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	<title>Breaking the Chains &#8211; Religious Cults Info ~ Resources, Answers and Hope</title>
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		<title>Healing from Spiritual and Emotional Abuse by Shari Howerton</title>
		<link>https://religiouscultsinfo.com/2011/02/healing-from-spiritual-and-emotional-abuse-by-shari-howerton/</link>
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					<description><![CDATA[   The following post is copied with permission from the blog of the survivor and author, Shari Howerton. It can be found at this link&#8230;  http://tinyurl.com/4ky2gb2 . This post is to me of the same open and honest quality with which the book was written.  Thank you, Shari for allowing me to share your work with the readers of this blog. Certainly hoping &#8230; <a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/2011/02/healing-from-spiritual-and-emotional-abuse-by-shari-howerton/" class="more-link">Continue reading <span class="screen-reader-text">Healing from Spiritual and Emotional Abuse by Shari Howerton</span> <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><div class='yarpp yarpp-related yarpp-related-rss yarpp-template-list'>
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<li><a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/2011/01/%e2%80%9cbreaking-the-chains%e2%80%9d-by-shari-howerton-introduction/" rel="bookmark" title="“Breaking the Chains”- by Shari Howerton- Introduction">“Breaking the Chains”- by Shari Howerton- Introduction</a> <small>    In an earlier post titled “The Church at Rock...</small></li>
<li><a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/2010/08/link-to-interview-with-jeff-vanvonderen-on-spiritual-abuse/" rel="bookmark" title="Link to Interview with Jeff VanVonderen on Spiritual Abuse">Link to Interview with Jeff VanVonderen on Spiritual Abuse</a> <small>    A few days ago, I had this link forwarded...</small></li>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>   The following post is copied with permission from the blog of the survivor and author, Shari Howerton. It can be found at this link&#8230;  <a href="http://tinyurl.com/4ky2gb2">http://tinyurl.com/4ky2gb2</a> . This post is to me of the same open and honest quality with which the book was written.  Thank you, Shari for allowing me to share your work with the readers of this blog. Certainly hoping all will be helped as much as I have been by your story, your insights and your victories. The book can be found here <a href="http://www.sharihowerton.com/">http://www.sharihowerton.com/</a> .</p>
<figure id="attachment_3779" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-3779" style="width: 199px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/breaking-the-chains-howerton.jpg"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-3779" title="Breaking the Chains- by Shari Howerton" src="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/breaking-the-chains-howerton-199x300.jpg" alt="Survivor Shares Her Story and Journey to Freedom" width="199" height="300" srcset="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/breaking-the-chains-howerton-199x300.jpg 199w, https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/breaking-the-chains-howerton.jpg 453w" sizes="(max-width: 199px) 100vw, 199px" /></a><figcaption id="caption-attachment-3779" class="wp-caption-text">Breaking the Chains- Overcoming the Spiritual Abuse of a False Gospel</figcaption></figure>
<p> &#8220;I have recently been corresponding with a few more readers of my book. Since my book is a testimony, it has a limited audience. And since I am an unknown, self-published author, it will never be a bestseller. But it continues to sell (albeit in small numbers) each month. And I continue to hear from readers. Many of the people who have written to me were loaned a copy by someone who wanted to share it. I know that some authors might be frustrated by that because it means less book <em>sales</em>. But that doesn&#8217;t bother me at all. I spent nearly a year of my life working on the book. I poured my heart into it. And what is most rewarding for me is just knowing that it is still being read.</p>
<p><span id="more-3776"></span></p>
<p>I appreciate every person who has taken the time to write and share their own experiences, wanting me to know what the book has meant to them personally. I continue to hear from people I know and people I have never met. I&#8217;ve heard from people who grew up in the same religious movement I did and others who have had similar experiences with completely different groups and abusive leaders.</p>
<p>I have learned in the last few years just how pervasive the problem of spiritual abuse is. I remember once thinking that the group I was raised in was unique and that no one outside my environment would be able to relate to my experiences. But I discovered that wasn&#8217;t the case at all; we were similar to other cults and cultish groups; not only in the area of control and intimidation, but even in many of our distinctive doctrinal beliefs.</p>
