The rise and fall of Mars Hill Church
Craig  Welch ("The Seattle Times," September 13, 2014) 
When the Christian radio host accused him of plagiarism, the quick-witted  
preacher sounded flabbergasted — and annoyed. 
“Man, I thought we’d have a better interview than this,” Mars Hill Church  
Pastor Mark Driscoll said. 
Driscoll’s heated November 2013 exchange with radio host Janet Mefferd 
would  prove a crucial turning point in his explosive rise and recent fall, 
igniting a  chain of events that would begin unraveling the Seattle megachurch 
he  founded. 
For years the edgy, blue-jeaned, hipster preacher used charisma and  
combativeness to barrel through turmoil, once bragging that he’d mow down all  
who 
questioned his vision: “There is a pile of dead bodies behind the Mars Hill 
 bus, and by God’s grace, it’ll be a mountain by the time we’re done,” he 
once  said in a meeting. “You either get on the bus or you get run over by 
the  bus.” 
Behind the scenes, former church members said, Driscoll could be vicious,  
abusive and controlling. Some charged that he refused to promote an 
overweight  elder because Driscoll said his “fat ass” would tarnish Mars Hill’s 
image. 
But for years, Driscoll’s outward style charmed many. He was dynamic and  
funny, with a potent mix of reverence for Jesus and irreverence for  
every­­thing else. He drew pierced-and-tattooed congregants from 
Seattle  to 
a church that espoused a conservative Calvinist doctrine cloaked in  
indie-rock, big screens and a worn pair of Chuck Taylors. 
Mars Hill grew to 15 branches in five states with 13,000 visitors on 
Sundays.  Driscoll appeared on Nightline, preached at Seahawks stadium, threw 
out 
the  first pitch at a Mariners game, and founded a network of evangelical 
leaders who  started hundreds of other churches. 
But after 18 years of stunning growth, an escalating string of bad news  
finally started driving churchgoers away. Mars Hill leaders last Sunday said  
attendance and giving had plummeted so fast that it would have to close 
several  Seattle branches and cut its staff 30 to 40 percent. 
And the Highline High School honors student who started the church as a 
Bible  study in his home wasn’t the one making the announcement. 
Driscoll had stepped aside temporarily in August so church leaders could  
investigate whether he was fit to lead, following new accusations that he  
bullied members, threatened opponents, lied and oversaw mismanagement of 
church  funds. 
While the seeds of the storm swirling around Driscoll date back years, many 
 elements can be traced to his November grilling by Mefferd, which inspired 
fresh  critics to start poking around the church. 
Again and again that day in 2013, Mefferd pushed Driscoll to be contrite  
after accusing him of lifting material for 14 pages of his book from another  
pastor without proper credit. Driscoll apologized but peppered his 
concession  with indignation. When Mefferd said she believed accusing him in 
public 
was  appropriate, Driscoll — as critics said he often did — tried to turn 
the issue  back on her. 
“I don’t. I don’t,” Driscoll snapped back. “I think it’s rude and I 
think the  intent behind it is not very Christ-like. But I’ll receive it and I’
ll try to  receive it graciously and humbly. But I wouldn’t allow you to 
pretend to take a  generous, gracious moral-gospel high ground. I would not 
just give you a pass on  that — out of love for you. Because I want you to grow 
as well.” 
In the months that followed, Mefferd and a handful of bloggers would 
uncover  more questions about Driscoll’s books. A Christian magazine would 
discover Mars  Hill paid a company $25,000 to buy up and distribute his latest 
book 
in a scheme  to vault the title onto best-seller lists. 
That prompted more questions about how the church handled money — and about 
 whether Driscoll and his organization were too slippery when accused of  
misbehavior. 
Each new accusation emboldened more critics, and by August Driscoll was  
hounded almost daily by people recalling bad exchanges. 
“Some have challenged various aspects of my personality and leadership 
style,  and while some of these challenges seem unfair, I have no problem 
admitting I am  deserving of some of these criticisms based on my own past 
actions 
that I am  sorry for,” Driscoll said when announcing his six-week leave of 
absence in  August. 
“The Brand” 
Driscoll is not granting interviews, but the church has tried to 
distinguish  between past mistakes and how Driscoll runs things now. 
