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AN APPROPRIATE CHURCH RESPONSE TO FAMILY VIOLENCE AND CHILD SEXUAL
ABUSE
by
Karen & Ron Flowers
Directors, Department of Family
Ministries, General Conference
1997
How
to Use This Resource: This collection of resources provides
an orientation for denominational leaders, pastors and local
church leaders to heighten awareness of the reality and experience
of abuse and family violence and to outline the elements of
an appropriate church response. It may also be useful in such
settings as pastors' meetings, church staff retreats, youth
camp staff meetings, school board meetings, meetings of the
Family Ministries committee and other departmental councils.
As church leaders become informed and involved these resources
will provide an information base for breaking the silence in
the congregation.
Along with the text for the Presentation Module the following
supporting materials are supplied: |
Presentation Helps:
Presentation
Helps #1 Maria's Story: A Case Study
Presentation
Helps #2 A Survivor's Litany |
Handouts:
Handout
#1 Abuse and Family Violence: Toward Some Definitions
Handout
#2 Abuse Indicators
Handout
#3 A Leader's Response to Abuse and Family Violence: Worksheet
Handout
#4 Dealing with Abuse and Domestic Violence: Do's and Don'ts
for Church Leaders |
Suggested Program:
Dramatic presentation
Presentation module
Small group activity
Litany |
Dramatic Presentation:
See Presentation
Helps #1 Maria's Story: A Case Study
This presentation will quickly help participants understand
the nature of abusive behavior, the underlying messages which
prepare a woman to accept abuse, and the way in which the circumstances
of a battered woman's life limit her options. Hope is present
also, as the kinds of releasing experiences and beliefs are
presented which can make it possible for her to break out of
her bondage and seek help.
As the introduction to the case study suggests, the individual
playing the part of the abuse victim will need to be chosen
carefully. Also, since the story is a composite of scenarios
from many battered women, and since the dynamics appear to be
similar universally, it is appropriate for the couple to carry
names suitable to your locale. |
PRESENTATION MODULE
Introduction
A top priority. At the 1995 General Conference Session
in Utrecht, Holland, world president Elder Robert Folkenberg isolated
abuse and family violence as one of six major topics of concern
confronting the church. More than one-fourth of the official delegation
to the General Conference Session underscored the concern of world
church leaders by their participation in the scheduled breakout
session convened to address the topic. There it was urged that our
denominational pastors and church leaders receive information and
education on the topic and that an appropriate church response be
made a top priority. The 1997 Family Ministries Planbook, and this
particular orientation seminar, are among the resources directed
toward the fulfillment of this mandate.
Recent Activity
Within Our Denomination
Abuse and Family Violence Taskforce. Early in 1995, and again
in early 1996, the General Conference Department of Family Ministries
convened an interdivision, interdepartmental Abuse and Family Violence
Taskforce. The Taskforce brought together family professionals,
with experience in dealing with both the abused and abusers in therapeutic
and community service settings, and church administrative and departmental
leaders. The taskforce has reviewed global population statistics
on abuse and available Seventh-day Adventist data on the incidence
and nature of family violence and child sexual abuse. Additional
data on the topic throughout the Adventist world is being collected.
The taskforce has reviewed published denominational materials, programs
and services, prioritized issues, developed a strategy for confronting
these issues with increased intentionality in our church.
Denominational statements. At the 1996 General Conference
Annual Council, a statement on Family Violence was voted by the
delegates (See Appendix A, 1997 Planbook Making Home a Place
of Peace and Healing). A statement on Child Sexual Abuse has
been drafted and will be brought for approval in 1997.
An orientation video for pastors and church leaders is in
process and will be released during 1997. Print resources accompanying
the video will be useful in contextualizing the church's response
to local communities and cultures.
Annotated listing of books, videos, curricular resources.
A number of books, videos and curricular resources from both a Christian
and secular perspective have been annotated (See Selected Resources
on Abuse and Family Violence, 1997 Planbook Making Home a
Place of Peace and Healing). Local churches, districts of churches,
as well as union and conference/mission departments are urged to
review this annotated list and establish a working and/or lending
library, making as many as possible of these resources available
to members, pastors, lay leaders, administrators and departmental
directors.
Together we can break the silence. Together we can offer support
to families struggling beneath the cloak of secrecy and the burden
of abuse and family violence. Together we can open the path toward
peace and healing in Adventist homes.
