Where does our rage belong when egregious actions are committed or defended by a “family member”?
Allegations of sexual impropriety against the longtime Religious Right celebrity and current Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore have forced the church to wrestle once again with sexual harassment and assault.
While we don’t know whether the claims that seven women have leveled against Moore are true, in general, when people claim to have been victims of sexual assault or abuse, Christians ought to believe them, says Liberty University English professor Karen Swallow Prior.
“People are denying the reality that most women grow up and live their lives being harassed, if not assaulted, and being propositioned or being pursued inappropriately,” she said. “Almost every woman I know, including myself, has had something like that happen to them. This is just the world we grow up in.”
Prior recently joined associate digital media producer Morgan Lee and editorial director Ted Olsen to discuss how quick we should be to distance ourselves from those who sin grievously or egregiously misrepresent us and what public repentance and confession might look like.
Christianity Today: 10 Things Sexual Assault Victims Want You to Know
Christianity Today: If You See Something, Say Something
Fresh Air: White Evangelicals Conflicted By Accusations Against Roy Moore
What is “Quick to Listen”? Read more
Subscribe to “Quick to Listen” on Apple Podcasts
Follow the podcast on Twitter
Follow our hosts on Twitter: Morgan Lee and Ted Olsen
Follow our guest on Twitter: Karen Swallow Prior
Quick to Listen is produced by Morgan Lee, Richard Clark, and Cray Allred
Source: Christianity Today Most Read