Something Was Wrong - S5 E1: Somewhere I Belonged | Julia
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First of all, it's hard to believe that we're already jumping into season five of something was wrong,
but I am really excited. As I've spoke to before, the formatting of season 5 will be a little different,
as it will feature what I'm calling survivor short stories. The season will feature one-on-one
interviews with inspiring survivors each chapter of the season will be formatted into longer one
to three-part episodes. If you're interested in sharing your story, visit somethingwaswrong.com slash submissions.
I'm so honored to share these compelling and inspiring stories with you, as we need encouragement
and inspiration now more than ever. Our first survivor short story features an interview with
my longtime friend Julia. Julia is a modern day cult survivor and an inspiration
to me as a human and parent. My husband and I actually separately attended the church,
aka cult, that Julia was a part of, and we suspected even then that this church was actually
a cult. I'm so thankful to Julia for her bravery in coming forward and sharing her story with all of us.
I'm Tiffany Reese and this is season 5 of Something was Wrong. You think you know me, you don't know me well at all
You think you know me, but you don't know me well at all
You think you know me, you don't know me well at all
I take my time every day
I call my mom and she said
She said heck My name is Julia.
I am a 33 year old stay at home mother of four living
in Northern California, and I am formerly a Christian pastor.
Why don't we start from the beginning?
2005, I believe that's around the time when you got saved.
Can you tell me about that?
Yeah, so I had been hanging out with a specific group of friends
that I went to high school with.
We were all very much into the hardcore scene locally and beyond.
But they were very involved in different churches.
I had tried that before, was not super into it,
not this specific church.
And they were like, you know,
we've been going to this great place
and they actually have a venue there
where bands come and play, you should totally come with us.
So I went and checked it out.
And immediately the atmosphere there just really drew me in
because their whole message was, you know, come as you are, and immediately the atmosphere there just really drew me in
because their whole message was, you know, come as you are, we love all of the tattoos
and the piercings and the loud music.
That's just what we're about.
And I'd never been to a church like that before.
It's funny you say that because that's what actually
attracted me to go to the venue, the music.
But then when I was there, I was like,
oh, if I was gonna go to church, like this one's pretty dope.
I can get behind this kind of church.
There were so many young people there.
Everyone was so lively, like the environment,
there was like really good energy because, you know,
when, at least when I would go there, because there was bands playing
and you're young, you're in high school early college years,
and there wasn't a lot to do around here necessarily.
And it seemed like a pretty like safe place to like parents were a lot more willing to let us
go to the venue because it was at a church even though all I did was stand outside and smoke cigarettes.
Awesome put my friends. We think about abusers and how they sort of lure people in, right? And how they sort of attract people. And now in hindsight, I feel like the venue
was sort of like how they got the kids to be in the church and to do the things that they wanted
them to do and to ultimately like have that control. It absolutely was a lot of the kids that I
hung out with, not all of them, but most of the ones that I came to know through that,
their parents were either just not really involved,
or like you said, they figured it was a church,
so they were just very hands-off.
Some of them, their parents were even really involved
in the church, and it didn't seem like anybody really paid
attention to what was going on in the youth group,
but I definitely think that that like what you said,
it just drew you in. There was something about it, and I mean, that's how cults work. We come to find. Actually, my husband, who you know, Michael, and I started dating around this time as well
when I met you. So, and his band played at this venue many times. Lots of our friends bands did.
My band played there a few times, and everyone who worked at the venue was working for free
on behalf of the church, which was amazing to me because I knew that the church was making a lot
of money from the shows. Would you agree? Yes, I didn't know about any of that really until obviously later, but it was part of that
whole belonging because they made you feel loved and they made you feel accepted and they're
like, hey, you like being here. What about coming to shows for free and just working part time
and then you can hang out with your friends? It was great. Like Like I have no bad memories of working it the venue ever
because it was just so much fun to be involved
in that scene and to like really be deep down in it,
but it's just thinking back on it now is kind of wild to me
because we should have probably been getting paid,
especially when you've got a bunch of high school kids
doing security that doesn't really seem safe.
Yeah, it wasn't safe. And like when I think of it now from like a venue, you know, as a kid really, when I, you know, I think when we met you were 17, I think I was maybe 19, I think I'm a couple years older than you, maybe a year or two.
But what blew my mind is they would have these hardcore bands really at the peak of that hardcore emo phase, 2005. Some of these bands were like huge names
that they started getting after the venue
developed over time and stuff.