Definitions
(Distribute and present the material from Handout
#1 Abuse and Family Violence: Toward Some Definitions.)
What the
Statistics Show
Research toward providing reliable estimations of the incidence
of abuse and family violence is relatively new. Only in the last
25 years have these concerns been broadly recognized. The only large
scale studies available have been conducted in the United Kingdom,
the United States and Papua New Guinea. Developing countries are
only beginning to gather information systematically, with Nigeria,
Columbia, Bangladesh, and Chile among the first to gather such information.
Current methods of estimating the extent of the problem rely mainly
on reported incidents of abuse in records, for example, those kept
by police, welfare agencies, hospitals and women's shelters. Data
available through such records or through phone and field surveys
reveal only very conservative estimates of the magnitude of the
problem since victims are often very reluctant to report that they
have been abused. Many do not report because of feelings of guilt
and shame, fear of loss of the economic support of their husband,
fear of damaging their husband's career, fear of police and/or legal
intervention, and fear for their lives and safety of their children.
This much is clear: we are confronted with an epidemic of abuse
and family violence which is global in its proportions. The limitations
of the data available cannot be construed as hope that the plague
is confined.
(To help your group appreciate the magnitude of the global statistics,
invite them to participate in a statistical demonstration. Number
them in groups of ten, with each person in each group assigned a
number from 1 to 10. Call upon the various numbers to stand to represent
the percentage of the population reporting abuse and violence experienced
in the categories that follow.)
Murder: (Ask persons with numbers 1-5 to stand.) You
represent the 1:2 women (50%) murdered between 1983 and 1985 in
Bangladesh who were victims of domestic violence. In Canada, it
is 3:5. In the U.S., 1:3. In England and Wales, 1:4. In Michigan,
a woman is killed every five days the year around in an incidence
of domestic violence.
Battery: (Ask persons with numbers 1-7 to stand.)
You represent the 67% of a comprehensive random sample of wives
in Papua New Guinea who, in 1986, suffered the nightmare of marital
violence. Data for 1992 in the United States indicate that episodes
of violence will occur at least once in two-thirds of all marriages.
During a six-month period following an incident of domestic violence,
1:3 of the women will be victimized again. If a woman stays with
her abusive husband, she will be at 75% higher risk of being killed
by her husband than non-battered wives. In a summary of Texas shelter
research, one-half of the women seeking shelter services were reported
to have experienced abuse on a weekly basis. Studies emerging from
Australia, Kuwait, Kenya, Thailand, Austria and Nigeria place family
violence at significant levels.
Assault: (Ask persons with numbers 1-9 to stand.)
In Columbia, 94% of all assault victims are women. (This statistic
holds across the international research available.) You represent
these women as they stagger, bruised and bleeding, often alone,
into the hospital emergency rooms of Bogota. Forty percent of you
are pregnant. Many for the first time. You are at twice the risk
for miscarriage as other pregnant women.
Rape: (Ask persons with numbers 1-5 to stand.) Among
women 12 years and older, 133,000 will be victims of rape or attempted
rape in a year's time in the United States alone. You represent
the 55% of these victims whose capacity to trust is violated as
deeply as your bodies because you know your rapists. In one of the
most devastating experiences imaginable, 1:8 married women will
be coercively raped by their husbands.
Child abuse: (Ask persons with numbers 1-3 to stand.)
You represent the 1:3 girls who will be sexually abused before
you reach the age of 18. One half of these girls will have to face
throughout their lifetimes the horrible realization that they have
lived with daddies and grandpas and brothers and uncles who are
tragically different from other men. Not all daddies and grandpas
and brothers and uncles abuse girls in the name of "love,"
in ways which make love feel so wrong, as their men have done. They
will have to face that they have been robbed of their innocence.
Many have been robbed of their childhoods.
The Statistical Abstract of the United States reports that in 1993
there were 838,232 cases of neglect, 204,404 cases of physical abuse,
129,404 cases of sexual abuse, and 49,123 cases of emotional abuse.
In one-half of these cases, the abuse was perpetrated against female
children, with the greatest incidence among children ages 3-5. These
are substantiated cases. Heaven alone has the records on
the total number of cases occurring in families where the code of
silence remains unbroken.
