Calls for pastor to resign after confession of ‘sex incident’ with teen met with applause
There are growing calls for megachurch pastor Andy Savage to resign after he confessed to a “sexual incident” with a high school teenager from his church. The episode allegedly occurred more than 20 years ago.
Savage, who is Pastor at Highpoint Church in Memphis, Tennessee, made the confession during a sermon on Sunday. “As a college student on staff at a church in Texas more than 20 years ago, I regretfully had a sexual incident with a female high school senior in the church,” he said during the sermon, which was streamed online.
“I apologized and sought forgiveness from her, her parents, her discipleship group, the church staff and the church leadership, who informed the congregation.”
The confession came in the aftermath of an accusation by Jules Woodson, who said Savage sexually assaulting her in 1998 when she was 17 years old and he was a youth minister at a Houston church. Woodson said she told another pastor about the incident, in which Savage allegedly coerced her into performing oral sex on him in his car. Describing the incident on the blog Watch Keep, Woodson claimed she was told by the other pastor to keep quiet.
The woman said she was encouraged to come forward with her story in the wake of the #MeToo movement, which emerged in the aftermath of sexual misconduct allegations against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein.
Savage’s confession on Sunday was met with a standing ovation from his congregation but it has not dampened calls for his resignation, which have continued unabated. “As someone who was very involved with youth ministry in Memphis as a child, this Andy Savage incident is not only disgusting but enraging,” Katherine Faulk said on Twitter on Wednesday.
As someone who was very involved with youth ministry in Memphis as a child, this Andy Savage incident is not only disgusting but enraging. The fact that he is still allowed to lead a church of vulnerable people is not only a disgrace to Christianity, but to the city and to women.
— Katherine Faulk (@kattals) January 10, 2018
I may not be able to sleep tonight after reading the article about Andy Savage at @ChurchLeadhttps://t.co/Pokoc8vcOk. The comments are unbelievable: victim blaming and siding with perpetrator. I hope these aren't church leaders. https://t.co/GShUarCfvp
— Julie Anne (@DefendTheSheep) January 10, 2018
I've been following this since Sunday morning when it all when live! @andysavage@chrisconlee@CottonLarry and Steve Bradley @SBChurch need to step down from Ministry. #justiceforjules@hpmemphis
— Cara Hoffman (@carahoffgirl) January 10, 2018
When a pastor assaulting a woman is less offensive to a church than a pastor being a woman. I am so sorry Jules Woodson. Highpoint Church of Memphis failed you in their response. They failed us all.🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤯🤯🤯🤯#andysavage#memphis#highpoint@hpmemphishttps://t.co/MvSwJl0h1V
— Hannah Adair Bonner (@HannahABonner) January 10, 2018
STANDING OVATION?!?! WTF...This is wickedness, sickness, and false religion at its height... why #Metoo exist...it’s why I left “evangelicalism” Andy Savage needs to sit his a** down and the true God needs to burn this false Christian establishment down. https://t.co/4Kx0g1Iw8A
— A.D. “Lumkile” Thomason (@redrev) January 10, 2018
This is some old school, Corinthians nonsense. Quiz: what polity allows #AndySavage to remain in ministry right now after confessing to child molestation? Hint: it’s not Lutheran, Anglican, Presbyterian, or Methodist. Local churches need outside accountability. https://t.co/rXJFBVHUyZ
— Anthony Bradley (@drantbradley) January 10, 2018
The pastor was set to release a book, titled The Ridiculously Good Marriage, in July, but publisher Bethany House announced it has decided to cancel the publication.
Bethany House and Baker Publishing Group have cancelled publication of the Andy Savage book The Ridiculously Good Marriage.It may remain on various retail web sites for a short time until those sites update.
— Bethany House (@bethany_house) January 8, 2018
"An apology does not change the fact that what happened to me was against the law and that it was wrong,” Woodson said following Savage’s sermon.