And when I think about that now,
I'm thinking how many thousands of dollars
were they making and paying all of their staff $0?
Like $0.
We're definitely gonna get into some of that too.
Mm-hmm.
We're definitely gonna get into some of that too. Mm-hmm.
That kind of blows my mind now.
As a kid, I thought, of course, these people are volunteering.
It's a church.
You know, why would you be paid?
But now as an adult, I'm thinking,
all those kids were working there.
What a liability, how dangerous.
Those shows, there was fights all the time when I was there.
I can't tell you how many, like, blood he knows as that venue as many as as well as many others. I mean people get wild
and things get crazy in there and the thought of it now as a grown-up adult, I'm like I don't know
how they actually got away with that because there were not many adults there. There were plenty of
child labor laws being broken not only within the venue, but within the entirety of the church, as well as extended
avenues that they went down. There were so many different things they were doing where there were
underage people working for free because it was a servant's heart. You were showing that you had
the heart of God and you were there to serve the people and serve the church. So that's definitely
100% how they served it sucked you in with that part. But then like you said, they were making money and then you've got the youth
pastor bragging about how he's only ever paid cash for cars and all this stuff.
And nobody else is getting anything.
And that's what always struck me about this youth pastor.
We're going to refer to him as Lance.
But my husband and I would always kind of joke about how he always looked like a million dollars.
He would always be wearing like this leather jacket
with these like flashy type shirts,
lots of gel in his hair.
And it just didn't really, he himself
didn't really fit the vibe of the venue,
which always kind of struck me as odd even as a kid, but now it strikes me even
otter because he really created the vibe and the ambiance I feel like and made it look a specific way.
But yet he himself didn't really seem to be correct me if I'm wrong, but I never saw him in like
really wearing ban shirts or like having tattoos or dressing the way that the people who attended
the church did. Does that make sense? Or would you would you disagree? No, I totally agree with that.
He definitely did not ever. It was very much a specific style that he was into. I believe
that his wife was responsible for a lot of the decor and all that stuff with the venue, but she
wasn't that white either. So a lot of that stuff in hindsight is very weird to me
or maybe because they had so many young people
building this venue, which was amazing.
And like you said, I have so so many good memories there.
Some of the best nights of my life I've spent at this place.
But even then, when I started going,
I had a weird feeling like this guy is a sociopath.
Can you tell me a little bit about if you remember the first time or the first few times
you met him and what your impressions of him were as a person?
The first couple of times that I met Lance, he seemed super cool, was very charismatic,
was very outgoing and loud and just joking around with all the guys and like was fairly
friendly at that point it seemed like to me. I didn't really have any bad
impression of him but at the same time I was 17 year old and I was just pumped
up to be somewhere where I belonged as well as the rest of the staff who aren't
particularly involved in the rest of this. Everyone was very nice and very friendly, but I never, never once got a weird vibe from
the entire situation in the beginning.
I just thought, everybody who goes here is so happy.
All of these kids are so happy.
And you could see the closeness of specifically the kids that were in the high school group,
the college group, the basically quote youth group.
And it's funny because the kids who worked at this venue were there working so often and so frequently.
It's like you all became sort of pieces of furniture there.
When I think of the memory, I picture you there and you're now husband there.
And these other kids that were working there all the time for you were always there.
We were. I can't imagine how many hours you guys were working because you were always there when I was there and I wasn't there all the time.
I went to other venues and other shows and other things as well. How did that sort of begin? How did you start to get involved in the actual like working at the church?
involved in the actual like working at the church. So I got saved in May of 2005 for reference, in case somebody
doesn't know, quote unquote, being saved is what it's called when
you accept Jesus into your heart, which is a form of Christianity
and becoming a Christian. So shortly after that, I started
attending regularly, weekly, because they would have Wednesday
services, I wasn't really involved in going to Sunday services I started attending regularly weekly because they would have Wednesday services.
I wasn't really involved in going to Sunday services then.
I don't believe I started working at the venue until 2006, right before I graduated, I think,
because they asked me if I wanted to be on the leadership team, as well as they invited me
to start working and actually making money in the church nursery, even though I had no
experience with children.
