The closest I can come to understanding it is to think my own experiences with "faith" dividing families. The church where I grew up was legalistic and controlling to a degree that would be very familiar to anyone at NTM or similar if we compared notes. In addition there was an explicit hierarchical system where you had (some mixture of) God and the leadership, kind of intertwined and inextricable from each other, and then everything else came very much after. It's only since I left that I realized that blood is thicker than water, and that NOTHING trumps "family," but growing up I think we almost coldly relished families splitting, marriages ending, etc., all in the name of God, all in the name of following a Man, a church.
It showed us, falsely of course, that the whole thing was "legit." In the sense that our faith was so weak that we needed to see things pushed that hard to reinforce it, to prove that our brand of Christianity was higher, and special. Like, I suppose if it truly came down to it, you'd pick God over everything else, but how often does He really make you pick? Over your own children? Forbid it.
I suppose once you've operated under a mechanism that is similar, and I think I see it here to a much lesser degree in the demand to board your kids -- i.e., proving His primacy in your life -- that I'm not sure your balance will ever be right again, without a lot of honesty and hard emotional work. Right now, thinking about what happened, and imagining anything like that horror visited upon my daughter, I promise you that people would be dead. And that I would be on this message board and dozens of others, a berserker for justice, hunting down the ones I couldn't find.
And yet I'm not thinking in terms of the hundreds of little compromises over the years that lead to situations like this. I'm not saying this in any sense to compare my worthiness as a parent, this is a situation that is entirely foreign to me, so I can't say anything about it.
What I'm saying, in a long-winded fashion, is that to all appearances, the expected involvement of parents, their fulfillment of their "typical role" is out the window in a situation like this.
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