If the gun is shooting that high it almost certainly been slam fired. Yes, the spring does have considerable power behind it. Add to that the momentum of the two halves of the gun swinging violently around and you get a lot of energy generated. More than enough to break the stock and bend the barrel upwards, with enough energy left over to do considerable damage to you if the gun flies apart in your hand. Imagine the stock coming apart and the barrel continuing in its arc right towards your face. This has happened in the past.
Theres enough energy released that it can also do more than bend the barrel and break the stock. Slamfires can damage just about any part of the gun. The yoke on the barrel where it attaches to the breech block can get tweaked, screws can get bent or broken, attachment points for everything can get bent, the mainspring can break, etc etc etc.....any one of which in combination with a bent barrel will make the gun shoot all over the place. If its that bad it probably needs professional help.
Slamfires do happen a lot, for various reasons. Improper handling is the main reason. Cocking the gun with a finger in the trigger guard, not holding the barrel while its open, or not fully cocking the gun and releasing the barrel. Weihrauch guns with the Rekord trigger are prone to slamfires when the trigger is tampered with by someone who doesn't know how to make adjustments properly. If its set too light or of the lock tabs are removed or bent the trigger can release without warning.
Don't try bending the barrel as described by cocking it then bendig it further. You'll almost certainly do more damage to the gun. The cocking link, tube, breech block pivots, trigger and just about everything else can bend or distort.