<p>One reader, who authors <a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/">a blog on religious abuse</a> has recently written about my book, sharing what an emotional read it has been for him. His experiences were with a completely different group. But he discovered many similarities between his experiences and mine.</p>
<p>Another recent reader who keeps in touch with me has been deeply traumatized by the same group I was raised in (just a different location) and is still in a difficult struggle to break free. She sees clearly that her life and many of her relationships have been devastated or destroyed by her association with the group, yet she is gripped with the fear of leaving and losing her &#8220;spiritual covering.&#8221; She has told me that the first time she read something I had written and saw my picture, she cried for hours that night. The reason? I looked so normal and happy to her and she couldn&#8217;t understand how I could be either. The &#8220;you can&#8217;t leave this fellowship and find God elsewhere&#8221; message has been deeply branded into her thinking. Though she has been abused horribly by the leadership of this <em>church</em>, she still cares so deeply about how she is perceived and vilified for leaving. I understand that.</p>
<p>The brainwashing and mind control she is struggling to overcome is so glaring to me that I have at times felt frustrated while trying to help her. I want to say, &#8220;Can&#8217;t you see&#8230;?&#8221; I have pointed out to her that God does not send fear and anxiety as a way to &#8220;deal&#8221; with our hearts. Men are doing this to her, not God. I have shown her how idolatrous it is to elevate a certain group of people to such a standing that God cannot be found outside its walls. I have explained to her that Jesus is her Savior and King, not a group of men calling themselves &#8220;the ministry&#8221; while putting <em>themselves</em> on thrones. I&#8217;ve said many things in my genuine desire to help her break free from the mind control. I&#8217;ve suggested books and I&#8217;ve encouraged her in other ways. And I think I <em>have</em> helped her, even if it&#8217;s <em>just a little</em>.</p>
<p>I have made myself available to strangers because I understand their struggle and the need to talk about it with someone who understands. I have spent hours on the telephone with some who just wanted to hear my voice and have an actual conversation with me after reading the book. My husband found it kind of odd at times that I could spend hours talking to someone I had never met and have so much in common to talk about. He has occasionally made jokes, saying that I was an unpaid therapist. And I would remind him that <em>the word for it is &#8220;ministering.&#8221; </em>That is the very <em>reason</em> strangers want to talk to me after reading the book; they sense that I understand what so many in their lives cannot. I can&#8217;t count how many people have said to me, &#8220;Nobody understands except someone who has lived this way.&#8221;</p>
<p>That&#8217;s true of all types of abuse. And I don&#8217;t have any special gifts to offer. But I do have compassion and empathy because of the difficulties I have come through. And I know that one can heal and thrive after these experiences, not merely survive. But it requires a relationship with Jesus Christ that is not filtered through another human being or a certain group of people.</p>
<p>What I have discovered about my own healing process in recent months is how much I <em>have</em> healed. Obviously, not everyone is going to write a book about their life (or even want to). But writing has been very therapeutic and healing for me. Whether God inspired me to write my story to help facilitate that healing, or He just gave me the freedom to do it, I don&#8217;t know. But it has been a healing journey. I don&#8217;t know if anyone heals by internalizing, I just know that I don&#8217;t. I don&#8217;t know that I would define it as a &#8220;need,&#8221; but it is accurate to say that I have felt <em>compelled</em> to share my journey and to connect with other people whom I could relate to. I&#8217;m thankful it has helped others and not just myself.</p>
<p>The author of the blog I mentioned above recently asked me if I would consider writing a guest post for his blog. He told me that it encourages others to hear the testimonies of people like me who are further along in their recovery from this particular abuse. That&#8217;s why I started writing this post.</p>
<p>The new reality for me is that I honestly don&#8217;t find myself thinking about spiritual abuse very often these days. That&#8217;s how far I&#8217;ve come. I believe I have pushed through so much of that. But it hit me this morning that <em>that is no small thing</em>. It&#8217;s nothing short of a miracle for me personally. And it occured to me that just sharing <em>that</em> might really be helpful to someone else. I <em>never</em> want to miss an opportunity to help someone else by sharing what I&#8217;ve been through. And it occurred to me this morning, as I was catching up with his blog, how far I have come in just the last year.</p>
