A North Carolina church that has previously faced allegations of
harassment and child abuse is the subject of a new investigation
launched after a 22-year-old man claims he was held against his will for
being gay.
Michael Lowry, who began attending Word of Faith Fellowship Church in
Spindale, N.C., as a child, filed a complaint with police earlier this
year and has met with investigators multiple times over the past week
about the allegations, according to police.
Lowry claims that he was kept in a church dormitory for months in
2011 after telling church members he was gay, according to the Charlotte
Observer. Lowry told ABC News affiliate WLOS that he was knocked
unconscious by church members in Aug., 2011, as they read him scripture
because of his sexuality.
“The pastor said to find out what my darkest secret was, and I was
like, ‘I’m never telling,’ Lowry told WLOS. “They hit my head with fists
and I was out on the floor, they held my hands and feet down and were
pushing on my chest and I could barely breathe.”
The Word of Faith Church was investigated for child abuse and founder
Jane Whaley was convicted of abusing a congregant. The conviction was
later overturned. The church also sued North Carolina’s Department of
Social Services in the 1990s over the child abuse charges, obtaining a
$300,000 award and having the child abuse charges expunged, according to
court records.
Lowry could not be reached for comment by ABC News. The Rutherford
County, N.C., sheriff’s department met with Lowry on Friday to go over
his claims again, according to Sheriff Chris Francis.
“We did a follow up interview, we looked at the allegations against
the individuals, and it looks like they’re part of the church, and then
we did a presentation to the district attorney and the assistant
district attorney on Friday,” Francis said. “We believe there will be a
presentation to the grand jury sometime in the near future.”
Lowry has been subpoenaed to testify in front of the grand jury about
his claims, Francis said. Jane Whaley, a pastor of Word of Faith, told
ABC News the allegations are “not the truth at all.”
Whaley said she and other church members, including Lowry’s parents,
had no idea Lowry was gay until a televised news report which aired last
week. He never told them he was gay when he was a church member, she
said.
“As far as this church being against gays, that’s absurdity. There
are 18 people in this church who have been delivered, they’re not
homosexual anymore, but if they were they could still stay in the
church,” she said.
Whaley said that the room Lowry claimed to be locked in is not able
to be locked from the outside. She said that Lowry came willingly to
stay at the church after his parents threw him out for “rebellious
behavior” and that he stayed in a building used for Bible study.
Whaley pointed out that Lowry has appeared on news broadcasts with a
fellow ex-church member, Jerry Cooper, on numerous occasions to discuss
the allegations. Cooper has been outspoken about his dislike for the
church, she said.
“(Lowry) wouldn’t be saying this except some disgruntled members have
pushed him to do that, one of them being the guy that’s with him and
two others,” Whaley said today. Whaley noted that she still loved Lowry
and Cooper, despite their claims.
Cooper has pressed charges against Word of Faith members for
harassment, and a court date is set for November, Sheriff Chris Francis
said. “I’ve witnessed it, the patterns, the people held down, the loud
screaming, all of it, so I knew Michael’s story was very credible,”
Cooper told WLOS in an interview with Lowry present.
Carol Reynolds, who works for the church, said that their ministry
has grown to more than 800 congregants who do outreach work throughout
the U.S., and in Brazil and Ghana.
Source: ABC News