And that ultimately
led to me deciding to go to ministry school as well. But I believe it was 2006. I started working
at the venue every single show that they would let me work. I would consider this church to be
Evangelical would be the word I guess I would use. What do you remember the type of church it was,
like what category it falls under
in the realm of Christianity? I remember it being described to me and this is the way I would
describe it to everybody else was a Pentecostal evangelical Christian church but that they were
very fond of saying they were not about religion it was about relationship and that's what set them
apart from all these other churches that they had actually formerly been a part of the assemblies of God, which is a grouping of churches that are Pentecostal, but to
a point they kind of have boundaries, but they became too radical for the assemblies of God
and were actually removed from the official grouping. So I remember going to the venue and one of
these kiddos who was always hanging out at the venue working one of the workers approaching me and being like, you should come to our college groups
sometime it's awesome. There's hardcore music like we have screamo worship and there's fog machines and there's lighting effects and it's just like a show like it's just like the like the hardcore shows that you love that you're coming to.
And I thought that was a really good idea.
I was like really excited by that.
And I thought it was really cool from a conceptual standpoint that this church was doing something different with their college group services, especially considering how many people attend the venue.
So I went with a friend of mine and I instantly had the feeling of,
oh, this is different than the churches I have attended in the past because people were
speaking in tongues and lots of hands in the air and shouting and fog machines and lots of talk
about physical sensations.
Can you maybe talk a little bit about the actual, the gifts of the spirit?
Is that what, how you want to describe it? Okay.
I'm going to do this to the best of my ability because two years of bullshit,
ministry school didn't really prepare me.
Can we get into that too later, the minutes quote, minutes school?
Oh yeah.
Because now I have no career. So go me.
The church believed in the gifts of the spirit,
which we're speaking in tongues, the prophetic,
which includes prophecy and all that,
words of knowledge, words of wisdom,
which are kind of complicated to get into,
we won't go there, as well as they believed you could be slain in
the spirit as they called it, which is you've seen all the memes and the gifts and stuff of people
like knocking somebody out in a church service where they fall over, that's what it was.
My favorite is when they have it to let the bodies hit the floor, the Benny-Hin YouTube video.
Yes. Yes. That is a fantastic. It's just a go-to for me. Sorry, continue.
It's okay. So the gifts of the spirit are broken up into three parts. The gifts of knowing,
the gifts of doing, and the gifts of speaking. The gifts of knowing are words of wisdom, words of
knowledge, and the discerning of spirits. Discerning means you can feel different energies and stuff,
like demons and angels, and all that kind of stuff is what the church believes.
Gifts of doing are faith for miracles, healings, and works of power, which I'm not sure exactly what that is.
Gifts of speaking or speaking in tongues, the interpretation of tongues and prophecy and with the whole prophecy thing, they were very specific because I know that they brought it
into the venue and we can get into that as well.
But when it came to the church,
you were only allowed to prophesy over individuals
if you had gone through all the classes and all that stuff,
but you were not allowed to prophesy
over the body of the church or over governments and stuff
like that.
For those situations, you have to be a prophet,
like chosen and all that good stuff.
By the church.
Recognized by somebody in the church
who was already a prophet.
So it's like a hand me down patriarchy
prophet situation or like who determines it?
Like it can women do it and men can do it.
Yeah, anybody can do it.
Okay.
And that actually the few people that I recognized as prophets
that attended the church were women.
So.
That's cool.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, that was actually fun.
Can we talk a little bit about you meeting your husband
and this group of friends that you got to know through this place and how you sort of bonded
because it always really seemed to me from an outside perspective that those who attended this college group and this church were and
worked at the venue were an extremely close group of friends.
Yeah, we really were the two friends that I went to high school with who introduced me to the youth group were my two best friends
in high school and
probably from the age of 15 on and
then I was introduced to
Few other people obviously through that and we were all a very tight-knit group of people
When I met my husband it was at a youth event and he came up and threw
my husband, it was at a youth event and he came up and threw sprite on me because he thought that would be a great idea to get my attention for whatever reason and it worked obviously because
here we are. So that happened four kids later. Four kids later. Yeah. For one of our anniversaries,
he bought me a bottle of sprite, like a glass bottle of sprite as a thing. It was whatever.
That's so funny to hear him doing that because he's he's just like the sweetest guy. So I can't even
imagine him doing that, but you know, when we were teenagers, we were all idiots, right? So.
Oh, 100%. At least I was. I don't know if it, I don't know. Maybe other people have their
lives together when they're teenagers that I started. No, I was, I was real dumb for a real long time.