<p>When my husband was newly diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, I was on an emotional rollercoaster for quite some time just trying to process and deal with what I thought of as my <em>shattered</em> dreams for our lives. I was so devastated by the pain of an uncertain future and the possibility of ever losing John that I cried every day. I just couldn&#8217;t get a grip on my emotions. I poured myself into learning about CLL and all its variations, treatments, specialists. I invested in online communities (in much the same way I invested in an online community to help me deal with the emotions of breaking free from a cult). That is how I deal with emotional struggle. I share and I find people I can relate to. Apparently, I&#8217;m not the only one.</p>
<p>I found comfort in not being the only one in my struggle. After my very, very, very lengthy introduction on <a href="http://cllcfriends.com/"><em>CLL Christian Friends</em></a>,<em> </em>I was comforted and reassured by others that the emotional rollercoaster was normal and they all understood what I was going through; but I would settle into <em>a new normal</em>. And whether I believed it or not, there would come a day when I didn&#8217;t ruminate constantly on CLL and my fears. They were right. I still wish my husband didn&#8217;t have leukemia. It&#8217;s not an experience I would have asked for. But I no longer feel shattered by it. I&#8217;m coping and I&#8217;m finding ways to help others through shared experience. And that part is very rewarding.</p>
<p>Our lives are a journey, not a destination. The silver lining in every difficult experience for me is that through my own struggles, God is equipping me to help someone else through theirs. Whether it&#8217;s recovering from the effects of spiritual abuse, emotional abuse or a chronic, incurable illness &#8212; I have the opportunity to reassure someone else that a new normal is just ahead of the storm.</p>
<p>If you are still struggling with the baggage of having been involved in a religious cult, I want you to know that no matter how hard it is in the present moment, you CAN heal from this experience. It&#8217;s a process. And there are some wounds that are easily reopened for a long time. But those wounds become scars. And then, just like physical scars, they fade until they are barely visible &#8212; even to you. You forget you have them until something focuses your attention on them again. That is where I find myself today.</p>
<p>For a long time, I thought about my past and people from my past on a daily basis. I grieved lost relationships and certain people&#8217;s distorted perceptions of me. I shed many tears and even suffered with anxiety. I struggled with fears of all kinds. I experienced the pain of rejection from people I loved who couldn&#8217;t understand me &#8212; and probably never had understood me, truth be known. I don&#8217;t doubt that I may have perceived rejection from some who didn&#8217;t even intend it. It&#8217;s very typical for people who have experienced a lot of rejection to fear it and anticipate it and even mistakenly perceive it in some instances. I see that trait in myself. And I acknowledge it.</p>
<p>I haven&#8217;t ONLY suffered spiritual abuse. I have been verbally, emotionally, mentally and physically abused in ways that I did not attempt to address in the book because it would have distracted the reader from the message of <em>this</em> book; which was <em>the spiritual abuse of a false gospel</em>. But I am well acquainted with the wounds of abusive relationships. Thankfully, I have experienced tremendous healing from those wounds as well. But it wasn&#8217;t instant in any case. It&#8217;s been a process. And God has used people to minister to me in that healing process. One of those people has been my husband, John. I am so thankful for him. But if I had stayed in the cult, I would not be with him. Not only because I would have feared marrying someone outside the group, but because he recognized it as a cult the one time I took him there. Participation would have been a deal breaker for him.</p>
<p>After having John in my life for almost eight years now, I cannot imagine what my life would have been like without him. I cannot fathom a more perfect husband for me and my personality. God gave me someone who seems &#8220;made to order&#8221; for all of my needs. And he feels the same way about me (which is still hard for me to believe). To think I could have missed out on so many blessings God had for me (all the blessings that have come through John, including many cherished friends) because of the lie that God would not honor a union between myself and someone outside that group. At this point in my life and personal growth, it&#8217;s almost hard to believe that at one time I was <em>that</em> deceived. But I was.</p>
<p>Do I still sometimes feel a twinge over the reality that even some of my family members don&#8217;t want to be Facebook Friends with me? Does it ever bother me that even some who have expressed warm feelings toward me privately cannot openly be my friend because of the awkwardness it would cause in other relationships? Sure I do. But it&#8217;s a much smaller twinge than it once was. And I accept it as the personal price I must pay for speaking my convictions openly and honestly from my heart.</p>
