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Why Our Christians Friends Leave Us When We Deconvert

church is a family

One thing being a part of a church does for us is give us a community through which we find meaning, purpose, and identity. I spent the first fifty years of my life in the Christian church. For many years, I attended church twice on Sunday and on Wednesdays or Thursdays for prayer meeting. These church families I was a part of were central to my life. Most of my friendships were developed in connection with the church and my work as a pastor. I spent twenty-five years pastoring Evangelical churches in Ohio, Texas, and Michigan. I developed scores of friendships, not only with congregants but also with colleagues in the ministry. As a pastor, I would attend pastor’s conferences and meetings. It was at these meetings that I had opportunities to talk with my preacher friends, sharing with them my “burdens.” We would laugh, cry, and pray together, knowing that the bond we had as fellow followers of Jesus and God-called preachers of the gospel was rooted in loving each other as Christ Jesus loved us.  A handful of preachers became close, intimate friends with my wife and me. Our families would get together for food, fun, and fellowship — hallmarks of Baptist intimacy. We saw vulnerabilities in each other that our congregants never would. We could confide in each other, seeking advice on how to handle this or that problem or church member. When news of church difficulties came our way, we would call each other, or take each other out for lunch. These fellow men of God were dear to my heart, people that I expected to have as friends until I died.

As a teenager, I had lots of friends, male and female. Most of my friends were fellow church members, though I did have, thanks to playing sports, a few friends in the “world.” I always found it easy to meet new people and make friendships. I had no qualms about talking to complete strangers, a gift that suited me well as a pastor. As a nineteen-year-old boy, I enrolled in classes at Midwestern Baptist College in Pontiac, Michigan. I quickly made a lot of new friends, including one who sleeps beside me to this day. I lived in a dorm room with three other men. Virtually every waking hour of my life was spent with fellow students — at church, school, and social events. As anyone who has ever lived in a college dormitory will tell you, dorm life is busy and full of activity. Practical jokes were an everyday occurrence, and, as a consummate jokester, I found great satisfaction in pulling one over on my fellow students. I lived on a dormitory wing that was labeled the “party” wing. The other dormitory wing was called the “spiritual” wing. My fellow party-wing residents loved Jesus, but they loved having a good time too. The spiritual wing? They loved Jesus too, but frowned on doing anything that might be perceived as bawdy or mischievous.

One day, a pastor by the name of A.V. Henderson preached at chapel (students were required to attend chapel five days a week). I have preached and heard thousands of sermons in my lifetime. I remember very few of them. I do, however, vividly remember Henderson’s sermon, even forty-five years later. Henderson was the pastor of Temple Baptist Church in Detroit. Temple was an Independent Fundamentalist Baptist (IFB) megachurch founded by Baptist luminary J. Frank Norris and later pastored by G.B. Vick. The 1970s were the zenith of the IFB church movement. Most of the largest churches in the United States were IFB churches. Churches such as Temple Baptist were pastored by men who were great orators and pulpiteers. Henderson was no exception. Henderson’s chapel sermon was from the book of Job. It was, by all counts, a thrilling, rousing sermon. However, Henderson said something during his sermon that I didn’t, at the time, understand. He said, with that distinct Texas drawl of his, that people will go through life with very few true friendships; that most people were fortunate to have two or three lifelong friends. I thought at the time, what’s he talking about? I have lots of friends! Forty years-five later, I now know that A.V. Henderson was right; that true friends are rare indeed; that if you have two or three such friends, you should consider yourself fortunate.

It has been almost fifteen years since I last attended church; fifteen years since I have listened to preaching; fifteen years since I have sung the hymns of the faith; fifteen years since I have dropped money in an offering plate; fifteen years since I broke bread with people I considered my family. In early 2009, I sent a letter to my family and friends detailing my loss of faith. You can read the letter here: Dear Family, Friends, and Former Parishioners. I grossly underestimated how people would respond to my letter. In a matter of days, I received angry, venomous emails, letters, and phone calls. One ministerial colleague drove four hours to my home, hoping to turn me back towards the faith. You can read the letter I sent to him here: Dear Friend. I was shocked by how hateful and vitriolic my friends were to me. And here I am fifteen years later, and I still, on occasion, hear from someone who knew me and is shocked over my betrayal of all that I once held dear.