You were talking about the your best friends bringing you
to the church and sort of getting close to people.
Yeah, that happened pretty quickly,
mostly because we would go to shows at the venue together,
a lot of them were in bands,
so we would go to other venues with them
and help them with their stuff,
or we would just like watch them and stuff.
We hung out all the time,
and those people ended up becoming my family,
which I
believe was also a core part of how this church functions is because they want
you to become that tight knit with these people. And I don't blame any of my
friends that I made through this that went on during this time frame at all, but
they were right in the thick of it with me. But a lot of them ended up becoming like second aunts and uncles to all my kids
until we all went our separate ways after we all left the church.
After your husband gave you the sprite shower and you started dating like right away,
was that allowed? How did the youth group view you guys dating each other?
Because it did seem like there were a lot of like couples, you know, naturally of a bunch of teenagers working together 24-7.
They're going to start flirting and having feelings for each other. How did the church view that?
Well, we didn't start dating until November of 2005, but they believed that the church leadership and the youth leadership should have a say and be able to speak into your lives as authority figures and
people that you would check in with and so
initially, I think it was okay that we started dating. It wasn't a super huge deal, but I wasn't outsider still
mostly at that point. I know that I wasn't really trusted because I was just a wild 17 year old
that came out of nowhere.
So I could definitely feel those vibes.
Eventually, there was a point where we were told by Lance
that we had to take a break from dating
because I was quote unquote, too emotional
as a, like, I believe 18 year old at that time and that we just needed
some time apart and that obviously did not last. So but they were they
definitely believed that if we wanted to go on dates one we had to be with
other people and two if if we were dating somebody you were not allowed to
ride like with someone else of the opposite sex in the car
Like you weren't supposed to be alone with other people of the opposite sex
How did it get to the point where your youth pastor was able to
dictate and control those sorts of things? I know with you it didn't end up working out so well for him
But we'll get into that later. I'll obviously, you guys are married.
But how do you think it got to that point?
How do you think he was able to get all of these people
to follow him and do all of this work for free
and listen to him in that way?
I mean, he was a sociopath for sure,
and he, the way that he talked,
and with his charisma and all of that stuff,
you believe what he said
and that it was everything was true and the way that he dictated it with the Bible said.
And for me personally, I didn't have very much knowledge of the Bible. I still, it's
a little rough around the edges, but I don't think I personally knew enough that I just wasn't
strong enough to say, no, I don't think you should be having
that stance in my life or you shouldn't be having that authority in my life. I know for my husband,
he was like raised up in the church. So there was no question for him. This is a person in church
authority. This is somebody you listen to and who you obey and follow. And I think that was the same
for quite a few others. Oh, I didn't realize that.
So your husband grew up in this church?
Not this one specifically, but he had gone.
He was at this church from, I want to say,
he was like 13 on, but he was born and raised Christian
and a very similar type.
Were your parents religious?
Did you... I know you said you became saved
after you started attending the church,
but did you grow up attending church at all
or did your parents practice any sort of religion?
I was, or my mom was Catholic
and actually was deeply involved
in her Catholic youth group for a very long time,
similarly to the way that I was,
but I was never baptized Catholic,
like my brother was or anything like that.
And my dad sort of was Methodist, but we never went to church with him.
I had gone to church a couple of times with like an aunt when I was in junior high.
And that was about the max before I started going to church in high school.
Very little religious experience.
Yeah.
What did you, they start to think?
Did you share with them when your youth pastor pulled you aside and was like,
I don't think you guys should be dating? Did you tell your parents this? I don't think that I did because it's just
a little complicated. My relationship in that way with them, but there were a lot of things that I
didn't talk about with them. And so I think I thought that I was handling it and that it was fine
and it was something I could manage on my own. So I didn't really talk to them about that part.
Later on, years later, after leaving the church and talking to them about it,
they knew the entire time that it wasn't okay and that that church was a cult.
And what Lance was doing was just manipulation all around.
And they couldn't, they said they couldn't do anything to stop it.
That's so sad.
One of the things that drew me to have you come on the podcast is that I think these modern
cults effortlessly exist and I think this church is such a good example of that that from
the outside it just looked it just looks like a regular old church right sure it was modern and there was some some edgy
quote-unquote practices maybe happening but to me I didn't recognize that it
was a cult until I met the youth pastor and began to hear him speak and as you
mentioned and as I mentioned before and having grown up with a father who's a sociopath, you've come to easily recognize that sort of trait
in another person and your your red flags and your defense mechanisms kind of kick in.
