A Christian charity registered in Balmain East which practices
“reparative therapy” is seeking to revive itself and recruit a new
pastoral worker, it can be revealed.
Liberty Christian Ministries is one of only
three known outfits in Sydney running ex-gay programs, and the only one
based in the inner west. It has placed an advertisement on the Sydney
Anglicans website for a part-time pastoral worker to begin in February.
“We are looking for someone with a passion to
support those who want to enjoy a faithful and fruitful Christian life
while struggling with unwanted same-sex attraction, and to resource
pastors, churches and other Christian groups who want to share in this
ministry,” the ad states.
Liberty’s intention to revive its program comes as the global ex-gay movement experiences something of a collapse.
In June, the world’s largest such network –
Exodus International – shut itself down and issued a stunning apology
for the hurt and suffering it had caused.
“I am sorry that some of you spent years
working through the shame and guilt you felt when your attractions
didn’t change,” said former Exodus leader Alan Chambers. “I am sorry
that I have communicated that you and your families are less than me and
mine.” The group also admitted efforts to change sexual orientation and
desire had been unsuccessful in 99.9 per cent of cases.
The former pastoral worker at Liberty, Haydn
Sennitt, departed in June. Mr Sennitt has not renounced reparative
therapies but quit to focus on his college studies and “pursue a closer
walk with the Lord”. He is now the vice-chairman of Exodus Global
Alliance (not affiliated with Exodus International).
In recent times the Liberty program has failed
to attract much interest. In his 2012 report, Mr Sennitt wrote that it
had been “a year of tremendous growth and success”, but reported meeting
with only ten individuals over the course of the year.
He also admitted that “in general, the
meetings have been quite sporadic with most being inconsistent in coming
to meetings and demonstrating a double-mindedness that has kept them
from making real progress”.
As well as conducting meetings, Mr Sennitt’s
work involved visiting churches chiefly in Sydney’s inner west, outer
west and north. His report states that he visited Toongabbie Christian
School, near Parramatta, four times in 2012.
Shane Cathcart undertook the 3-month Liberty
program twice in the late 1990s after being referred to it by a member
of his Anglican church’s ministry. He was 22, “young and
impressionable”, desperate to be “the sort of person that everyone
wanted me to be”. But he had little expectation that his sexuality would
change.
“I believed that I would learn a lot about why
I felt this way, but in all seriousness I didn’t think it would work,”
Shane said.
Back then, the group was considerably larger,
with about 20 participants, he recalls. The program consisted mainly of
discussion and “counselling”, where the young men and women were urged
to confess if they had masturbated or been clubbing since the last
session.
“Anything to do with same-sex temptations or acting out were discouraged.”
At the end of the three months, Shane says he
understood more about himself, including his unabated homosexuality. He
repeated the program just “to see if there was something that I might
have missed along the way”.
Shane is now happily partnered to another man
and participates actively in the gay community. It wasn’t an easy
transition – when the program didn’t work, he began to withdraw from
family and friends, or treat them with anger. Programs like liberty make
the shame worse, Shane says, by encouraging people to bury their
feelings rather than reach out.
Anthony Venn-Brown is the founder of
Ambassadors and Bridge Builders International and the author of “A Life
of Unlearning”, his own story of coming out as a gay preacher. He said
the battle against the ex-gay myth is being won, in part because the gay
Christian movement has grown exponentially.
“These organisations are becoming increasingly irrelevant,” Mr Venn-Brown said. “You just wish they’d lie down and die.”
He said proponents of reparative therapy are
often ignorant of the harm caused because they don’t keep in contact
with clients after the program.
“I’ve got hundreds of stories of people who’ve
told me … how bad they felt about themselves, the depression they went
through. Some had thoughts of suicide, some even attempted suicide.”
Mr Venn-Brown said he was doubtful Liberty would find anyone willing to take on the role in this changed climate.
“This will all be over in a matter of years. This might be the final straw. But my goal is to see them all closed down.”
Mr Sennitt was unavailable for comment. The Inner West Independent
unsuccessfully sought interviews with David Peterson, Liberty’s
chairperson, and Stephanie Menear, listed as a committee member by the
Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission.
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Labels: exodus, Liberty Christian Ministries, news, reparative therapy