The friendships of a lifetime are now gone — all of them, save my friendship with an Evangelical man I have known for fifty-seven years (we walked to elementary school together). A.V. Henderson’s words ring true. I have one friend who has walked with me through every phase of my life. The rest of my “true” friends have written me off (2 Corinthians 6:14), kicked the dirt off their shoes (Mark 6:10, 11), or turned me over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh (I Corinthians 5). I was naive to think that it could be any other way.

Many people believe in unconditional love. I know, at one time, I did. I have learned, however, that unconditional love is largely a myth. (Please read Does God Love Us Unconditionally?) Unconditional love suggests that nothing we do to those we love can break the bond we have with them. Many people carry the notion of unconditional love into their friendships. We think, these people love me, no matter what. They will always be my friends. And then something happens. In my case, I spit in the face of God, pissed on the blood of Jesus, and used the pages of the Bible to wipe my ass, so to speak. I repudiated everything I once believed, and in doing so called into question the beliefs of my friends. The glue that held our friendships together was our fealty to a set of theological beliefs. Once these beliefs were questioned and discarded by me, that bond was irreparably broken. If the connection Christians have with their churches is akin to family, then when people walk away from the beliefs and practices of these families, they are, in effect, divorcing themselves from their families.

Marital divorce tears the bond between husband and wife. When Christians divorce themselves from Jesus, the bonds they have with their friends are ripped asunder. While this divorce can be amicable, most often it is not. My divorce from Jesus and the church was very much like a high-profile tabloid divorce. And even though the judge signed the divorce decree fifteen years ago, repercussions remain to this day.

I have learned that few friendships last a lifetime. Most friendships are dependent on time and location. Remember all your friends who signed your high school yearbook? Are you still friends with them today? Remember the best-buds-for-life from your college days? What happened to those friendships? Were these relationships true friendships? Sure, but they weren’t meant to last a lifetime. And that’s okay.

I don’t blame my former friends for the failure of our friendships. I am the one who moved. I am the one who changed his beliefs. I am the one who ripped apart the bond of our friendship. I do, however, hold them accountable for their horrendous treatment of me once I deconverted. They could have hugged me and said, I don’t understand WHY you are doing this, but I appreciate the good times we had together. I wish you, Polly, and the kids well. Instead, I was treated like dog shit on a shoe bottom; a person worthy of scorn, ridicule, and denunciation. By treating me this way, they destroyed any chance of restoration. Why would I ever want to be friends again with people who treated me like the scum of the earth?

I have spent the past decade and a half developing new friendships. These days, most of my friendships are digital — people who I will likely never meet face to face. This has resulted in Polly and me becoming closer, not only loving each other, but also enjoying each other’s company. For most of my marriage, Jesus, the church, and the ministry were my first loves. (Please see It’s Time to Tell the Truth: I Had an Affair.) It’s not that I didn’t love my children and wife, I did. But they were never number one in my life, and Polly and the kids knew it. I was a God-called man who devoted his life to Jesus and the church. Polly knew that marrying a preacher meant that she and the kids would have to share me with the church. (And her teachers in college and fellow pastor’s wives told her that’s how it had to be. God came first.) Little did she know that she would spend way too many years getting leftovers from a man who loved her but was worn out from burning the proverbial candle at both ends. Now that religion no longer gets between us, Polly and I are free to forge an unencumbered relationship. We have always loved each other, but what has now changed is that we really like each other too and are best friends. And in Polly, I have found one of the true friends A.V. Henderson preached about forty-five years ago. I am indeed, blessed.

Bruce Gerencser, 67, lives in rural Northwest Ohio with his wife of 46 years. He and his wife have six grown children and thirteen grandchildren. Bruce pastored Evangelical churches for twenty-five years in Ohio, Texas, and Michigan. Bruce left the ministry in 2005, and in 2008 he left Christianity. Bruce is now a humanist and an atheist.

