Jack Hyles Recounts Manhandling Teen While Guest Preaching
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- Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024
- In the sermon How Shall I Let Thee Go?, preached by Jack Hyles at First Baptist Church, Hammond, IN, Jack Hyles recounts the story of manhandling a teenage boy at a church where he was guest preaching because the boy said something he didn't like about his sermon.
Original sermon link: • Audio Sermons - How Sh...
The improper treatment of children is a common theme that comes up in preaching. I've heard crazy things, and all of it, of course, is justified by the pastor. Yet, as a worker in the ministry, you are told not to do those things. But how can you as a worker not justify your actions when the pastor of the church does? Is it no wonder there are so many hurt children from IFB churches when they are treated so poorly?
Keep in mind when you hear things like this, he had a public ministry that was worldwide. Thousands of people heard everything he said from the pulpit. So, if you were a pastor, ministry leader, or ministry worker and you heard a pastor like Jack Hyles say something like this publicly, wouldn't that make it that much easier to justify violence against children? Wouldn't it make it that much easier to defend those in your church, or even yourself, though you may have mishandled or hurt a child? If you were a parent of a child, would it make it that much easier for you to not confront a pastor or ministry leader or worker after they did something egregious to your child? After all, we are told over and over not to say anything critical about the man of God. How much abuse has happened and then been justified because of things like this?
That's the sort of thing that helps Christians to be stereotyped as hateful and interferes with lost people wanting to be saved.
That has all of the earmarks of a complete lie. A story made up for the sake of impact. For whatever reason, it was either a lie or an assault. Either one was a terrible sin and a disqualifying act for a "pastor".
I can't tell you how many times I have heard IFB preachers tell stories like that. They usually start out like" there was this guy" or something like that. Common sense tells you that these stories are made up. One in particular I remember hearing was " There was this beautiful young woman who God called to the mission field, but she refused God's lead.
Then one day, she was driving her little sports car and pulled out in front of a truck. She was terribly injured and perfectly deformed. She after her her recovery, went to the mission field not as a beauty but ugly and horribly disfigured."
The moral to this story is if you do not do what the pastor says God called you to do, something terrible is likely to happen to you or someone you love. That is control through terror.
Some requirements for pastor (ie. Bishop):
1 Timothy 3:3 KJV
Not given to wine, no striker, not greedy of filthy lucre; but patient, *not a brawler** not covetous;
The late Dr. Hyles sounded like a striker and a brawler in this video.
As heard with the audio clips, the late Dr. Hyles sounded like he was filled with fury.
Well, the late Dr. Hyles behaved in a manner very befitting of a cult chieftain.
😳😳😳
First of all, the story is a lie in which he tries to present himself as tough. But even worse than that, its a fabricated story in which he physically attacks a teenager because he couldn't take criticism. He could be arrested for assault of a minor.
This comment is probably a lie
OOF
I'm kinda confused, did the boy really just say he didn't like the sermon? Or did he really just insult the sermon and disrespect the pastor and while recounting the story he just sums it up as him saying the sermon was rotten? Its incredible disrespectful to call a sermon rotten but it seems pretty damn harsh to throw him out on the spot cause of it???
Read Nehemiah 13:25!
I would hope that no one would advocate that because Nehemiah acted that way toward some of the men of his day, that somehow that gives pastors the right to physical harm children.
Nobody is advocating harming children.
That said, I can’t think of a preacher who helped more people. I am one of them and I am married to one of them.
@@answersfromscriptureonline Just want to make sure since you highlighted the passage from Nehemiah about him doing physical harm to the men of his day. Don't forget that Nehemiah was in a position of judicial power. He was not just a spiritual leader. Rightly dividing the word of God definitely helps when trying to understand why people did what they did.
@@answersfromscriptureonline I'm glad you expressed the sentiment, because it confirms my observations. I have seen over and over that expression, and it is exactly the sentiment that creates the culture whereby egregious things are justified. I heard people say the same about Jack Schaap, that he had "helped so many people." I personally know of a former IFB pastor who went to prison for molesting a teenage girl in his church, and the some people were saying, "We can offer him his job as pastor back when he gets out because he was such a good man."
So it is interesting that you would post a reference to the Nehemiah passage, and then justify a person by saying what you have. Glad to see that sentiment is alive and well.