Ex-Hillsong Pastor Carl Lentz Addresses Bombshell Documentary, Where His Marriage Stands

The ex-Hillsong pastor is speaking out.

Carl Lentz is providing an update on his life. The former Hillsong pastor, who was fired from the church for "moral failings" in 2020, took to Instagram on Tuesday to share the status of his relationship with his wife, Laura Lentz, and speak out about the upcoming documentary that will cover his downfall and cheating scandal.

"For the last 3 years my entire focus has been fighting for my wife and my kids, my family has been my only priority," Lentz began of his and Laura's children, Ava, Charlie and Roman. "In order to do that, seeking sobriety and healing had to run parallel with those goals. Honestly nothing else mattered. None of the noise, the lies, none of the half truths that were said about me and or us, mattered."

"All I wanted was to prove to my wife and kids that I could show up for them like I had never done before. Although we have a long way to go, with a lot of work, a lot of honesty and a lot of prayer, we have found ourselves in a beautiful, happy and deliberately honest place," he continued. "So much so that we not only celebrated our 20th wedding anniversary on May 5th but we got to do that in the purest way."

That milestone, Lentz noted, "came through a lot of humiliation embarrassment and heartache." It was because of that feeling that the Lentzes agreed to participate in FX's The Secrets of Hillsong docuseries, which will premiere May 19.

"Part of the healing from that heartache led us to the decision to be a part of a documentary that we do not control, that we don't have any say in and that we haven't even seen yet," he wrote. "We'll see it when the world does. We were not interested in blame shifting or responsibility deflection, we focus on my mistakes and the context for what transpired."

"I can honestly tell you that when you get to a place of honesty and freedom in your life, when you've gone through hell and you realize God is still with you.. It is so freeing," Lentz continued. "It's the freedom I wish for all of the many people that I know that are called by God and wrestle with secrets and the feeling of not being worthy. Trust me it led me to some dark places."

As for what he's doing now, Lentz wrote that, while he's part of "an amazing church that loves and supports us," he's "no longer in ministry."

"I'm not preaching, not overseeing people, my role is to help give perspective and insight where I can," he wrote. "I can also say that what gives me joy and hope is knowing that what I have been through, what I have made it past can help so many others. I can do that in so many different ways, inside and outside the church."

Lentz continued by noting, "I'm not the first man to be in this situation and I won't be the last, but I can promise you I'll be the guy standing with his arms open wide for anyone who's been on this path of addiction and destruction."

"I can say I understand it and my relationship with Jesus in a way that I couldn't from the pulpit. Repentance and life change is proven over time with consistent choices and that's a road I look forward to," he wrote. "It truly makes me wonder if this is what all of this pain was all about."

"From the lows of where I've been, to the grace and forgiveness that God has granted me, I have something to share and so does Laura and my kids," Lentz concluded. "With that said I just want to thank you for even taking a moment to read this. More later."

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