Among Seventh-day Adventists. (Ask persons with numbers
1-6 to stand.) In a study conducted in one union in North America,
with over 500 randomly selected Adventist church members responding,
56% said that physical abuse had been directed toward them or their
siblings in the homes in which they grew up. Significant levels
of physical, emotional and sexual abuse were reported by the nearly
8,000 randomly selected respondents to the Adventist Family Study
initiated by the General Conference Department of Family Ministries
in 1994. A range of 8-18% of female respondents reported being sexually
abused. (The range indicates the lowest and highest percentages
reported in the world divisions for which data is currently available.)
The percentages of women reporting physical (15-43%) and emotional
abuse (27-69%) were considerably higher than those reporting sexual
abuse. On average, women reported greater levels of abuse than men.
A range of 4-12% of males reported sexual abuse, 15-55 % physical
abuse, and 6-37% emotional abuse. As with women, reports of sexual
abuse among men were lower than other forms of abuse.
A Profile
of Abuse Victims and Their Abusers
It is not likely that a victim of abuse and/or family violence will
announce that they are being battered or sexually exploited. If
they reveal anything at all about their circumstances, they often
speak in terms that are general or vague. But professionals mark
a number of indicators that characterize families in which abuse
may be occurring. The presence of these indicators should put pastors
and church leaders on alert that a spouse, child, or family may
be at risk. It is true that abuse and violence are blind to age,
social status, color, culture and creed. There is no typical victim,
no typical perpetrator, except insofar as the victim is overwhelmingly
female and the perpetrator male. It is also true that the presence
of any one of these general indicators does not necessarily mean
that abuse or violence is present. But as the number of these observable
indicators increases, concern for their safety and well-being should
increase on the part of church leaders.
(Distribute and present the material on Handout
#2 Abuse Indicators.)
When you suspect abuse, create safe opportunities for the individual
to share her story with you. Remember that in some abusive situations,
violence occurs in a three-phase cycle. Tension builds (stage 1),
there is an abusive episode (stage 2), followed by what appears
to be remorse on the part of the abuser (stage 3), gestures of "love"
and promises that it will never happen again. What is likely happening,
however, is that the abuser has merely changed tactics and seeks
to gain control in another way. However, because many victims want
so badly to believe that these actions represent a genuine intention
to change on the part of the abuser, attempts to intervene during
this part of the cycle (stage 3) are usually ineffective. The best
time to open the opportunity for her to talk with you is when she
appears frightened, angry, depressed, or reaching out for help.
Ask her questions such as, "Are you in danger now?" "What
does your husband do when he gets angry?" "Are you worried
about the safety of yourself and your children?" "What
options do you see yourself as having?"
Wounded individuals and families victimized by abuse and family
violence deserve a ready and compassionate response from the church.
To remain indifferent and unresponsive is to condone, perpetuate,
and potentially extend such behavior. To respond with caring concern,
understanding, and practical help is the church's moral responsibility
and tangible evidence of the presence of Christ in the midst of
the community of faith.
An Appropriate
Church Response
In dealing with abuse and family violence, the full range of services
provided through preventive education, support systems such as the
church, and professional mental health and social services should
be utilized. The church has a significant part to play in breaking
the silence on abuse and family violence. Pastors and their spouses
as well as respected church leaders are powerful voices both within
the congregation and in the surrounding community, holding high
God's ideal for marital and parent-child relationships. At the same
time, they may use their voices to keep the church and community
in firm touch with the hard realities of a world of sin and to establish
a climate in which the truth can be confronted and resources martialed
to respond to the needs of families in which abuse and family violence
are occurring. Most pastors do not have adequate training or the
necessary licensure to treat abuse victims or their abusers. However,
they can take their appropriate place in a supportive role and as
a bridge to the full network of professional and community resources
available.
The New Testament metaphor for church as the "household of
faith" creates a vision of community, of family, where members
turn from the total pursuit of personal agendas to become involved
in one another's lives. To be involved means:
To "care-front" one another when disconcerting
indicators call for compassionate inquiry.
To endeavor to protect the vulnerable and to stop abuse.
To hold abusers firmly responsible for their behavior.
To become actively aware of professional family resources
in the church and the community.
To help families find and access these resources.
To provide support and encouragement for all family members
as they process their pain with professionals trained to help them.
To respond to the spiritual questions which arise out of
abusive and violent experiences.
To minister to families as they move toward reconciliation
when true repentance on the part of the abuserwhich always
includes acceptance of responsibility for the abusive behavior,
restitution in every way possible for the harm done, and evidence
of changed attitudes and behavioropens the way for forgiveness
and new beginnings.