And I had that with him instantly. And I remember him just trying to see what he could get away with with me.
And I was standing outside smoking and he came up to me
and was criticizing me for smoking
and was asking me why I was smoking.
And like, what I got out of it
and why I didn't go to church and all these sorts of things.
And he wasn't being like super aggressive about it.
He was trying to come at it like, Hey, I'm, I'm your older brother. I was just this young girl and this, I
don't know how old you would say he was at that time, maybe 30s.
Mm-hmm. Early 30, early 30. No, like late 20s, early 30s. So he was then our age now.
Mm-hmm. I feel like he was reading me and my answers and kind of would see what he would,
the way he would talk to me was like, I'm going to ask you these questions and give you this advice
and I'm going to see what your response is before I decide whether or not I'm going to continue
to push you if that makes sense. And that was pretty much the only conversations I really had with
him or him saying, hey, you need to come to youth group
It's awesome. We're gonna have like screaming there. There's gonna be like screaming and there's gonna be like lighting effects and all that kind of stuff
I mean, which is his job like granted that was kind of why they it seemed like why they had the venue was to really try to recruit other kids to join the church
Would you agree with that or was it to make money?
I to join the church. Would you agree with that or was it to make money? I think overall he was all about numbers
and he was all about income.
As far as what you said about his questioning you
and all that stuff, he was all about a confrontation.
He wanted to stir up shit all the time.
And he was like, I'm gonna go talk to this person about this.
And we've come in there defensive and like ready to throw down
because he wanted to be right.
And he wanted to prove to you that he was right,
so that he could prove that he was a charge of whatever the fuck.
And that was all to boost his own ego.
Truly, I don't think any of it, even to this day,
has to do anything with the kingdom of God.
I think it all has to do with
making lands feel like the boss. And that's initially because it started out with him as the youth
pastor. I think when it was first getting going and when the venue was first getting going, he was
very hands-on on getting people in on his own and kind of building a relationship, but not enough to actually let people see him up close.
And as he got more and more of us to do his dirty work for him,
he didn't have to talk to any of those people anymore
and that was perfect for him
because they were too lowly for him anyway.
Yeah, confrontation old is a really good way.
It's that anti-social personality trait.
Yes, it was like, why are you doing this?
Explain this to me and now when I think I'm like, who the f are you? I don't even know you like, why are you you know what I mean?
Why did he think? Absolutely. He would act like because you attended shows there, you owed him something.
And another thing that he would do with me and a couple of my friends is he would always quote, put us on the list.
he would do with me and a couple of my friends is he would always quote, put us on the list.
And this is, he would have shows,
then the show's turned into like,
there was a VIP area.
Do you remember this?
Of course you do.
100%.
Yes.
So you could like pay extra to get into this like VIP area.
And he was just very much like any other venue owner,
which should have been a red flag to me,
but it wasn't at the time.
But I loved the people who attended the church so much,
the kids that worked at the venue.
I really wanted to like the church.
I really wanted it to work out because I just love the venue.
I love the vibe of it,
and I wanted to believe that it was what it was presenting as.
So I remember going to one of the college groups, I love the vibe of it, and I wanted to believe that it was, what it was presenting as.
So I remember going to one of the college groups,
and I started to become concerned
when I heard the youth pastor start talking
about someone named Wigglesworth.
Oh shit, oh shit.
How would you explain who Wigglesworth is
for those who don't know?
So Smith Wigglesworth was an evangelist back in the earlier 1900s, and the story that was told,
because he was a Pentecostal pastor, the only story that I remember them talking about Smith Wigglesworth
all the time, was that somebody had a baby and then baby died or was still born. And that
Smith Wigglesworth in a church service kicked the baby, like punted it, like a football.
I'm so sorry, this is very graphic. And then the baby came back to life because God healed
the baby. This is the shit that I heard. And I was like, what the fuck is happening right now?
Mm-hmm.
I never went back.
After that, I walked out.
I started smoking my cigarette.
Like, it was the most bizarre thing and I think especially for me,
somebody who didn't grow up with religious parents of any kind.
My church experiences were very youth group casual.
My mind was blown. Then I talked to my husband about it because we had started like hanging out more.