“There is a well-documented list of past actions and decisions I have  
admitted were wrong, sought forgiveness, and apologized for, to those I hurt or 
 
offended,” Driscoll said in that August address. 
But recent formal complaints from 21 former pastors include anecdotes from  
the past two years. 
They charged that Driscoll referred to himself as “The Brand” and said 
Mars  Hill would always be about “me in the pulpit holding the Bible.” They 
said he  threatened to shred a former pastor’s new church “brick by brick,” 
and they said  he lied about how much he’d known about the 
book-sales-contract fiasco. 
With nearly a dozen blogs or online groups dedicated to critiquing Driscoll’
s  every move, church leaders said it’s almost impossible to keep up with 
the  accusations. 
“The hard part is that some of what’s out there is true, and he’s owned it 
 and apologized for it and is trying to correct it, and some is not,” said 
Mars  Hill Pastor Matt Rogers, who chairs the church accountability board 
examining  accusations against their leader. 
“If someone went through and dragged out every example of where I’d been  
short with my wife, or rude to a co-worker or done something stupid, and  
trickled that out week after week after week for months, you would have no  
respect for me, either.” 
It’s not that Mars Hill is new to controversy. For years, Driscoll seemed 
to  revel in being outrageous. 
He dubbed yoga “demonic,” and he dismissed mainstream depictions of Jesus 
as  “an effeminate-looking dude” and a “neutered and limp-wristed Sky Fairy 
of pop  culture.” 
He preached that homosexuality is a sin, and he once said anointing a woman 
 as an Episcopal bishop was a step toward voting in “a fluffy baby bunny 
rabbit  as their next bishop to lead God’s men.” He’s joked on stage about 
masturbation  and oral sex. 
In 2006, after evangelist Ted Haggard was caught with male prostitutes,  
Driscoll appeared to blame Haggard’s wife, writing, “It is not uncommon to 
meet  pastors’ wives who really let themselves go. A wife who lets herself go 
and is  not sexually available to her husband ... is not responsible for her 
husband’s  sin, but she may not be helping him either.” 
Driscoll “is Chris Rock,” said former Mars Hill member Rob Smith. “He has  
told us in the pulpit and in private that he admired comedian Chris Rock 
and  learned a lot from him. He’s crass, and he’s an extremely gifted orator 
with a  good sense of the gospel. But he also in some ways has always been a 
street  bully.” 
Smith left the church in 2007, after the first major internal Mars Hill  
scandal, an event that current leaders admit left deep wounds. 
Back then, Driscoll and several dozen elders ran the church. With  
decision-making growing unwieldy, the church changed bylaws to limit power to a 
 
smaller group. 
Two pastors objected, arguing it concentrated authority with little  
accountability and made it easy for Driscoll to steamroll opposition. Driscoll  
fired both men, held a church “trial,” and urged members to shun one pastor,  
leaving some aghast. 
Rogers, not affiliated with Mars Hill at the time, said looking back, “
There  were a lot of wrong things done that shouldn’t happen in a church.” 
But much of the strife remained internal, until after the Mefferd  
interview. 
Plumbing the depths 
As an evangelical Christian and a psychology professor in Pennsylvania,  
Warren Throckmorton had little association with Mars Hill. 
“I’d never been to the church, never heard a sermon, never read a book by  
Driscoll,” he said. 
But after Mefferd’s show, he thumbed through Driscoll’s books, finding 
more  instances of what he considered plagiarism. He blogged about them and 
burrowed  ever-deeper into church practices. When World magazine, a Christian 
publication,  found the church had hired a company to get Driscoll’s new book 
onto the  best-seller list, Mars Hill’s contract with the company wound up 
on  Throckmorton’s blog. 
Church officials had told the magazine they’d hired the company to get Jesus
’  word into as many hands as possible. But that week, church leaders 
quickly  apologized. 
Soon, Throckmorton and other bloggers were posting almost daily, spreading  
the word about many internal church questions. 
“Once I get on a subject, I plumb the depths,” Throckmorton said. 
When World magazine revealed that Mars Hill had tried forcing departing  
pastors to sign nondisclosure agreements, Throckmorton and other bloggers 
noted  it. 
