A Texas megachurch pastor is taking a leave of absence after his church learned of frequent messages between him and a woman who is not his wife.
Matt Chandler, the lead pastor at the Village Church in Flower Mound, about 30 miles northwest of Dallas, told his congregation on Sunday the move was prompted by what the church’s leaders called inappropriate messages between the pair.
In the statement recorded and shared to the church’s website, the embattled pastor explained that a few months back, a woman approached him in the church’s foyer with concerns about “how I was [direct messaging] on Instagram with a friend of hers.”
“I didn’t think I had done anything wrong in that,” Chandler, 48, told the congregation. “My wife knew that, her husband knew that, and yet there were a couple of things that she said that were disorienting to me.”
That same evening, Chandler shared those concerns with his wife, Lauren, and two elders, in an effort to address the situation, The Village Church wrote in an Aug. 28 statement on its website.
The elders, the statement continues, then commissioned an independent law firm to conduct review Chandler’s messaging history across social media platforms, his cell phone, and his email.
The investigators’ report led the elders to conclude that Matt violated the church’s internal social media use policies, and “more importantly that, while the overarching pattern of his life has been ‘above reproach’, he failed to meet the (Bible’s) standard for elders of being “above reproach” in this instance,” the statement reads.
“While the messages were not romantic or sexual in nature, the frequency and familiarity of the messages crossed a line,” the statement continues. “They revealed that (he) did not use language appropriate for a pastor, and he did not model a behavior that we expect from him.”
The statement said his leave of absence is “both disciplinary and developmental, which allows him to focus on growing greater awareness in this area.”
The timeline for his return will be determined by expectations the elders have laid out for his development, the statement said.
“I’m just really embarrassed, feel stupid… I feel like I’m embarrassing my wife and kids,” Chandler told the congregation Sunday. “I’m held to a higher standard and fell short of that higher standard.”
The church did not immediately respond to USA TODAY to say who would replace Chandler in the interim.
Chandler is also president and chairman of Acts 29, an organization dedicated to starting new churches. The organization also did not immediately respond to USA TODAY for comment.
According to his online church profile, Chandler married his wife in 1999 and they have three children. In 2002, he became pastor of First Baptist Church of Highland Village, now called The Village Church.
In 2009, he was diagnosed with brain cancer, underwent brain surgery and was declared cancer-free in 2010.
The church’s latest setback
The pastor’s leave is the latest blow for the church and the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) denomination — the country’s second-largest faith group, of which the Village Church is a member.
Earlier this month, SBC announced it’s under federal investigation related to sexual abuse.
“Individually and collectively each SBC entity is resolved to fully and completely cooperate with the investigation,” a SBC statement released Aug. 12 said.
The probe followed the release of an internal report that found SBC leaders mishandled sexual abuse cases for two decades.
Also on Aug.1 the Village Church announced on its website it had settled a 2019 lawsuit alleging that one of its former children’s ministers molested an 11-year-old girl. The criminal case against the minister was dropped in 2020, Religion News Services reported.
The church wrote that after a thorough and lengthy legal investigation, we maintain and firmly believe that we committed no wrong.”
Natalie Neysa Alund covers trending news for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] and follow her on Twitter @nataliealund.
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