<p>In wrapping up this lengthy post, I also want to say that I am truly sorry for any pain I have caused anyone from my past with <em>my</em> words. In all honesty &#8212; it has <em>never</em> been my heart&#8217;s desire to hurt anyone from my past (or anyone in my present for that matter). I have made mistakes. I know I have not said or done everything perfectly. But my intent was never to hurt anyone or retaliate for wrongs done to me. Actually, I hate hurting people and I agonize over it when I know I have. If I have hurt you, I ask for your forgiveness sincerely. And if you will contact me personally and tell me specifically how I have hurt you, I will ask your forgiveness in a more personal and specific way. I believe I have forgiven those who have hurt me. Sometimes I have to recommit to that forgiveness because of memories that still sting. But forgiveness is not a feeling. It&#8217;s an action. And I know I have released those who have hurt me from owing me anything &#8212; including an apology.</p>
<p>Although my convictions are as strong as ever that I was raised in a cult, that does not prevent me from continuing to love the people I grew up with and wanting them to know that I always will.&#8221;</p>
<p>By Shari Howerton        </p>
<div class="mceTemp">
<figure id="attachment_3782" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-3782" style="width: 214px" class="wp-caption alignright"><a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Shari-Howerton-author.jpg"><img decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-3782" title="Shari Howerton- Surviro and Author" src="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Shari-Howerton-author-214x300.jpg" alt="Shari Howerton" width="214" height="300" srcset="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Shari-Howerton-author-214x300.jpg 214w, https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Shari-Howerton-author-731x1024.jpg 731w, https://religiouscultsinfo.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Shari-Howerton-author.jpg 1167w" sizes="(max-width: 214px) 100vw, 214px" /></a><figcaption id="caption-attachment-3782" class="wp-caption-text">Shari Howerton - Survivor of 43 years in a religious controlling group</figcaption></figure>
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<p>    Thank you, for taking time to visit and read this blog. Please, consume the information on this site responsibly. The author is not a licensed mental health professional and encourages those that need professional help to seek it. The intent of the material is to inform and be a resource. Be sure to tell every member that you know at WOFF about this blog. There are readers at WOFF. Comments are invited from all readers, including present or former members. Polls are not scientific and no private information is gathered.</p>
<p>   Look on the right side of any post for the option to subscribe by email for notifications or RSS feeds notifying of new postings. It is a great feature. Also, find more posts by selecting “Categories”.</p>
<p>    (Please, take time to read the Terms of Use for this personal blog. As mentioned, the information about WOFF is from my memories and recollections as perfect as that may be or not be. ) Scripture references are Amplified Version unless otherwise noted. (Copyright © 1954, 1958, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1987 by The Lockman Foundation ) This is post number 258.</p>
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<li><a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/2011/06/signs-of-abuse-in-a-church/" rel="bookmark" title="Signs of Abuse in a Church">Signs of Abuse in a Church</a> <small>  In the previous post, we looked at the work...</small></li>
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		<title>Teaching of Perfection- a Double Edged Sword</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Jan 2011 11:25:49 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[    In previous post titled, “Rules, Rules, Rules &#8211; The Results?” found here.. https://religiouscultsinfo.com/?p=3649 , we included quotes from “Breaking the Chains” Overcoming the Spiritual Abuse of a False Gospel (Copyright © 2009 by Shari Howerton, ISBN- 978-0-9713499-4-0). The author, Shari Howerton laments about living under so many rules in the church her family was &#8230; <a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/2011/01/teaching-of-perfection-a-double-edged-sword/" class="more-link">Continue reading <span class="screen-reader-text">Teaching of Perfection- a Double Edged Sword</span> <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><div class='yarpp yarpp-related yarpp-related-rss yarpp-template-list'>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>    In previous post titled, “<em>Rules, Rules, Rules &#8211; The Results?”</em> found here.. <a href="https://religiouscultsinfo.com/?p=3649">https://religiouscultsinfo.com/?p=3649</a> , we included quotes from <em>“Breaking the Chains” Overcoming the Spiritual Abuse of a False Gospel</em> (Copyright © 2009 by Shari Howerton, ISBN- 978-0-9713499-4-0). The author, Shari Howerton laments about living under so many rules in the church her family was a part of during her years as a child and teenager. The church she was in taught <em>perfection</em>. She writes, <em>“We believed that God revealed His “truths” to us as a group; “truths” He had not revealed to Christianity as a whole. As God’s special, we were called to restore the church to its former purity and ultimate latter day glory; we were not called to evangelize”.</em> (page 20)</p>
