This Foolishness With Pastors
Does Ministry Have An Expiration Date?
The Bishop And The Bathtub
I'm sure somebody thought it was cute. Truthfully, it was cute, a seemingly innocent photo of Pop-Pop and grandbaby. But it's not 1965 anymore, when such photos were commonly taped to the fridge door and pressed into thick albums along with junior's' first haircut. What troubles me most about Bishop Larry Trotter's photo, posted to InstaGram, of himself and his granddaughter sharing a bath, is how out of touch the Bishop seems to be with the world he supposes to minister to. The world has changed since 1965, bishop. My mom likely had a few dozen such photos, yes, from the 60's, of my sister or myself at bath time, but she didn't pass them out to the local pedophiles or have them printed in the newspaper. The Trotter photo, which we have chosen not to post here, seems innocent only to the immediate family who understand the full context from which the image was taken. Outside of that bathroom door, nobody gets why this old man is taking a bath with a child, of either gender. What I'm certain was intended as a moment of sweetness creeped us out. I am most disturbed, however, by the bishop's failure to recognize what year this is. The photo marks him with an expiration date of perhaps 1972 at best, as such private family moments have been deemed inappropriate for public distribution for well over thirty years.
The Love of Jesus? Bishop Larry Trotter
in imperious pastor's scowl with bad Photoshop
job on his head, French manicure and ridiculous, effem-inate bishop's ring.
This is a really bad choice in optics, making the bishop look like a black Vincent Price in his Egghead role from the 1960's Batman TV series. The image projects vanity.
Jesus would not take such a photo,
nor would He allow himself to be photographed in a bathtub with a child.
More troubling is the lying, likely intended to help
the bishop but backfiring, shrouding what was a
likely innocent situation in ugly suspicion and
making things much worse by trying to clean up
an awkward but otherwise negligible moment. First was the lie of the photo having been
posted by accident. This was a posed and
carefully prepared image, not a candid photo
taken in the spur of family play time. Trotter
clearly intended the photo for public viewing.
The bishop, or his daughter taking the picture,
went to a lot of trouble to carefully stage the
photo, sculpting the bath bubbles around them so
as to cover the child’s nipples and any view of
the bishop’s nudity. Second, it wasn't, as the
church reported, "a large Jacuzzi tub." It
appears to be a normal-sized bathtub, not that
that makes any difference, given the proximity
of the two. Third is their assertion
that both the bishop and the child were wearing
“trunks,” which is not impossible, but if they
were, that underscores the first lie that the
picture was not intended for public viewing.
Toddlers around the world routinely swim nude in
backyard wading pools and Mommy and Me time in
the bathtub is hardly unusual. It seems
unlikely the bishop was taking a bath, the child
wanders in, he interrupts his bath, dresses
himself, and either draws a fresh bath or gets
back into what is now soiled bath water, with all the suds
remaining at peak fluffiness. It’s even less
likely a four-year old girl has swimming
“trunks,” rather than a one-piece bathing suit.
The church's assertions seem to be needless inventions, whether
they are or not. "It was a private family moment. We exercised poor judgment in posting it online." Done.
The real problem is nobody wants to take responsibility anymore. The arrogant defiance of
the indefensible makes
Trotter look weak and frightened. The more childish bluster coming out of his camp, the more ridiculous the bishop seems.
Nobody actually thinks Trotter is a child molester. The problem is
people think Trotter is an idiot,
which is far more damaging. A pastor's inability
to simply admit a mistake is a red flag that he's been in the storm too long.
Worse, anyone who works in communications will tell you: if you are on defense, you're losing. Trotter, and virtually every pastor mentioned
here, has been playing defense and, thus, losing badly.
In another video clip,
here’s the same
bishop, on defense, defending his having mock-crucified what
appears to be the same child in a staged protest
against the Chicago teachers strike. That
imagery is far more disturbing to me than Pop
Pop in the tub. The mock
crucifixion was just creepy and reinforces my suspicion that the bishop has stayed beyond his expiration
date.
The Disciples: A rumored $1.5 million paid to Eddie Long accusers Robinson, Flagg, and LeGrande. How is it possible your married pastor can keep company with these young men and nobody seems to be troubled by it?
Solomon and Saul
The lesson of King Saul, of King Solomon, seem to be an arc of
usefulness beyond which these powerful and righteous men of God
became consumed by ego and self-interest. Now given over to
their flesh, these men believed they could do anything they
wanted to. Saul became consumed by jealousy of David, his
protégé and obvious successor. Rather than honor God by
celebrating David, Saul clung to power, a kingly power he
had disgraced. Instead of
seeking God, Saul sought advice from a witch and schemed
endlessly to kill David whom Saul presumed was out to kill him.
For his part, David honored God and refused to kill Saul when
the opportunity presented itself. In the end, Saul was God’s
man: he was God’s to deal with. Judging God’s man was not
David’s place.
King Solomon is remembered for being the wisest man in the
bible, which misses the actual point of King Solomon who was, in
fact, the biggest fool in the bible. This is what happens when
you substitute religion for relationship, you end up doing
ridiculous things like naming your church “King Solomon Baptist
Church,” which does not honor God in any way because it gets the
story wrong. The lesson of King Solomon is not the king's wisdom
but the king's arrogance. King Solomon's is a cautionary tale,
not some benign, positive and uplifting Sunday school lesson.
Naming your church after him echoes and magnifies the biggest
fool in the history of the world and informs everyone that the
people of this church known nothing, nothing, about the bible.
They're just Church Folk.
There are many stories in the bible that end this way. Not in
triumph or celebration but in tragic personal
failure following historic triumph that is difficult to explain to children in Sunday
School: Noah having drunken sex with his daughters. Many churches round
corners off of these bible
stories so kids can draw pictures of the wise King Solomon in
crayon and learn to trust God, but changing the narrative by
being dishonest about how it ends is, in and of itself,
blasphemy. Too many of us are simply Church Folk who don’t read
and who do not study. At churches across the nation, Bible Study
is typically a ghost town, with a bare fraction of the church’s
membership attending. The overwhelming majority of people who
identify themselves as Christians, white, black or otherwise,
know precious little about Christ and less about the bible.
Their investment is in religion and their training is these half-truths taught to them as children in Sunday School classes: King Solomon The Wise. Shot-callers at most black churches, adults, with money, with bachelors and even masters degrees, often have biblical training at the kindergarten level because they’ve chosen not to invest in that part of their lives. This makes them gullible and easy prey for the backslidden pastor. Many of these people, Church Folk, are puffed up and insist on adding their letters of academia to every mention of their name, “Doctor” this and .MA added onto everything. But in this area, in the area of understanding the bible and knowing who God is, they have contented themselves with whatever they remember from being eight years old. And they name their church after King Solomon.