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Firing of pastors roils Mars Hill Church

The recent firing of two pastors is causing turmoil at Mars Hill Church, Seattle’s largest congregation.

About a month ago, Paul Petry and Bent Meyer were fired from their staff positions.

Some Mars Hill members contend the pastors were removed because they challenged proposed changes in church structure that those members believed would consolidate power in the hands of top church leaders.

A current church leader disputes the interpretation, saying the church intends to share power, not hoard it.

The firings and changes to church bylaws, passed last month, have prompted lengthy exchanges in an online members-only church forum.

Mars Hill leaders said in forum postings that one fired pastor was removed, in part, for “displaying an unhealthy distrust in the senior leadership.” They said the other was removed for “disregarding the accepted elder protocol for the bylaw deliberation period” and “verbally attacking the lead pastor” - charges the fired pastor denied, the leaders added.

Petry also was removed as an elder - a position of authority, though not necessarily a paid one; Meyer remains a church elder but is on probation.

Petry and Meyer declined to comment.

Mars Hill has grown exponentially since its founding in 1996 and today claims about 6,000 in Sunday attendance at its five campuses.

Because of such growth, its bylaws, which outline how the church is organized, have to be rewritten once a year, according to an online posting by church leaders in the members’ forum.

In the forum, some members said the bylaw changes don’t address what they’re supposed to - organizing multiple campuses - and instead put too much power into the hands of only a few pastors. They lamented the loss of Petry and Meyer and challenged their firings. And some members questioned whether dissent was being quashed and whether a “culture of fear and elitism” was being perpetuated.

Some members apparently had their posting privileges to the forum revoked.

Church leaders said the bylaw changes were made because the governing structure of the church had grown so large that it was impractical to have that many people governing its affairs.

Lead Pastor Jamie Munson, in a post on the members’ forum, said “the intention is to not hoard power but rather share it.”

For example, he said, Pastor Mark Driscoll, the church co-founder, was giving up his titles of lead pastor and president, and instead now holds only the title of preaching pastor. Driscoll is a former Seattle Times contributing Faith & Values columnist.

“We have made many organizational changes over the last six months and our remaining 29 elders stand behind the direction and decisions of Mars Hill Church,” Munson said in a comment e-mailed to The Seattle Times on Saturday. “Removing any staff member is unfortunate, and we are actively seeking to shepherd our church body through their understanding of this.”

Mars Hill has campuses in Ballard, Shoreline, West Seattle, Wedgwood and Redmond. It plans to open another campus in Belltown at the site of the former Tabella Restaurant & Lounge.

The next goal, Driscoll said in a sermon earlier this year, is to attract 10,000 worshippers on Sundays.

Janet I. Tu: 206-464-2272 or jtu@seattletimes.com

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