And he grew up in a very evangelical cult church, which is a story for another time.
But he started telling me Tiffany. These people are not following the Bible.
This guy is not even using the Bible
during these services. He's just going off on his own thing because he had attended the church
as well. And he was saying, no, you don't understand. Even as far as these sorts of churches go,
and people have their beliefs, this is a different type of evangelism. And I was shocked.
Like, what did you think when you heard this? Like, how did you,
how did they convince people? Like, did you think it was real? Where you're like, that's,
that's insane. This, this person is full of it. I honestly, I have no clue what I was thinking
at that point because so during my experiences, like in these services and stuff, I felt what I was thinking at that point. Because so during my experiences, like in these services
and stuff, I felt what I thought at that point in time was the presence of God.
I believed that I was having spiritual experiences at this church that I could
physically feel and see all around me.
So when I heard that story, I remember being like, what the fuck? But like not what
the fuck enough apparently to leave. So that I mean, because they preached about healings
and stuff all the time and because it happened so long ago, I was like, well, no pastor would
get away with that now. So okay, here we go and just kind of like went off with it and
didn't think anything else of it when I really should have.
You also had those social ties already, right?
Oh, definitely.
I was walking in more of like a casual person
who was just trying it out.
I remember my husband and I, his band was on tour
and they were doing a festival.
I think it was in Northern California.
You may have been there.
It was called Joshua Fest.
Julia, did you go to the...
I never went to Joshua Fest.
So we went to Joshua Fest in a big group of kids
that were there, were there from this church.
And there was this really lovable older guy,
a little bit older than the rest of the young kids
in the youth group.
And he was a very heavy, heavy guy.
And I was talking to him and some
of the other boys from this church were going to go have pizza and he wasn't allowed to go.
And I said, what do you mean you're not allowed to go? And he said, well, our pastor, your former
youth pastor told me that I couldn't attend any extra church activities,
social activities, where I wasn't working basically until I lose weight, because he was lacking
spiritual discipline with his obesity, apparently.
Yep. I can confirm that story.
I was blown away.
Red flag, red flag.
That's when I started to actually feel actively concerned
for the people in the group and started expressing that
to our mutual friends, not in an aggressive way or anything,
but just kind of being asking more questions.
A lot of times we would go to Denny's after shows.
And I remember a conversation my husband having with one of the guys who was, I believe,
living on the church campus at this point.
If it was between Jesus and your youth pastor and both were giving you direction and you had to choose
which one, which would you choose, the Bible or your youth pastor, and the kid said,
my youth pastor, I believe him. And that struck me as well. Can you speak to that a little bit
from your experience? For me personally, I would like to say that that wouldn't have been me,
but who knows? But the group was very devoted to Lance and to his wife.
And they were willing to do what he asked, even though it was completely ridiculous,
99.9% of the time, and even though it was literally free manual labor,
he just had some weird power over all of us.
And I, looking back on it now, I don't understand like at all. I can see
straight through that bullshit from a mile away now and it's it's just so
obvious. All of it is so obvious and I think he just happened to pick the right
group. A lot of times it was he was the only adult there that I saw. Once in a
while there would be another adult there but the other adult is still to this
day somebody I would trust quite a bit, but I don't understand how he got away with it.
I think some of the parents who went to the church trusted him and were just like, yeah,
it's cool and then everybody else's parents weren't involved or just let it go.
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What drew you to attend the school and how would you describe the school to
somebody who's not familiar? So for me I was drawn to the school obviously because
all of my friends were gonna go and I didn't really have any set plans for college because I didn't have the
crates or any like major aspirations other than being a photographer.
And I was like, well, I could be a photographer and a pastor.
So that's cool.
So I just decided, you know, I want, I think I want more of God.
I think I want to experience more and learn more, especially.
So I'm gonna go ahead and try this.
Now, the pastor that was in charge of the school
at the time is a good guy, and a lot of the stuff
is he was handed off the school from somebody else.
And there were some aspects where it was like,
Lance would get involved, and he would be like,
oh yeah, you guys are going to practice having a servant
tart, you're going to paint the entire building where the school
takes place. And oh, for this day, you guys are going to help us
with the harvest carnival, which they would have every year,
it was huge. And we would literally work for weeks and weeks
and weeks up to it and then work the entire thing. So a lot of
it was honestly just labor the whole time.
And the fourth of July booth, I remember,
was a big one.
