by the way, that has never happened. When you were on your plane home, I was in an ambulance heading to Trauma Bay #2 of Skyline Hospital in Nashville, out of my therapy treatment two weeks early, because of a freak accident. During a game of baseball, someone lost their grip on the bat and it missiled into my jaw, breaking it in four places. I’ve had four surgeries, two bone grafts, plates and screws and braces and implants. My face will never be the same. 

    The cost of this accident and all of the mental health expenses over the last two decades has a price tag of hundreds of thousands of dollars. This is just one more way I’ve suffered because of the abuse, and it will forever affect my family’s financial future.

    When I first wrote this victim statement, I wrote about how I prayed that you were a statistical anomaly. I wrote about how I hoped I was the only person you sexually violated. 

    I have since learned you are not an anomaly. 

    I am not the only woman you took advantage of. 

    Others have come forward in the past few days and shared that you used their vulnerability for your sexual gratification, at times even doing so after you were told to stop. There are hearts everywhere damaged by your refusal to own up to what you’ve done. The truth is exploding out from all the places you have hidden it. You can no longer hide in the duality you live in. 

    Mark, here we are, face to face, 22 years after seeing each other for the last time. My heart is no longer broken. It has been rebuilt by love and faith and those who have helped carry it and patch it over the years.  I never thought I’d see you again, ever, but now I can and I want to look you in the eyes and tell you I forgive you. 

    I forgive you, Mark. For all of the pain, the time I had to spend away from loved ones, the fear of intimacy, and the financial losses. I forgive you for stealing the good I believed about the world and for damaging the image of a perfect and loving God who I still often doubt cares for me or protects me. 

    I forgive you. And my heart aches for the person-the man-you could be if you would just tell the truth and accept the responsibility that comes with it.

    I used to believe that in order for this ordeal to be over, you needed to tell the truth and ask me to forgive you. I know now that’s not the case. This is over because I have spoken the truth. It’s over because I have forgiven you. Your lies have no more power. 

    This is over, Mark. This is the end.

    I do pray, however, that it is a new beginning for you.

    I pray you begin to feel the pulse of conviction pursuing your heart. 

    I pray you begin to immerse yourself in the repentance and forgiveness you have spent your life proclaiming but never fully experiencing. 

    I pray that you begin to choose to live honorably and honestly for yourself and for your family.

    And I pray you will know the holy and saving power of God’s perfect and unconditional love. God loves you so much, Mark. Please ask for the strength and the help you need to be made whole. He does not forsake those he loves. He hasn’t forsaken me. He won’t forsake you either. 

  • Update on IMB sex abuse and misconduct communication and investigations

    Last week, a confusing IMB communication was sent out and then leaked to the media, many people, including myself, had significant concerns regarding the letter, the policies outlined in it, and the manner in which it was sent. People also contacted me saying they should have received the letter or had experienced a sexual abuse/misconduct situation and should be contacted by the IMB’s third-party firm who is looking into old cases and helping them develop new policies and procedures for the future.

    This morning, I had a call with an IMB leader (staff) and a trustee who have been my point of contact over the last year. They shared with me that the firm recommended sending this email to people who could have had contact with Mr. Aderholt and encouraging them to report it. Their intention was to reach a specific group of people the best way they could, considering he was on the field 12 years ago.

    I shared with them how some of the verbiage in the email could be interpreted by any potential survivors in a way that did not accurately reflect their well-meaning intentions and could actually cause additional concerns. We also discussed how the IMB could potentially better communicate in this particular situation and moving forward.

    We talked about additional ways they could rebuild trust internally and publicly, encourage appropriate reporting to a third party and law enforcement and how to help care for survivors.

    One specific concern we discussed was the IMB’s letter not encouraging people to report directly to authorities. They said IMB’s current practice is to report all allegations of sexual and physical abuse of children to proper authorities, and their plan is to report any allegations of abuse that are brought forward as a result of this letter.  They assured me that the IMB does not discourage victims from going straight to authorities, and it was not their intention to discourage that from taking place. They said they’re already looking at revising future letters to make that option more clear.

    We talked about how having an anonymous (but still internal) reporting process could prevent people from coming forward and to maybe use an alternative process involving a fully independent third party to “triage” any reports so the IMB would not make the decision of what needs to be reported to law enforcement and a third party would also then have documentation outside of the IMB. They stand by their commitment to their policy to always report, but adding this extra layer allows for further transparency and accountabiilty.

    Overall, I was encouraged by the phone call and I look forward to seeing how they move forward. Time will tell, as always, but I felt as if the conversation was positive and should they consider and consult with survivors moving forward as they rewrite policy and both internal/external communication, it would be a good step in the right direction for everyone.

