I remember it well.
My first “accountability group”.
The church I attended during the mid-90s had just held a men’s conference and all of the men were strongly encouraged to sign-up for a group where we could be gut-level honest with the other members of the group. I was selected as a leader and remember wondering to myself how I was going to pull off leading a group of guys toward honesty and transparency without being honest and transparent myself.
I had done a great job meticulously managing my reputation and I wasn’t going to mess it up by being honest now.
The church assigned five of the conference attendees to my group and we met about two weeks later at a local coffee shop.
I knew most of the guys only in passing and our first meeting was pretty awkward. No doubt all of us had deep dark secrets and feared just how honest we were going to be required to be. I spent most of the first meeting covering logistical information about the group: when we would meet, where we would meet, and what material we would be going through.
Then I pulled out the questions.
If you have ever been a part of a men’s accountability group, you know EXACTLY what questions I am referring to. The ones that start with “Have you spent time with God every day this week?” and always end with “Have you been truthful in answering all of these questions?”
Our meeting went from awkward to downright uncomfortable.
Every list of questions I have ever seen that were written to be used in this context deal with intimate matters of the heart. Questions about personal finances, lustful thoughts, integrity, spiritual growth, and our relationship with our spouse.
Asking these personal questions outside the context of an intimate, trusting relationship most often leads to manipulation and legalistic, moral policing of another’s behavior rather than to a deeper walk with Jesus.
Our attempt at accountability felt awkward and contrived.
My group lasted about six months and gradually the guys quit coming.
Most men’s accountability groups sprang up out of the Promise Keepers movement of the early 90s. Promise #2 of Promise Keepers is:
A Promise Keeper is committed to pursuing vital relationships with a few other men, understanding that he needs brothers to help him keep his promises.
So how did the admonishment to “pursue vital relationships with other men” get dumbed down to meeting with other men and asking a series of probing questions about behavior? Why do women have fellowship groups and men have accountability groups? Have you ever even heard of an accountability group for women?
I think the answer lies in the fact that men tend to be very formulaic in our approach to life. When we hear “pursue vital relationships with other men” and have no real experience at connecting at the heart level with others, it is no wonder that the best we can do is come up with a list of questions to help keep our behavior in check.
Googling “Christian accountability”, I uncovered hundreds of articles that gave Biblical evidence of the need for men’s accountability. Taking a closer look at the verses that were referenced, however, I realized that most of the verses were calling us to fellowship and genuine community, not accountability.
So is accountability not important? Of course it is. But true accountability is a by-product of genuine, transparent community and was never intended to be “stand-alone”.
Accountability that is not grace-centered and that is done outside the context of genuine, authentic community will always seek to serve the legalistic Pharisee in us all. We must come together and connect at our weaknesses and not spend so much time and energy trying to impress others with our strengths. I would submit that for me, my desire to hide behind the mask and not be transparent is in direct proportion to how much I am not believing the Gospel. When I’m not believing the Gospel, I need to believe I’m better than I actually am and do a very good job of constructing all kinds of systems that can lead me to that conclusion.
Because God loves us as we are, we can courageously share our stories and boldly step into the stories of others. This is more in line with the “vital relationships” that Promise Keepers mention in their second promise. When we do this, God uses community in our lives to bubble up our own sin. The closer and more intimate we are in relation to others, the harder it becomes for us to appear to have it all together.
Which gets at the heart of why most of us don’t have genuine, authentic community…we don’t want to be exposed…we think we can do “Lone Ranger Christianity”. The reason we don’t want to be exposed is because at our core, we don’t believe God loves us exactly as we are.
Are you attempting to do “stand-alone” accountability in your life? How has that worked? In what ways do you shy away from genuine, transparent community and why?
Absolutely, GG! What about you?
This is awesome Traylor!
I appreciate that, Lindsey. Glad you could relate.
Tray, I so admire where you are in your walk today. Thank you for your willingness to share your heart, your experiences, your love for the Word, and your knowledge with us. I look forward to reading more!
Thanks, Mom!
Great post – challenging and for pastors/church leaders this should help us begin the discussion on helping men connect authentically and not just doing programs.
I would love to hear more advice for pastors on what we can do to help practically facilitate a level of community like you've described for men in our churches.
Thanks Jonathan!
I think the key is teaching men how to speak the language of the heart and then connect with other men at the heart level. True accountability is leaning into the heart of another and drawing out what God has designed.
I think the discussion must start with changing our paradigm. I grew up in a paradigm where Christians were supposed to have it all together and so we hid behind masks and were not transparent at all. Doing accountability in this paradigm means at some level I am going to be trying to convince the other members of my "group" that I'm not broken and I have my behavior in order.
We must be gripped by the scandal of the Gospel that God loves us as we are. When we truly believe that, we are free to love ourselves and others and experience the kind of genuine, authentic community that God intends.
My good friend and author, Michael Warden, is going to do a guest post soon about men and the language of the heart. Be sure to check back and read his post.
Traylor
Thanks Traylor. Very helpful.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Jonathan McIntosh and Traylor Lovvorn, Traylor Lovvorn. Traylor Lovvorn said: Oops! Forgot link! New post…"We Need More Community, Not Accountability" http://bit.ly/4Fy1bK [...]
Thanks Tray!, good post.
Thanks, Larry! Please pass it along to others.
[...] I vividly remember the day I stumbled upon The Sojourner’s Blog, the personal blog of author and life-coach Michael Warden. As I read his writing, something began to stir deep inside of me. I made contact with Michael and immediately signed up for his 8-week course for men called The Braveheart Intensive. It was during this course that I began to learn to speak the language of the heart and to connect genuinely and authentically with other men. Since Michael has taught me much about living in a larger story and why connecting at the heart-level with other men is so vitally important, I asked him to write a guest post as a follow up to my earlier post on accountability. [...]
Right on! The Bible encourages us to meet together often as believers, to have rich face-to-face relationships, to confess our struggles, to motivate one another to love and good deeds, to help one another to unearth our deepest sins, and to encourage one another to set our hope fully on Christ. This is far more than accountability:
GR8 Ideas, I never saw it like that before, do you have more relationship blogs about this?
Hi, we are Traylor and Melody Lovvorn and we were married for 11 years before sexual addiction and infidelity ripped our family apart. By God’s grace, our family was reconciled in 2008. Hang out here for awhile and you’ll discover how this miracle happened. Learn more about us…

So did you talk to your Tonto's today?