The Josh Duggar Scandal Is Part of a Much Larger Christian Abuse Problem

UNITED STATES
Vice

by Drew Millard
Associate Editor

The story of the Josh Duggar scandal—that as a teen, the 19 Kids and Counting Star molested multiple young women, only to have his father, Jim Bob Duggar, underplay and cover up his actions—is simple. The narratives surrounding it, however, are not, exposing underlying questions about faith, morality, and abuse in the Christian patriarchy movement, a fundamentalist set of beliefs popular among Evangelical homeschooling families like the Duggars.

The scandal is the latest in a series of sexual abuse allegations that have rocked the Patriarchy movement, which holds that women in general should be subject and subordinate to men. According to Evangelical leaders, including Home School Legal Defense Association founder Michael Farris, who has distanced himself from the movement, biblical patriarchy goes beyond even typical Christian fundamentalism in treating women as subjects, discouraging females from voting or attending college and promoting the idea that “unmarried adult women are subject to their fathers’ authority.”

The Duggars, who homeschool their children, belong to an even more specific sect known as “Quiverfulls,” which advocates for large, patriarchal families. Each family member is an “arrow” in a “quiver.” Vyckie Garrison, a former Quiverfull adherent who runs the Patheos blog No Longer Quivering, which acts as a watchdog against the movement, describes the “quiver” metaphor this way:

The whole point of having a quiver full of babies is to… out-populate the “enemy”… and to shoot those many arrows “straight into the heart of the enemy.” And by that, we meant that our children would grow up to be leaders in all the major institutions of our society.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, a central tenet of Quiverfull beliefs is a rejection of any and all forms of contraception. The Quiverfull website contains links to articles with titles like “The Case Against Birth Control,” sells a booklet titled “Does the Birth Control Pill Cause Abortions?,” and includes a link to a now-disabled site that encourages vasectomy reversals. The message is clear: Women ought to have as many children as possible, regardless of their personal preferences.

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