    I said this to a trustee at SWBTS last week and I said it on the call: I don’t want to see any entity of the SBC fail. Yes, I’ll point out weakness I see and I’ll (usually) share them out publicly if it’s a part of my story and I feel that I should have a say in it. But ultimately, I want these organizations and the convention to succeed in reforming policy, preventing abuse, and caring for survivors. Everyone wins: past, present, and future survivors and ultimately the cause of Christ.

  • Southern Baptist Convention’s mission arm the International Mission Board privately searches for other victims related to sex abuse case, does not encourage reporting to law enforcement.

    This morning I got an email from my Google Alert for “Mark Aderholt” and saw there was a new article discussing how the International Mission Board, the SBC arm that conducted an internal investigation in 2007 into one of their employees who sexually abused me in 1996 (when he was not an employee.) I was happy at first. My first reason for coming forward was to make sure that this man had not abused anyone else considering his access to vulnerable people on the mission field for over a decade.

    As I looked for the original post, I couldn’t find anything except for what a few newspapers posted. At about 10:30 this morning, I received the following screenshots from an anonymous sender.

    This is a letter the International Mission Board sent out to a group of people (that I am unaware of who it includes and doesn’t include).

    You will note a few things:

    1. It is sent privately to a group of people when in fact, this should be a public statement as well as a private inquiry.
    2. It immediately goes to defend Mr. Aderholt stating that he maintains his innocence and to their knowledge, they don’t know of anything else.
    3. They want to find out if there are other victims so they can “offer counseling resources to help them.” Interestingly enough, I have been asking for counseling resources as well.*
    4. What is of utmost importance, aside from that, is that they do not at any point SAY ANYTHING ABOUT REPORTING CHILD ABUSE OR ILLEGAL CONDUCT TO LAW ENFORCEMENT. You think they would know this by now. It’s kind of why we’re in this pickle now, isn’t it?
    5. Their first concern is to minister to victims. Their primary concern is NOT following the law.
    6. In listing ways to report illegal activities like abuse and harassment, they do not say “call your local law enforcement” or “call the FBI”…they list FOUR ways, all of them INTERNAL, of letting them know about the illegal activity. They do not recommend contacting law enforcement.
    7. It highlights the amount of discretion that will be used in providing any follow-up.

    If you are the recipient of this letter and an abuse survivor, or a survivor period, please contact your local law enforcement to begin taking the proper steps of finding help and justice.

    INTERNAL REPORTING ALLOWS PREDATORS TO KEEP OFFENDING.

    When will the Southern Baptist Convention hold the IMB accountable in the same manner that they hold their churches accountable? The IMB is acting in a way that is diametrically opposed to what the SBC is attempting to do in reshaping their policies and informing people to REPORT TO LAW ENFORCEMENT.

    Once again, the IMB is operating in an inappropriate manner and I’m assuming this is after they have been counseled by the law firm they hired. If they cannot follow instruction from the SBC HQ or from the third party they hired, what hope do they have?

    They need to know that the days of keeping things secret are over.

    I do hope they follow through on their promise to help victims get the counseling they need. I know I’m still waiting for that answer to my request. But most importantly, I hope they report all abuse and all illegal activity to law enforcement and encourage those in their care to do the same.

    I have recently asked for help for current counseling directly related to the IMB’s negligence in handling this situation over the last 12 years as well as past and future counseling expenses. I was told “yes” for current expenses and was told there was a list of counselors they recommend. Upon me sharing my counselor of my choosing, I did not hear back for several days and when I did, I was told my request was sent on to “leadership.” I have not yet heard back. May 2019 update: I had the chance to meet with a staff leader and trustee along with a support person of my choosing to discuss this. This is currently on-going. I do hope we can meet an agreement soon that is suitable.

  • Lifeway and BH Publishing is Printing “Healing Together”

    Here’s the big news. I mentioned an organization wanted to partner with me to publish “Healing Together,” the book I am working on to help supporters of survivors and survivors with the fundamental first-aid of healing from abuse. That organization is LifeWay & B&H Publishing Group.
    I wanted to explain a little bit how this happened, as it’s not the norm of my last books that have been published traditionally with Zondervan, Thomas Nelson, Baker, etc. I got a message from them asking if they could partner with me to publish it…not make it a “book deal”…

    They said up front they want to keep all electronic versions FREE, just like I wanted to do. And they could make the printed copy $5, which is HALF the price of what Amazon’s self-publishing arm would do at $9.75 a copy, making it more accessible than I ever could have.

    I sent them over my table of contents and what I’ve written so far, and they aren’t changing a thing. Basically, they’re taking my book and putting in in the hands of the people of the SBC so that the SBC can see the damage that’s occurred in the church and what survivors NEED from the church to heal. They are letting me, a survivor of abuse IN the SBC communicate and lead the way as a voice TO the SBC, without asking me to change a thing and letting the book be as accessible as it can be.

