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My friend Sarah is co-hosting a discussion on the book Mad Church Disease: Overcoming the Burnout Epidemic by Anne Jackson over at her blog Living Between the Lines.  If you are in any way connected to either full time or volunteer ministry, you should read this book.  It is extremely eye opening!  At any rate, I started writing my commentary to her posting and realized it was going to be way too long to contain in a comment box.  So here’s my take on Chapter 4 which covers External Risk Factors.

I think a major risk factor, when it comes to pastoring anyway, is the mindset of many churches (I almost said ‘small country churches’ there, but I corrected myself, realizing it really exists everywhere) that it is the Pastor’s job to do everything, be at every event, and participate in every activity. If there is a ministry meeting, the Pastor should be there to give input.  If there is a church “work day” the pastor better be right there on the roof washing the steeple.  If there is a Sunday School class party, the Pastor is obligated to attend.  Holidays should be spent having special church services, not visiting relatives he never sees.  (Side note:  If he’s a youth pastor, he should be at every ball game, every recital and every play of every kid in his youth ministry.)  If someone’s cousin’s sister’s brother-in-law’s uncle is in the hospital with gall bladder surgery, the pastor should drop everything he is doing and rush over there, because only prayers by the pastor, in person actually have any worth.  He should work every fundraiser, attend every birthday/Christmas party, be the first one to arrive and the last one to leave.  He’s paid to do this, after all – and he really doesn’t have anything else to do except preach on Sunday and Wednesday.

The expectations aren’t limited to the Pastor though.  His wife better be at every baby/wedding shower, every engagement party, every tupperware/pearl/Southern Living/Creative Memories/Pampered Chief party (and buy something) or you can go ahead and count on there being some evil talk in the church about her.  Many churches still expect her to play the piano, be the president of Women’s Ministries, head up the nursery, teach Sunday School, coordinate the prayer chain, prepare food for every death, and basically do a full time job for the church without a cent of pay.  His children should act like little adults, not children, should never misbehave, never get cranky, and never act unspiritual in any way.

Even when all of this is done, you will still hear comments of “So you are a pastor, huh?  So what do you do the rest of the week?”  “You know, you really don’t act like a pastor’s wife.”  “You know, I really think we should have a (insert various ministries here) at our church.  Why don’t you go ahead and head that up?  You have Friday nights free, right?”  “Well, I’d really hoped your wife and the baby would have come too.”

When is “family time” occuring in all of this madness?  How do you avoid burnout when you may very well be voted out if you refuse to juggle all these balls?  How do you have normal family relationships when the only time you see each  other is at church?

I didn’t grow up ‘in church’ – I was saved as a teenager, so my perspective on family life is much different than my husband who grew up in a pastor’s home.  We spent a lot of time at home and a lot of time with my extended family of aunts, uncles and cousins.  The only evening activities that ever took me out of that circle of family – and then only to a very small degree –  was girlscouts once a month (my mom was the troop leader), dance lessons for a few years once a week, and little league baseball during the summer (my brother and my two cousins were all on the team together).  That was IT! Most of my growing up was spent wandering in the woods behind my house with my brother, riding horses with my Grandaddy, swiming in the little above-ground pool in our backyard, or riding bikes up and down our driveway.  Mama was always there; we had her undivided attention.  Daddy worked a lot, but when he was home, we spent time together – shooting basketball at the top of the driveway, playing tag in the backyard, or just being together.

Already when I compare my daughter’s growing up to mine, I am saddened by how dissimilar they are.  How much of her life has been spent in church nurseries?  How much time has she had to entertain herself during practices of all kinds?  Home is the place we sleep to her – not where we live.  Grammy has an ‘outside’ – we don’t.

When I read some of the testimonies in this book of Pastors who made it a priority to be at home with their families at 5pm every evening my first inclination was to laugh rather bitterly.  And then I stepped back and really looked at the thing.  Is it any wonder so many ministers are plagued with poor health, failing marriages, depression and moral failures?  How do you have a healthy lifestyle when the expectations placed on you by church boards and often even the church congregations themselves are so UNhealthy?

