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Megachurch Pastor Matt Chandler set to return from 3-month leave
over inappropriate messages
By Anugrah Kumar,
Christian Post Contributor
Matt Chandler preaches on day 2 of the Passion conference at the Dallas-Fort Worth site on Jan. 3, 2019. | Sterling Graves
Texas megachurch Pastor Matt Chandler will return to the pulpit Sunday, about three months after taking a leave of absence from his role as teaching pastor due to inappropriate social media messages with a woman who is not his wife.
In an email sent to congregants this week, elders at The Village Church in Flower Mound announced that Chandler will return to preaching as the church celebrates its 20th anniversary.
"We asked a lot of Matt, including time spent in study and prayer, personal reflection, and multiple intensives with trusted outside experts. Matt has completed everything asked of him with submissiveness, steadfastness, and humility, and we have received positive feedback from all involved," the elders wrote in an email, a copy of which was shared by The Roys Report.
What about God? Was He personally involved? Did you get feedback from Him?
As The Christian Post reported, Chandler announced in August that he accepted a decision by the elder board for him to take a leave of absence for engaging in inappropriate Instagram messaging, which was neither sexual nor romantic, with a woman in the church.
The elders said in this week's email they had been "encouraged by his posture throughout."
"Therefore, we are pleased to share with you that his return to preaching is scheduled for this Sunday, December 4," the email reads.
"Although we did not work toward this date as a target for Matt's return, we did not think it was appropriate to delay Matt's return to avoid it falling on the anniversary."
The Village Church elders said in an August statement that Chandler voluntarily disclosed the inappropriate Instagram messages after a friend of the woman confronted him about his behavior in the church's foyer several months ago.
The friend of the woman who confronted him disclosed the matter in the church foyer. How can you then say that Chandler voluntarily disclosed the matter?
Global church planting network Acts 29, where Chandler served as the president and chairman of their board, also asked him "to step aside from Acts 29 speaking engagements" following the decision by The Village Church.
Chandler, who maintained he wasn't aware at the time that he had "done anything wrong," said he alerted Josh Patterson and elder Chairman Jasien Swords and "submitted to their leadership in addressing the situation." He also informed his wife.
"I didn't think I had done anything wrong in that," Chandler told the congregation in August. "My wife knew that. Her [the woman's] husband knew that. And yet there were a couple of things that she said that were disorienting to me."
This sounds a little like victim blaming.
The Village Church elders commissioned an independent law firm, identified by The New York Times as, CastaƱeda and Heidelman, to investigate Chandler's messaging history across social media platforms, cell phone and email.
They concluded that Chandler "violated our internal social media use policies, and more importantly that, while the overarching pattern of his life has been 'above reproach,' he failed to meet the 1 Timothy standard for elders of being 'above reproach' in this instance."
The elders also said the lead pastor's leave of absence "is both disciplinary and developmental" to allow him time "to focus on growing greater awareness in this area."
In October, Chandler hinted that he would likely return to the pulpit "soon" and was "eager to return."
Chandler wrote on Instagram at the time that he had become "more aware than ever of that earnest and angsty prayer of David's in Psalm 27:4," which says: "One thing have I desired of the LORD, that will I seek after; That I may dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of my life, To behold the beauty of the LORD, and to enquire in his temple."
In an Instagram post on Friday, Chandler recalled his two-decade history with The Village Church.
"Over the past 20 years I have watched God do INCREDIBLE things almost all of which were despite me," Chandler wrote. "I survived a bout with brain cancer in 2009, needed to publicly repent more than once and have been loved deeply and cared for fiercely by the men and women of The Village. I am at a loss for the invitation into this great journey the Lord put me on!"
It would be nice if there was some indication of the effects this has all had on the woman involved, but there is hardly any mention of her. As is far too often the case, the consideration is for the pastor and the 'victim' (if that's an appropriate term here) is largely ignored.
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