    By keeping it free and only $5 for a print version, it’s not a money-maker at ALL. I honestly don’t know how it even makes sense to print it because it seems like they’ll be losing money on it. But that’s not my issue to worry about. :)

    They know that my heart is and has been not to promote a book capitalizing on #MeToo #ChurchToo #SBCToo, but to promote healing that must take place in the church while coming from someone who was hurt by the church. I’m not quite sure how this happened, but I’m glad it did.

    We are looking for it to be published before the SBC Annual Convention in June…keep your fingers crossed!

  • Keeping Silence vs. Keeping Your Word

    This morning I was doing some thinking.

    Back in the day, I remember the International Mission Board telling me as long as I didn’t use their name, or the man’s name who abused me, then it would be okay to write about it and speak about it in my book and talks.

    And when I read through the 300-page transcript of their interview with me during their investigation, they asked me if I was going to write about it or speak about it and I said no.

    Over the years, I’ve let the idea of “keeping my word” to them keep me silent. When people would ask about my abuse after I would speak or when they would read my book, I’d say I “legally” couldn’t say anything about it because I thought since I told them I wouldn’t, and it was recorded on paper, that I could get in trouble for talking about it. Only my closest friends and family knew.

    When I decided to come forward, I also read a part of the transcript that said I would talk about it if someone else came forward and I felt the need to. When I said it, I meant another victim of the man who abused me. But 12 years later, I feel like the #MeToo and #ChurchToo movements empowered me to speak.

    So many times people have told me about their abuse and how they have been told to keep quiet. They’ve promised to not name their abuser, and they feel as if going against their word is a “sin” or doing something wrong.

    Keeping your word means doing what you’re going to say you’re going to do so that you will be a person of integrity. A person of integrity does what’s right to keep themselves and others around them whole, healthy, safe, and valued.

    If you have promised someone you won’t speak out about the abuse that happened to you, or abuse that you know about, by talking about it, you are not breaking your word. You’re breaking the silence. Your keeping your word to protect, honor, and value human life and dignity.

    You are not “sinning.” You are not going against the truth. Even though you may have told someone you’ll keep abuse a secret, you have the right (and often times the responsibility) to speak up.

    Don’t let someone else’s lack of integrity keep you silent. That is a tactic used so the abuser will remain safe and protected. By speaking up, not only are you setting the truth free, you’re speaking justice and life back where it has been stolen.

    If you need help reporting abuse, please don’t hesitate to contact me. 
    I am more than happy to help you through your next steps. 
    You can contact me here.

  • Why I Don’t Feel Disadvantaged as a Woman in Ministry

    Earlier this year, I spoke at a church on a Sunday morning. This isn’t out of the ordinary for my schedule; I often have pastor-friends who need someone to fill in, often last minute, and teach during a Sunday morning service.

    After the service, I was speaking to another pastor at that church when a gentleman approached us. He wasn’t at the service but was a pastor at a different church in town. After learning I was the guest speaker, it was clear he was not happy that a woman was teaching to the entire church.

    This doesn’t bother me. I understand where he’s coming from and had to think through my own philosophy of women in leadership at churches. Growing up in a very fundamental Baptist environment, women were only allowed to be in certain roles and usually that meant never teaching to both men and women.

    Here’s what I see: I do believe that men are called to lead and have authority over a church. If one of these men thinks the message I am sharing will help grow the people trusted to him, he can choose to have me teach that message. While I may be the one speaking to a congregation, I’m doing it under the decision of that church’s leader. And I do believe God calls and appoints specific men to specific local congregations.

    Many times I’m asked if – and sometimes it’s assumed that –  I am more of an egalitarian than I am because I am ordained and I do frequently teach/preach/whatever. I’m not. I dislike labels, but if you had to call me something, I’m a closet complementarian.

    And many times I’m told, “I’m so sorry that the church looks down on women” or “I wish more churches let women lead” … something to imply that as a woman, I’m at a disadvantage in ministry. That I won’t sell as many books as a man could (someone once commented in a review that I was the wrong gender to write about ministry leadership). That I’ll never speak in certain churches because I’m not a man.

    While some people would fully agree with those statements (and maybe, in essence, factually they are true), I don’t feel disadvantaged as a woman in ministry for one simple fact:

    I believe in the sovereignty of God.

    He has made me woman and he has called me. The two can’t contradict.

    If I am prayerfully seeking Him, cautiously listening to His spirit through Scripture and through, well, that mysterious way the spirit works, and the voices of those in my own life who I’ve submitted to, (Submission is not a terrible thing. I wish it didn’t get such a bad rap.) I can confidentially walk into the opportunities that God has placed in my path that do not go against those things.

    Sovereignty, structure, scripture and submission…they aren’t mutually exclusive. In fact, they’re all needed as we grow and live out our gifts and callings, male and female, unique and unified.