Willow Creek Chicago pastor resigns, decides to become his own Messiah…
The pastor of Willow Creek Chicago — the city campus of the evangelical megachurch Willow Creek Community Church — has resigned and admitted to “sexual impurity,” a church spokesman said.
The pastor, Rev. Steve Wu, could not be reached, and the church would [not] specify what took place.
Wu, 43, moved from California’s Silicon Valley in early 2006, hired by senior pastor Rev. Bill Hybels to lead Willow Creek Chicago, the downtown branch of the South Barrington-based church.
And further down…
The statement said: “He admitted to sexual impurity and has taken full responsibility for his sin. He has expressed a desire to participate in a restoration process.”
The usual drama continues — yet another collection of sex obsessed evangelicals find yet another in their midst who slipped Willy across this week’s line and, yet again, have tossed him out on his, er, nether-regions as a form of utterly useless restorative therapy that is sure to result in both zero change and a speaking tour — probably with a book deal. (Clearly, we assume, this is necessary because sex is so much badder then all the rest of the antics they are involved in.) None of this is new. What’s interesting is how honest they have been this time…
“has taken full responsibility for his sin.”
Two errors in seven words — pretty much a record I think…
Last time I checked Scripture, it tells me Jesus took responsibility for the sin of the entire world, took it all upon Himself and died for it. Paul further tells us that (Rom 7) we died with Christ to all of the elemental principles of this world (Col 2:21) and the very concept of the naughty and nice list style of living that got instituted in at the Fall in the garden of Eden. Sin was such a serious problem that no one other then God Himself could do ANYTHING about it — and He had to die, kill us and then raise all of the above to a new life to do it. And, He did it — once and for all
But not in Bill Hybel’s inferno… It’s a special place of image and performance where people handle sin with so little seriousness that they actually believe that a human being can do something to fix it. Here, sin (At least whatever of it is on the latest naughty list) is still front and center (Because apparently Jesus only died so we can eat Jr. Bacon Cheeseburgers) and people are still scaled by it until they can work hard enough to appear to clean up their own acts.
But don’t worry, it’s a caring place where they help people reach that sinless state — by ensuring their unemployment…[SIGH]
I’m still waiting for a church with the guts to stand up and say,
Today pastor _________ came to us to admit that he’s been having an affair with our women’s ministry coordinator. We’re leaving both of them in their jobs and are going to set out as a community to experience what it is like to see Jesus do what He said he would do in setting the captives free if we actually become the safe place He talked about. This week we are going to start that journey by talking about guilt, shame and condemnation and how that unholy trinity keeps people doing stupid things that will never satisfy. Bring what you have been conned into believing is your own dirty laundry at 11am and we’ll see if Jesus can do the stain removal you never could even get started on…
Ya, I know — never mind…[SIGH]






February 18th, 2009 at 12:04 pm
Hello, I have only one question.
If he has committed a “sin”…. And they are going to engage in a so called restoration process…..
If then, I am assuming that the fundamental belief of this organization is that they are all sinners who “need Jesus”, what exactly are they going to “restore” him TO? A lesser sinner? A controlled and repentant sinner? A sinner can only sin. The logic is baffling.
You know, the simple audacity of some people to believe that when we engage in the mystery of living in the Spirit of Christ we are no longer sinners is too unfathomable isn’t it???????
But I suppose that the lot of them are feeling pretty good about themselves as they have a new fall-guy who is likely “serving” in making them feel very godly indeed.
No sarcasm intended.
I pray that the irony in the end would be that the condemnation would truly break him and that Jesus would lead him to true life. It did for me. And so I pray….
Vivien.
February 19th, 2009 at 4:29 am
Hi Vivien,
Sadly, it will probably just result in the requisite groveling and a reemergence within the same system that has employed him thus far.
For most people that deeply a part of the bricks and mortar church, they just can’t think far enough outside of the box to even imagine anything else…
Cal