To assist families in grieving the loss of significant relationships
severed by continuing abuse and violence.
Practical
Suggestions for a Helpful Response
(Distribute Handout
#3 A Leader's Response to Abuse and Family Violence. This is
a worksheet with the following main points and opportunity for participants
to make their own notes.)
1. Speak out about abuse and family violence in your church and
community.
Communities of faith must move beyond denial and face the hard realities
of abuse and family violence in their midst and in the communities
around them. For too long abuse victims and survivors have suffered
in silent fear and dread, with even the closest of friends, work
associates, fellow church members, and family unaware of their painful
secret. They need pastors and church leaders who will declare that
abuse and violence are wrong and who are prepared to follow through
on their convictions.
Disseminate information. Your church can play an important
role in breaking the silence on these issues by disseminating the
best information available, from the pulpit, through your church
newsletter, your Sabbath School classes, and your leadership committees.
Premarial guidance sessions, marriage enrichment retreats and parent
education classes all provide opportunities to share information
that will be helpful in prevention and intervention. When you speak
out, chances are you will not only be making the most of your best
opportunities to disseminate good information. You will also be
creating an atmosphere in which victims and survivors can safely
tell their stories and find help.
Your church and community needs:
Your ringing affirmation of the dignity and worth of every
human being made in God's image and redeemed by the blood of Christ;
Your voice lifted with those of others to decry all forms
of physical, sexual and emotional abuse and violence because love
and mutuality, not force and the abuse of power, are to characterize
Christian relationships;
Your acknowledgment of the global extent of this problem
and the serious, long-term effects of abuse and family violence
upon the lives of all involved;
An indication of your willingness to be actively involved
in addressing these problems.
Speaking out is the first step in both prevention and intervention.
2. Prepare yourself to make appropriate referrals.
Make it your responsibility to learn all that you can about the
resources available to victims of abuse and family violence within
your congregation and in the community. The most successful response
to abuse and family violence utilizes the full range of professional
and support services available. The goal is to bring abuse and family
violence to the attention of those who can help and to put the family
members in touch with the professional resources necessary to bring
about change. Individual and group therapy combined over a substantial
period of time has proven most effective. However, a network of
friends in the church who can be available to offer practical support
is also needed. Without this network, many victims and perpetrators
will be unable to benefit from the help available.
Become informed about available services. Acquaint yourself
personally with the personnel and services of local shelters for
battered women and children, child abuse prevention organizations,
rape crisis centers, support groups and the agency to whom reports
of suspected child abuse are to be made. Discover in advance how
you can expect them to respond to your call when a woman seeks your
help and you are needing to make a referral.
Introduce yourself and become acquainted with a network of Christian
counselors with expertise in the fields of abuse in order to establish
a ready list to whom you can refer. Know the services available
through local law enforcement, for legal counsel, and where emergency
babysitting services, medical care, food, clothing and temporary
financial support can be found. Keep the names and telephone numbers
of contact persons close at hand, as well as the numbers for local
crisis hotlines. To become more proficient with abuse issues, you
may wish to train as a volunteer and offer your services to one
of these community organizations.
3. Recognize that your primary role is to listen and support
those who have the courage to tell someone about the presence of
abuse and violence in their family.
Take any report of abusive behavior seriously. Most battered
women will minimize the abuse; few will exaggerate. Children, in
most cases, simply do not have the experience or vocabulary to lie.
Presume she is telling you only a small part of her story. Her worst
fear is that no one will believe her. Affirm her for her courage.
Likely she is very embarrassed and even now wondering if she is
doing the right thing. Listen with compassion and empathy. Do not
assign blame or interrogate her with questions like, "What
did you do to make him angry?" Do not suggest that she go home
and try harder to please him or imply that she has it in her power
to stop the abuse.
Abuse is a choice made to control another person. Affirm
that abuse is learned behavior. It is about the desire of one person
to exercise power and control over another. It cannot be excused
by alcoholism, stress, the need to fulfill sexual desires, or any
behavior of the victim. In many abusive situations, alcoholism,
stress, or poor relational skills are also present. However, it
has been shown that many who are alcoholics, who are in stressful
situations, or who possess poor relational skills do not abuse their
wives and children. Abuse is a choice made by the abuser. Victims
do not deserve abusive behavior nor do they cause the abuser to
abuse. What is happening to them is not their fault. No change in
their behavior will bring an end to the abuse. Professional treatment
can bring about a change in the abuser's behavior, but only if the
abuser can be brought to the place where he takes responsibility
for his abusive behavior and seeks help to change.
