Friday, August 31, 2007

"Enough" Starring Jennifer Lopez as Evangelist Juanita Bynum Is Where This Conversation Needs To Go!

The Continuing Battle Of Juanita Bynum & Thomas Weeks III Delivers A Punch To The Pulpit

Yesterday in the Courier-Journal of Louisville, Kentucky, columnist Bettye Baye' writes an insightful perspective on the larger issue of domestic violence and other glossed-over realities within the church as it relates to the latest developments of prophetess Bynum and Bishop Weeks III.

Here is an excerpt:
The beautiful bride of such recent memory was reportedly choked, kicked and stomped by Bishop Weeks, from whom she already was estranged, in the parking lot of a hotel near the Atlanta airport. A meeting reputedly intended to see whether the marriage could be patched up clearly went badly. A bellhop who saw the incident pulled Weeks off his wife.

The bishop, charged with aggravated assault, spent six hours in the Fulton County Jail before being released on $40,000 bond. If his wife sees the case through, she may deliver her greatest service and sermon to female followers.


Estimates are that anywhere from 950,000 to 3 million women are physically abused each day in America by so-called intimate partners. A 1998 survey found that nearly one-third of American women claimed to have been physically or sexually abused by an intimate partner sometime in their lives.

"It's happening in every ZIP code and every area code," said Denise Vazquez Troutman, president and CEO of the Center for Women and Families. The Center, which opened Kentucky's first domestic violence shelter for women in 1977, today has a 24-hour hot line and eight regional locations.

"Faith leaders," Troutman said, "must speak out against domestic violence," and should institute protocols within their own institutions that support victims and that support domestic violence shelters -- for example, by publishing hot line numbers and information about services for victims in bulletins and newsletters, and placing domestic violence literature in heavily traveled areas.

The aim, Troutman said, is "to create a faith community environment in which domestic violence isn't tolerated."

Ah, but there's the rub, according to...

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