That doesn't sound good.
If you HAVE to have foreend pressure that will move your barrel enough to get 20 MOA change in your point of impact, then your gun is probably (I'd say DEFINITELY but I hate absolutes and your gun might be the one gun in a million that is the exception to the rule) going to have big problems with a changing zero. As the humidity changes with the seasons (and the weather), your stock will swell or shrink slightly, and thus the barrel will be moved slightly.
Did you take your scope off? Is it possible you misaligned the scope putting it back on? Check your rings, and check your scope to be sure nothing is broken. Can you get the gun to boresight (align the crosshairs with the centerline of the bore by centering the bore on a target at 100 yards and then moving the crosshairs to be centered on the same target)? Could the crown be damaged? Is the barrel bent?
It's hard for me to believe that, with a properly set-up rifle (barrel is square to receiver and not bent) and sighting system (scope isn't bent, rings and bases are as spec'd by the factory) you'd be unable to zero your gun at 100 yards and still have plenty of adjustment left in your scope. There's got to be something else wrong and bending your barrel isn't the solution.
I think you really need to check your rifle over, to the point of perhaps letting a qualified gunsmith examine it.