Help the abuse sufferer discover options. Do not minimize
her fears for her life, whether she chooses to stay or to leave.
Ask about her options for a safe place in which she herself and
her children can take refuge when they are in immediate danger.
You may need to help her find optionsthe home of a friend
or relative, a shelter, a motel, or with someone in the church who
is willing to provide safe haven. If the woman is in need of immediate
medical attention, it can be very helpful for another woman whom
she trusts to accompany her. Point out to her the importance of
telling a physician the details about the origin of her injuries
so that this information can accurately be included in her medical
records.
Help her to explore the alternatives open to her. Her ability to
perceive her alternatives or to evaluate them may be impaired by
the circumstances. Offer assurance that the church will not abandon
her or her family as they work through the problem one step at a
time, no matter what lies ahead. Provide practical, short-term assistance
as needed, but guard against making her dependent on others for
the long run. Dependence breeds low self-esteem.
Support the victims choices. Allow her to make her own choices
in her own time. It is not appropriate for you to tell her what
to do. Your task is to support her decisions, even if you do not
agree with the course of action she has chosen. You may, of course,
share your concerns for her safety should she decide to stay in
the relationship. It is never appropriate for you to urge her to
stay in a destructive relationship in which the abuser refuses to
take responsibility for his behavior and to seek professional help
to change. A victim is not responsible for preserving the marriage,
keeping the family together, or the salvation of her husband. The
marriage covenant is built upon mutuality, love and trust. When
these are violated, covenant has been broken.
You have ministered well when you have helped the victim to discover
and maximize her own resources. Your task is to open the way for
her to access as many professional resources as you can and to offer
your's and the congregation's practical support as she utilizes
these resources to benefit herself and her family.
Respect privacy. Be sensitive to the family's need for privacy
and confidentiality. The congregation can be supportive without
the family feeling as though they have become spectacles whom everyone
is gossiping about. Reassure victims that you will not discuss their
situation with anyone without permission.
A sequence to remember:
First, protect the victim and her children.
Second, support the family in identifying and utilizing professional
resources to get help.
Third, help her deal with her spiritual questions.
Fourth, help her evaluate the relationship to determine if
reconciliation is possible or if the relationship is too destructive
for reconciliation. Offer her help with the reconciliation process
and/or help to grieve the loss of a significant relationship.
In the best of circumstances, the wounds of abuse and family violence
run deep. Scars inevitably remain. Only the senile forget. But with
professional counseling the intense pain can be diminished and abusive
experiences need no longer be incapacitating when the memory of
the abuse recurs throughout one's lifetime. God provides His own
balm, the healing balm of forgiveness, which, in response to true
repentance, can open the way for reconciliation and new beginnings.
The meaning of genuine repentance. Only when the perpetrator
takes full responsibility for his action, makes restitution for
harm done in every way possible, undergoes treatment and gives evidence
of a radical change in behavior, can repentance be considered genuine.
Do not be easily taken in by an abuser's claim to a religious conversion
or reconversion without the earmarks noted above. Apart from true
repentance and professional treatment, the abuse will almost certainly
begin again if the family is reunited.
Forgiveness is a process. Forgiveness is often misunderstood.
It is a process which takes a person(s) from an experience of deep
pain to eventual healing. It is not a process which should be hurried.
Reconciliation may take a very long time if it is possible at all.
There is an aspect of forgiveness which can bring peace to a victim
even when the abuser does not respond with repentance, restitution
in every way possible, and changed behavior. But in this case, forgiveness
is a choice which frees the victim from bitterness and a desire
for revenge. When restoration in the relationship is not possible,
it is helpful for the pastor to assist family members in grieving
the loss of an important relationship.
4. Safeguard the children.
When a child makes a report, remember most children do not have
the vocabulary or the experience to make up a convincing story.
When, as is often the case, the abuser is a family member, friend,
or someone else the child should have been able to trust and to
count on to love and care for him or her, the abuse is particularly
devastating. It is best for a pastor to simply listen and accept
the child's account and feelings and to provide caring support.
It is appropriate to ask questions like, "Is there anything
more that you need to tell me?" or "What exactly did your
uncle do?" If the child needs to be questioned further about
details, it is best for these questions to be asked by professionals
who have been trained in this area.