<p>    While reading the book, I have been captivated at the many similarities that her church (Christian Gospel Temple-CGT) had/has with Word of Faith Fellowship (WOFF). I spent 16 years either indirectly or directly under the teachings of WOFF and more specifically –Jane Whaley. Jane considered herself as the one who heard the “Truth” in <strong><em>many areas</em></strong>. For example, Jane taught/teaches about loud prayer, deliverance from demons for Christians, certain customs for marriage ceremonies, burial customs, strict lifestyle customs and many other “truths”. Certainly, while I was there we felt these were “truths” which &#8211;<em>“We believed that God revealed His “truths” to us as a group; “truths” He had not revealed to Christianity as a whole.” </em>After all, it was said several times, “<em>we know there are other people out there with “truth”; we just have not found them yet…” </em>So, did we ever expect to find them? These unique “truths” certainly served to make us (WOFF members) feel special and “set-apart” from others who did not or would not listen or accept what God was saying to us…. After all my time in that group I can say the efforts to “evangelize” were slim to none. Can you see a pattern here?</p>
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<p>    Howerton writes, <em>“One “truth” in particular affected me… the teaching on perfection. This belief set us apart from most, if not all, other Christians.”</em> (page 20) Let me stop here and just point out that the doctrine of perfection quite naturally coincides with a belief that no other group can be perfect. For if perfection was able to be had by other Christian groups, it would not be <em>perfection</em>, it would be <em>normal</em>. How do I know? WOFF taught “perfection” in these words frequently repeated by Jane Whaley, <em>“Jesus came to set us free from sin and teach us how to walk perfectly in Him”. </em>The exact words may vary slightly- but the mantra was clear. Jane was the only one who heard how we were to “<em>walk perfectly in Him</em>.” That was then followed by the rules to bring one to that <em>perfect walk in Him</em>. In respect to WOFF-life, being in WOFF and listening to Jane was the only way to ever hope to learn <em>how to walk perfectly in Him.</em> If you doubt me, ask a faithful WOFF member if they could ever hope to know Jesus outside of WOFF and more specifically- away from Jane? That does pose some problems, wouldn’t you say? We move on…</p>
<p>    The author continues, <em>“We were taught that no believer had eternal life based on faith alone in Christ. Initial salvation had to result in the same sinless, perfect life that Jesus lived in order to qualify for heaven. Only souls that attained sinless perfection in this life would go to be with the Lord immediately following death.”</em>(page 20) Howerton makes another connection about the doctrine of perfection as taught in her church, <em>“The perfection message and pervasive legalism went hand in hand. Grace was little more than a word. It has no meaning for me. The list of rules we were expected to follow and enforce upon on children was long.”</em> (page 22)   Okay, she wrote this without knowing about WOFF and <em>the long list of rules that we were expected to follow and enforce on our children!</em> Did you realize that WOFF members never considered these rules as <em>rules</em>? The <em>rules</em> or “don’ts”, as they have been referred to before on this blog were referred to as “<em>the ways of God</em>”, <em>the way of holy righteous living</em>”, <em>the way God’s people live</em>” or “<em>God’s protection for His people.”</em> As far I can remember I never saw a written list of rules. Why? Because, if you write them down, they are harder to change or even deny that they ever existed! Jane Whaley took the liberty to change rules when they no longer seemed to fit the need(s). Does that happen for a reason? If Jane was/is the final say on the rules and if/when they change, what did/does that make her? Can you understand why I have been very interested in this book by Howerton?</p>
<p>    Ms. Howerton goes on to explain her dilemma. <em>“Legalism and abuses of power are problems in many churches. </em>(Yes!)<em> However, legalism combines with the requirement of perfection caused me to focus entirely on my own shortcomings, placing the weight of all my failures and inadequacies upon my own shoulders.</em>” (page 23) She then goes into further explanation how this affected her as child and young person. The honesty in telling her confusion is very sad on the one hand and very believable on the other. For this next quote explains the double edged sword of the doctrine of perfection. <em>“I tried to believe I could be perfect. Occasionally, in spiritually high moments of intense emotion, I felt a ray of hope. I told myself I could do it. However, deep down, I was always profoundly aware of my inadequacy.” </em>(page 24)  </p>
