The
subject of church health is a rather new genre of writing and a recent theme for many of us. My church health web site has
been online almost three years now but only had counters for each page and the site as a whole since January 2003. Since
then, I’ve collected the number of hits for each page by month and figured the sum total of each for the year.
Recently,
I assessed my collected data for the various pages on the Body Anatomy Church Health Development Model web site. I looked
for which pages received the most and the second most hits for 2003 and then for 2004. The same was done for each month. The
patterns within each year for an individual month in connection with the others were discovered. Significant increases in
the number of hits a page received from one year to another were found. How often various pages were repeatedly recipients
of the most or second most hits from month to month were noted.
I observed and interpreted the statistical data as a whole,
of each year, and of each month along with their various relationships. The following implications arise from my observations
and interpretations of the collected information from 2003 until now.
What I found gives us a cyberspace view of who is probably
looking into this theme the most. There is a high probability that the largest number of hits come more from clergy than laity
This may hold true for other church health related sites as well.
This cyberspace view of church health also says where people’s
interests are. These themes point us to issues needing to be addressed by denominational leaders and others. Many para-church
groups focused on clergy and church health have been around for several years while others have popped up all over the country
and in cyberspace. The issues calling for help include the following:
Informing clergy and their families about what is available
for them and their churches in crisis,
Informing
clergy as churches concerning opportunities for education in church health,
Making available and accessible training
in boundaries directly related to the life and work of ministry for clergy and their families,
Offer intentional and adequate
help for healthier clergy marriages and families,
Creating educational opportunities concerning mental health ministry for clergy,
Remove the disbelief
concerning church pathology and the epidemic of ministry leader fallout for both clergy and laity
Guide and encourage clergy to
lift up the importance of godliness for healthy churches; and
Call for more laity to get involved in the pre-ceding subjects.
Thank God for the laity who are searching in these areas, but more are needed.
When I
wrote this article, there around 15 clergy/church health ministries with web sites listed on my Emergency/Triage page. I sent the above article to the leaders of these organizations and seven responded. All of them
agreed that they are seeing in their ministries the same dynamics and issues raised above.
Those who responded included the following:
1. Rev. Kim Wenzel, the director of “Smoldering Wick Ministries”
in Colorado.
2. Mark M. Marxhausen, Executive Director, Pastor in Residence in
Virginia Beach, VA
3. Robert Clark, Ex. Director of the Kairos
Institute and founder of the Clergy Consultation Services in Madison, New Jersey. He is one of the country’s leading
authorities on spiritual psychotherapy.
4. Dr. Bimler, the executive director of “Wheat
Ministries” in Itasca, IL. This is an independent Lutheran charitable organization that provides support for new church-related
health and hope ministries.
5. Rev. Timothy J. Fangmeier
who is a Congregational/Clergy Coach & Consultant. He lives in NC is
Staff Associate with Wheat Ridge Ministries working especially in the area of the care and development of church leaders Years
ago, he consulted a church in Goldsboro, NC.
6. Revs. Pauline & Arthur Kennedy from England the
directors of Bullied & Abused Lives in Ministry: A Christian Support Network for Damaged Ministers
International and Inter-Denominational”
Additional comments from those who responded included the following
Few denominations take the risk of abuse seriously enough to have any kind of anti-bullying policy in place or to
give it any time during ministerial training.
Many of the items that you have listed
were never taught at Seminary.
Many clergy and their families have no idea that there is help in times of need.
Many exited pastors feel like they're the only one who this has ever happened to.
Most people who contact us after visiting our website are in the midst of some kind of crisis
because of bullying, and their experiences have consistently highlighted the immense destructiveness of bullying.
Most
denominations continue failing to take destructive bullying seriously or to offer constructive support - though there are
occasional glimpses of encouragement on this.
Getting denominations to take the items you have listed
seriously is another big issue.
I am disappointed in the lack of concern for others
who are needing help fast. Christian organizations seem to be racing forward on the road to Jericho not even seeing the hurting
on the side of the road.
Additional issues imbedded but not specifically mentioned on your list are: 1)the
state of physical health (obesity, high blood pressure, etc) in the clergy ranks, and 2) issues specific to challenges of
being a clergy spouse.
Seems like a good curriculum for a church health institute....
Since
07/09/07
This page has been visited.