Church Executive SEPT / OCT 2019 DIGITAL ISSUE | Page 28

SEXUAL ABUSE CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE IN MINISTRY CONTEXTS Understanding the risk By Gregory Love & Kimberlee Norris Child sexual abuse risk in ministry contexts cannot be ignored. This statement implies child protection has been ignored by some ministries in the past. For most ministries, however, the challenge is ignorance of the problem. Most ministries are doing something, but not doing the right thing. Church Executive and MinistrySafe have teamed up to provide ministry leaders with analysis and guidance such that they can understand the risk, properly prepare to meet the risk, and effectively address the risk with preventive protocols. As sexual abuse attorneys, and the founders and directors of MinistrySafe, we have more than 50 years combined legal experience addressing child sexual abuse issues impacting ministries and secular organizations across North America. Prevention starts with understanding: how does child sexual abuse risk unfold in ministry contexts? We cannot reduce a risk we do not understand Prevention starts with understanding. What does your church do to protect children from sexual abuse? This question jump-starts any discussion about child sexual abuse risk and preparation. The majority of ministry leaders typically reference these practices or efforts: • Criminal background checks • Child check-in system • Policies • Two adult rule • Six-month member rule • Video cameras • Police officer on site (uniformed or plain clothes) This list, however, is minimally helpful in protecting children from the dozens of abusers featured in media reports across the nation within the past five years. Yet the Church continues to double down on the ‘list’ as if it were the solution to the problem. Doing so will result in negative headlines for the next 25 years. As civil trial attorneys who deal with standards of care, we stand over scores of ‘train wrecks’ in Christ-based 28 CHURCH EXECUTIVE | SEPT / OCT 2019 environments. In nearly all cases, the ministry in the media cross-hairs employed a variation of the practices listed previously; the problem is that these do not address the real risk. Building the right fence In any discussion related to child sexual abuse prevention, the concept of a fence is a good starting point. The type of fence built is driven by what it is meant to be kept out. To protect a garden from your neighbor’s livestock, for example, the fence might involve metal stakes and barbed wire. While a barbed wire fence effectively addresses one risk (livestock), it’s absolutely worthless related to another (rabbits). In general, churches are building the wrong fence. Ministries are building perfectly functional barbed wire fences, and the rabbits are destroying our gardens. Compounding the problem, churches construct the wrong fence and believe the problem is solved. To effectively address the risk of child sexual abuse, church leaders must understand offender behavior, then build the right fence. Understanding the risk A church’s efforts must correspond to actual risk. To properly protect children in ministry programs, church leaders must understand how the risk unfolds. Livestock vs. rabbits To better understand this risk, ministry leaders must be aware of two types of sexual abusers, the abduction offender (livestock) and preferential offender (rabbit). Abduction offender The abduction offender often has little or no relationship to the child or the child’s family; this person simply sees an opportunity to snatch a child and does so. The public sees the story on the news, and the outcome is generally awful. Considering the broad waterfront of child sexual abuse risk, the abduction offender only represents 4-5% of the problem.