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5 Comments

  1. MJ Lisbeth

    Bruce, this had me in tears, and I thank you for it.

    I didn’t lose the friendships you described when I left Christianity and stopped believing because, for one thing, my “divorce” wasn’t as public as yours (I wasn’t a pastor) and it came earlier in my life than yours. I could, however, relate because when I affirmed my gender identity (what people called “changing” my sex), I lost relationships with family members and friends I’d known most of my life–and a partner with whom I thought I’d spend the rest of my life. Some were vicious in their “divorces” from me; others used coded language and passive-aggressive gestures.

    On the other hand, others remained in my life. That is a reward, if you will: I learned just how good they are by losing the others–and by meeting new friends. The best part is that those relationships aren’t premised on falsehoods.

  2. BJW

    I’m glad you and Polly are closer after leaving religion. I think leaving our church brought me and my husband closer too.

    What happened to me? 8 years ago I told one of my good friends I was no longer a Christian. I never saw her again. My other (at the time)close friend has gotten more batshit crazy, and she probably espouses Qanon. At one point a couple years ago, I told her I didn’t want to talk about politics. So she would sneak it in. Finally, after Biden was inaugurated president, she told me I had voted to have her kind exterminated.

    About 3 years ago I realized that I was too ill to work, and couldn’t make new friends that way. I’m too sick to play with a recorder group in Toledo (65 miles drive). So I gave up the idea of making new friends at the time. I do have a handful locally, but I fear some have become infected with the antivaxxer POV. Personally, I fear that POV more than the actual virus.

  3. Brian Vanderlip

    I am so happy to know that Polly and Bruce came back alive from the poison factory and decided to live as decent human beings instead of poisoning the world! I would dearly love to share a single malt with you one day but know that it is unlikely. Still, because of our similar backgrounds in poison-factory work, I think of you as a digital brother. I do this without your permission because you are a stubborn, controlling old prick with a big stick and a penchant for preaching the only preach I enjoy anymore. Thank-you, brother. And thank-you MJ, for putting it so clearly: “The best part is that those relationships aren’t premised on falsehoods.”

  4. Avatar
    ObstacleChick

    Looking back, I don’t think my grandparents, mom, or stepdad really had friends. They had church, where they were really active. But I wasn’t aware of them hanging out with people outside church functions. I had a couple of friends at school, some of whom overlapped at church, but I was not encouraged to hang out with people outside church or school hours. When I would ask to go hang out with friends, the response made it clear that driving me anywhere was a pain in the a$$.

    My mom and stepdad did make a couple of friends through their local Republican club.

    I think what is most sad is recalling funeral turnouts. My grandpa died while we were all active in church, and there was a huge turnout. People from where he used to work, from church, from the community came. The family moved to a different community a few years later. When my grandma died, only family attended even though my mom alerted our former church. When my stepdad died, family and some of their church members attended. A few years after that, only family and a couple of my mom’s GOP friends and a couple of church members attended. What really surprised me was that one of my friends from the old church and her mom attended – I hadn’t seen them in years but had connected on social media and text.

    I haven’t told many people from my Christian past that I am no longer Christian. With the remaining family, it’s complicated – 😕. My aunt and uncle are progressive Christians so we talk about what’s wrong with evangelicals. But I think they would be sad to hear about my atheism. My brother suspects, but we have a tacit agreement not to discuss it.

  5. Troy

    People at church were never really your friends, a better description is “like minded acquaintances”. My dad loved the social aspect of church, we’d only leave when we were the last ones there. Acquaintances can of course be friends, that happens too. There is nothing wrong with a social club like church. Seeking the like minded is something atheists haven’t really had until recently.

    I’m thinking back about one of my friends, we had a mutual interest in coin collecting and some school classes in common, though we drifted apart after that. Reminds me of the movie “Stand By Me” where a writer reminisces about his pals in junior high, but also remarks that he had only heard what they were up to now that he was an adult.

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