I have some thoughts that I'd like to throw out there to get batted around. In my mind they are somehow tied to the topic of this thread, but perhaps there is a better place to post them? Let me know what you think...
I'm thinking about the emotional hurdles and challenges to leaders (now stay with me here for a minute
of applying policy (which will hopefully be the result of reporting abuse) to those they have worked with, knowing that it will cause heartache in many different ways for many different people. Interestingly enough, what I think I find in scripture is actually at the foundation of NTM's core value of reaching the lost!
We know that God not only extends grace and forgiveness to sinful man, but He embodies those principles; they are not just His practice, but are an integral part of His very nature. And yet His 'policy' is that without repentance there is no remission of sin. As much as He wants all men to come into relationship with Himself, He is bound by His policy. And it certainly isn't a lack of grace and forgiveness that prevents God from having a relationship with every individual -- rather it is the justice of His nature that insists that policy be kept. And many "good" people will suffer eternal damnation because of that policy.
In fact, missionaries are so convinced that God's policy is both just and inescapable that they give their lives because of it. As difficult as it is to reconcile in our minds at times that "good" people who have never heard the gospel are still going to hell, we accept it as truth and live our lives accordingly. It seem to me that applying a mission policy which has difficult repercussions falls into that same category. Although it is difficult, the willingness to following established NTM policy regarding the consequences of abuse would be a proper application of that Biblical principle.
Living out truth is often very difficult, but it is always necessary. And beneficial. Report your abuse.