Yes.
Seeing all of you just stuck in those,
I mean, freaking Sacramento and July everyone
is a fucking nightmare.
Truly.
It's like 120 degrees every day,
full of smog, dry as hell, just, I mean,
at least we don't have humidity. So there's that. But being trapped in a fireworks booth
for two week or two, just sweating your balls off. I just, you would have to really be convinced
to get a bunch of teenagers to do that for free for you. Because I can't imagine how much money they made off
of that booth.
I know that was a huge one too.
Oh yeah, and initially a lot of us weren't even allowed
inside of the booth.
So that was a great way to stand out.
So we were forced to be on the street.
Yeah, we were either outside of the booth
or we were out on the street waving signs.
So.
The sign waving, did you guys do sign waving
for other things as well?
Like for other causes or am I remembering that wrong?
So there are two different scenarios in which there were signs sign holding
besides the fireworks booth.
The first one was the county was threatening to shut down the venue because it was loud
and there were surrounding neighborhoods and they were complaining and stuff like that.
So Lance got his youth group and additional kids that were involved in the local scene
to come out and protest on the street to show that we were like the venue was doing a
good thing because it was giving the kids somewhere to go at night just because it was loud
didn't mean that it was creating issue in the area. There weren't any burglaries going on and all that so we were supposed to
protest that. The second scenario and I discussed this with great shame unfortunately was during
or leading up and up to the 2008 election and that was when they were discussing Prop 8.
And Prop 8 was about keeping marriage between a man and a woman and not same sex.
And so I don't remember exactly how it went down, but at some point, Lance encouraged the
entire young adult group to go out and protest on one of the main roads in time would send out a vote like his
his recommendations and how he was going to vote. He would send them out to the
entire church. Basically a voters guide. It was a voters guide which is in
exact noncompliance with a nonprofit. So they should have lost their nonprofit status
for that, it's illegal.
Wow.
Yeah, so the School of Ministry was basically there
to expand your Ministry experience.
And if you were to seek out a career in Ministry of Any Kind,
it was supposed to prepare you for that type of
scenario. And for me, at the time I wanted to be, I don't even remember really, it
had something to do with traveling. I don't know if it was a traveling minister,
what I wanted to do at that time, but I was like, oh that'd be kind of cool, and I
wanted to learn more about God, and I wanted to be with all of my friends, and I
worked out that every single one of them
decided at that point that they were gonna go ahead
and go to ministry school,
including my eventually husband.
So it was, it did cost money.
I lived at home and went and I worked in the church nursery
in order to pay off my ministry school.
My husband also worked at the church in order to pay off his ministry school. I think 99.9% of us
did the same thing, but some of them lived up at the house on the same
property as the church. What happened after your youth pastor pulled you aside and
said that he didn't think that you and your husband should continue dating.
I think we tried to take a break for, I think I honestly think it only lasted about three weeks.
And then we started dating again in secret, which doesn't work out for anybody when you're a teenager. And eventually, we kind of just brought it back around
to him and we're like, you know what?
This isn't working.
We want to date each other.
We're going to go ahead and start dating each other.
Our parents said it's fine.
So what was his response?
He definitely looked annoyed at that point,
but he was like, fine, okay, you want to do it.
I'm saying no, but you go ahead.
And so we did.
We were obviously proceeded with a relationship.
But I think at that point, specifically with me,
he was more on guard with me after that,
more trying to distance himself from me.
Did you feel like your relationship with him
suffered after that?
Oh, 100%.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Hmm.
It kind of shifted. And I don't know if it was specifically
because of that or specifically because he was rising in power in the church at that point,
but he kind of from then on only really talked to you if he needed something from you or needed
like needed to give you a command essentially. Further into my dating
relationship prior to getting married, I was approached by Lance during a show at the venue one night
and Lance pulled me aside and it was just us and he goes, hey he's like God told me that you and
your my now husband are having sex outside of marriage and he confirmed it to me, my husband. And I looked
at him and I said, no, we're not. And no, he didn't. And he got extremely offended. And
was like, well, I know what I know. And I walked, turned around and walked away on his heel. And I was
just horrified. But that I don't understand still why that wasn't a huge red flag to me and why I wasn't like I'm never
talking to this book or again because
what adult man
approaches a
Probably I think it was probably 19 year old at that time and says something like that
next time If you think you know me, you don't know me well at all.
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