The Lord is my shepherd,
but the pastor was my predator.
So tell me again—who’s leading the flock?
This isn’t a hit piece on religion.
It’s a survival story with scars still bleeding.
Not because I hate the church.
But because I believed in it—
and it believed in him.
🙏 The Sacred Was Weaponized
He didn’t need to raise his voice.
He had a Bible.
And that was enough.
Enough to shame.
To gaslight.
To touch what should’ve been protected.
He wore God like a costume.
Quoted grace while cornering girls.
Preached purity from a pulpit he polluted.
And they told me to forgive.
To stay quiet.
To “trust that God sees everything.”
Well—He better.
Because I was there too.
🧠 Psychological Insight:
- Spiritual abuse isn’t always loud. Sometimes it’s a whisper in a prayer room.
- Religious trauma rewires your entire nervous system. You learn to associate God with guilt. Silence with safety. Scripture with fear.
- Forgiveness becomes a leash when demanded too soon. Especially by those who protected the abuser more than the abused.
🩸 What I Couldn’t Say Until Now
I didn’t leave the church because I lost my faith.
I left because I couldn’t survive under the weight
of a God who only spoke through men
who never asked what happened to me.
They said I was bitter.
Said I was rebellious.
Said I was turning my back on God.
No.
I was walking away from a system that blessed wolves
and told the sheep to sing louder
while they bled.
💔 For the Silenced Survivors
This is for:
- The ones who were told “don’t ruin his reputation”
- The ones who were prayed over but never protected
- The ones who were taught submission before self-worth
- The ones who still flinch at hymns and hollow apologies
- The ones who were told to stay
because “this is where healing happens”—
but healing never came