Report abuse to authorities. When you suspect a child is
being victimized, it is morally responsible to make a report to
appropriate authorities in order to protect them from further harm.
In many places, making a report is also a pastor's legal responsibility.
It is your responsibility to know the laws in your jurisdiction.
Remember that often the involvement of the authorities is the most
powerful motivator for an abuser to seek the professional treatment
necessary to end the abuse. Where there are no civil authorities
who will ensure the protection of children, it is incumbent upon
Christians to do whatever they can to protect them
Children need a great deal of care and support when their families
are in the midst of the turmoil brought on by abuse. They need reassurance
that no matter what has happened, it is not their fault. While treatment
toward healing from the trauma of abuse should be left to a professional
counselor, the child needs his or her pastor and friends from the
church to stay close and provide a safe, caring circle when everything
else when the child's world seems to be falling apart.
5. Hold the abuser firmly accountable for his actions.
Many abusers will vehemently deny their abusive actions or minimize
their severity or incidence. You will need to be caring but firm
in your statements that the abusive behavior must cease immediately.
For your own safety, do not confront the abuser alone. Do not suggest
marital or couple counseling. Couple counseling is not effective
at this point because the victim will not be free to talk without
putting herself and her children at further risk. The first goal
is not to save the marriage but to stop the abuse.
Treatment for abuse is complex. The abuse perpetrator should
be placed in the care of professionals with expertise in this area
as soon as possible. Without such professional help, the abusive
behavior will almost surely continue. Without such help the abuser
will be unable to see the abusive nature of his behavior or identify
the patterns of control and the abuse of power in his relationships.
It should be made clear that any hope for restoration of his family
relationships rests on his active participation in treatment and
a radical change in his behavior.
6. Address the spiritual dimension.
Victims of abuse and violence in the church often struggle with
deep spiritual questions. Where was God when I was being abused?
If He is all powerful, why doesn't He stop my abuser? Is God punishing
me for something I have done? Does He think I need to learn a lesson?
I must be bad, else God would have protected me. Many feel God-abandoned
and wrongly blame themselves and worry about whether God can ever
forgive them.
At this time they need a faith community who accepts them, questions
and all, recognizing that God will make Himself known to them as
they are able to come to some understanding about the inevitability
of suffering as part of life in a fallen world. They will come to
see that you can't save anyone by letting them hurt you. With the
passing of time they will become more open to your clarification
about God's design for mutual submission in marriage, Christ's teachings
about power and authority, and the difference between discipline
and punishment.
They may need help to identify the earmarks of true repentance which
always includes taking responsibility for wrongs committed, a change
in behavior, and restitution wherever possible for harm done. They
may need help to distinguish between the forgiveness which may someday
free them from bitterness and a desire to hurt as they have been
hurt even if there is no repentance on the part of the abuser, and
the forgiveness that may open the way for the restoration of a relationship
when true repentance and treatment which brings about changed behavior
makes reconciliation possible. But for now, do not be hasty to correct
theology or to offer directives or solutions. Leave room for God
to do His work.
(Allow time for discussion in small groups regarding the orientation
material that has been presented. Distribution of the Handout
# 4 Dealing with Abuse and Domestic Violence: Do's and Don'ts for
Church Leaders may add to the discussion. Encourage participants
to focus on plans for implementation of these principles and concepts
in their local area and in the arenas over which they have responsibility
and influence.)
(Close with A
Survivor's Litany, Presentation Helps # 2.)
References
Bussert, J. M. K. (1986). Battered women: From a theology of
suffering to an ethic of empowerment. New York: Lutheran Church
in America.
Epp-Tiessen,
E. (Ed.). Expanding the circle of caring: Ministering to the
family members of survivors and perpetrators of sexual abuse.
Akron, PA: Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Women's Concerns.
Fortune, M.
M. (1987). Keeping the faith: Questions and answers for the abused
woman. Harper & Row, Publishers, San Francisco.
Fortune, M.
M. (1991). Violence in the family: A workshop curriculum for
clergy and other helpers. Cleveland, OH: The Pilgrim Press.
Pope-Lance,
D. J., & Engelsman, J. C. (1990). A guide for clergy on the
problems of domestic violence. New Jersey Dept. of Community
Affairs, Division on Women, Office on the Prevention of Violence
Against Women, William Ashby Community Affairs Building, 101 South
Broad StreetCN 801, Trenton, NJ 08625-0801.
Violence against women in the family. (1989). New York: United
Nations.
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