<p>    The doctrine of perfection has a double bite or in other words can cut you coming and going. Let me explain. Shari Howerton felt she never could actually reach perfection much like Kristy Sullivan expressed from the film “<em>Join Us</em>” in the post referenced above on “Rules..” – “<em>I always felt like I couldn’t do anything right. I couldn’t be good enough in the church and I couldn’t be a wife and I couldn’t be a mother.” </em>Teaching perfection and requiring it often leaves members feeling inadequate. This causes many pressures for which the member finds no relief within the parameters of the perfection teaching. No teaching on Grace was in either Shari’s or Kristy’s groups. At WOFF, it was “taught” in some form but, it was not applied in life practice- Grace did not/does not fit into the WOFF-life outline or program. How could it? Grace is from God, not Jane Whaley. True Grace from God does not fit within man’s own teaching on perfection or desire to obtain approval from man. Jane Whaley nor Raimund Melz nor William Sowders nor Cornelius Mears could ever be the author of Grace given from God. Does that make sense?  </p>
<p>    There is another way that the teaching on perfection can cut and jade those who live by it. There is the danger of living in a group that teaches perfection and thinking you HAVE obtained perfection. The confusion could come in many ways. You could ignore your own faults; judge others by their actions and yourself by your intentions. You could take your worth by being a part of a group that teaches perfection and assume that since you are a part of the group, you are then <em>perfected</em>.  How would this work? At WOFF, it may be reflected in thoughts or statements such as<em>&#8211; I am letting God deal with my heart and I am walking with God. I am submitting to the WORD from Jane and God is changing me… We have truth that others don’t; we must be special in God’s eyes. He has a work for us to do. We must take His message of deliverance to the world or at least to other churches that Jane has approved of…</em> <em>God is blessing us! Look at these cars and houses and nice clothes! We are the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus and we are going to make it! </em></p>
<p>    Honestly, during my time at WOFF, I heard more teaching on the sin in God’s people than any other place or church I have attended. There was always a warning from God or a <em>new sin</em> discovered in WOFF members or some new revelation on what God hates… But, through it all, because we were taught the <em>special truths from one such as <strong>Jane Whaley</strong></em>&#8211; the attitude was evident that we (WOFF members) were a cut above the other churches. If we were not perfect, we acted like we were as close to perfection as anyone person or group could get this side of eternity. Why? Because we felt like Jane Whaley was as close to God as any person could be… If you did not act that way and talk that way by showing reverence for <em>her gift and her authority</em>, you did not stay long in the group. Besides, she was always giving us new ways to <strong><em>walk with God</em></strong> (rules) that would prove to others and ourselves how holy and righteous <em>and perfect </em>we were! Is it fair to say that those who have been in WOFF the longest are the most convinced of Jane’s perfection and subsequently &#8211; their own? You who live or work around long-time WOFF members and/or those in leadership in that church- tell me. What have you noticed?</p>
<p>    We will take up this subject again in another post. There are more insights from Howerton’s book (link here to her website where you can buy the book… <a href="http://www.sharihowerton.com/">http://www.sharihowerton.com/</a> ). We also have some other recently discovered resources!  </p>
<p>   Thank you, for taking time to visit and read this blog. Please, consume the information on this site responsibly. The author is not a licensed mental health professional and encourages those that need professional help to seek it. The intent of the material is to inform and be a resource. Be sure to tell every member that you know at WOFF about this blog. There are readers at WOFF. Comments are invited from all readers, including present or former members. Polls are not scientific and no private information is gathered.</p>
<p>   Look on the right side of any post for the option to subscribe by email for notifications or RSS feeds notifying of new postings. It is a great feature. Also, find more posts by selecting “Categories”.</p>
<p>    (Please, take time to read the Terms of Use for this personal blog. As mentioned, the information about WOFF is from my memories and recollections as perfect as that may be or not be. ) Scripture references are Amplified Version unless otherwise noted. (Copyright © 1954, 1958, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1987 by The Lockman Foundation ) This is post number 247.</p>
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