One who had opposed the agreements was pastor and former Driscoll confidant 
 Dave Kraft, who had started attending Mars Hill in 2001 and came on staff 
in  2005. 
By 2013, Kraft was concerned. He heard tales of Driscoll’s bullying, which 
he  said created a culture of fear. Staff turnover was high. 
Kraft was supposed to be Driscoll’s “coach,” the man Driscoll confided in  
about life. 
“Was it his fame, or had he been the same guy all along? I didn’t know, 
but  what was apparent was he was verbally abusive and arrogant and not 
interested in  changing,” Kraft said. “And a lot of people were being hurt.” 
With Driscoll no longer listening to him, Kraft said, he filed a formal  
complaint, arguing that Driscoll’s behavior disqualified him from church  
leadership. He urged church officials to interview specific people and hear  
their stories. Instead the church sent a questionnaire to departed staff 
seeking  feedback. 
Kraft left the church in September 2013 but kept silent until this spring,  
when he shared his story on his own blog. Within weeks, another 19 pastors  
joined him in complaining about Driscoll’s management. 
Driscoll apologized to his congregation for the snowballing problems and 
for  the book issues. He declared his “angry-young-prophet days are over.” 
Still the accusations snowballed. 
Throckmorton wrote about a tithing fund some congregants had believed was  
designated to start overseas churches that instead had been used for regular 
 church expenses. Church officials again apologized but have maintained the 
issue  was a misunderstanding. 
In July, critics unearthed a cached church website from 14 years ago, in  
which Driscoll made dozens of posts under the alias “William Wallace II.” He 
 described America as a “pussified nation” of “homoerotic worship loving 
momma’s  boy sensitive emasculated neutered” men raised by “bitter penis 
envying burned  feministed single mothers” and made other, cruder statements 
about women. 
Driscoll apologized two days later: “While the discussion board itself was 
a  bad idea, my decision to attack critics who were posting there ... was an 
even  worse idea — indeed, it was plain wrong.” 
By then, many churchgoers had had enough. 
Judy Abolafya and her husband had joined in 2000 but quit, disillusioned,  
this spring. Reading the William Wallace rants rattled her. 
“I was shocked,” Abolafya said. “Mark officiated our wedding four days 
after  he had initiated that thread. It really upset me to know that was the 
kind of  stuff that was going on in his head at that time. 
“I’d had no personal beef with Mark Driscoll,” she said. “But his 
preaching  had really done a number on my head. It permeated our marriage, 
affected 
how I  looked at myself as a woman, how I viewed my husband. I wasn’t able 
to view it  for what it was while I was inside that environment, but within 
a matter of days  since deciding we weren’t going back, it was like a cloud 
was lifted. All of a  sudden I could breathe again.” 
For Driscoll and Mars Hill, August and September were worse. 
Former members protested outside Sunday services. An assistant who worked  
closely with Driscoll until 2003, wrote an account of Driscoll pushing her 
out,  shunning her and calling her a heretic because she’d suggested he hire 
someone  to “go toe to toe” with him. 
Acts 29, the network Driscoll helped found that opened hundreds of churches 
 around the world, booted Driscoll and Mars Hill, arguing that associating 
with  them discredited the network. 
Kraft and 21 pastors lodged the new complaints, which Rogers and the board  
are investigating. Driscoll announced his six-week sabbatical. 
Then a group of nine current pastors urged Driscoll to step down, quoting 
an  internationally recognized Christian author and conference speaker who 
called  Mars Hill “the most abusive, coercive ministry culture I’ve ever been 
involved  with.” Within weeks, eight of the nine pastors were gone from 
Mars Hill. 
“If Mark were to acknowledge and own his mistakes, all of them, from the  
depth of his heart and repent and step down for a minimum of sixth months,”  
Kraft said, maybe then Driscoll could lead again. 
Rogers said his board is still investigating but he concedes the church’s  
very future is in the air. 
So many people want Driscoll punished, his return could drive away more  
congregants. But losing a celebrity preacher with Driscoll’s oratorical gifts  
could drive away others. 
“I can’t predict how it’s going to go,” Rogers said. “My prayer is that 
God  will keep the church open no matter what.”  
____________________________________

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