So bottom line:  why don’t we say no?  Why don’t we draw a line in the sand and say, enough is enough?  Because our jobs are on the line.  Because most of us don’t make enough money in the ministry to have a cushion to get us through unemployment (gratefully our denomination has taken great strides to provide a safety net in that area) so we just keep toughing it out.  Because we were trained (like my husband) to think this lifestyle is normal and to be expected.  Because we think if we aren’t working ourselves to exhaustion “for God” we aren’t really loving Him with all our strength.  (That we equate works with love is some screwed up doctrine, isn’t it?)  Because we are riddled with guilt – of our own manufacture and that aimed at us by others – if we don’t.

Don’t get me wrong.  Like Sarah said in her blog, I love ministry – real ministry.  The kind where lost souls are saved, hurting families healed, addicts find deliverance, and the church really is the hands and feet of Christ.  I love being a part of that.  But all this other stuff…all this ‘adding to the law’ that I see in our modern church age….not so much.  I have a mission statement of my own:  I will not sacrifice my family on the altar of church.  Period.

It is a mad, mad, mad world.

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I asked permission from Bro. Keith O’Neal to repost this very timely and very powerful message he had shared with his followers on Facebook. In light of recent discussions with fellow bloggers on the book ‘Mad Church Disease’, I really thought his insights were worth sharing.

When you are a pastor just who do you go to when your personal life is a mess? It is common knowledge that religious people (not true Christ-like believers) can be some of the cruelest people on the planet and that makes it tough to be open or transparent. That has fostered an environment where struggling believers cannot be open or transparent about their personal struggles.

Hypocrisy comes from the word comes from Greek Theater. In ancient Greek plays, the actors held masks in front of their faces to play a part. Of course in the theater everyone knows who the actor is. But in the faith community it is often tough to see who is “masking” the issues of their heart and living a hypocritical life.

James 5:16 teaches us that we should confess our sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. You see, it is not God’s plan that His people be alone during tough times. Members of Christ’s body should be able to count on others for support and prayer during difficult times. This is hard to do when you fear “the system” that is made up of far to many carnal believers who are spiritually immature.

Retribution, ridicule, and rejection, along with gossip mongers and judgmental attitudes, make it near impossible to “come forward” for help. For that reason storing our areas of struggle in the basement of our heart has become a common practice amongst believers because it is out of sight and unseen by those who are and are not close to us.

When you know you will be treated so poorly by so called “Christ-like” believers how do you muster the strength to come out into the open? If you struggle with lust who do you go to? If you have a drug or alcohol problem who do you call? If you are bound by gambling or a host of other vices that grab you by the throat and won’t let you go, just who do you turn to knowing that you will experience the “fall-out” that comes when your “dirty laundry” is available for all to see?

If you are in ministry and you are under personal attack, or your marriage is in serious trouble, what do you do when you know it will cost you your place in the congregation and your standing in the community? Too many times facing the system is just too difficult, thus, “imposed hypocrisy.”

So what do we do and how do we avoid falling prey to this spiritually fatal trap? The choices are rather simple. You can do as I and millions of others have done and try and ignore the fact the basement of your heart is rapidly filling up with “junk” that will ultimately be exposed. Or, you can come clean and allow God into your basement for a thorough cleaning. Both paths take courage, because one means confronting pride and the other involves confronting our people-pleasing tendencies.

I have personally walked both roads and I can tell you that the best option by far is humbling yourself and allowing God access to those things that have you bound. King David’s Prayer of “Create in Me a Clean Heart” (Psalms 51:10) isn’t an easy road to take, but it is the fastest road to right standing with God and to spiritual health.

Be sure of this, the rumor mills will run rampant once you open up. You will need to close your ears to the hurtful words that are spoken by enemies, friends, and yes, even family.

King David, a man I have come to relate to very well, seemed to know about this subject. He wrote these words in Psalms 31:13-18:

13 I have heard the many rumors about me, and I am surrounded by terror. My enemies conspire against me, plotting to take my life.
14 But I am trusting you, O LORD, saying, “You are my God!”
15 My future is in your hands. Rescue me from those who hunt me down relentlessly.
16 Let your favor shine on your servant. In your unfailing love, save me.
17 Don’t let me be disgraced, O LORD, for I call out to you for help. Let the wicked be disgraced; let them lie silent in the grave.
18 May their lying lips be silenced–those proud and arrogant lips that accuse the godly. NLT

Finally, hypocrisy cannot be imposed on you if you can get delivered from pride and approval addiction. Once that freedom comes, God will have free access to the basement of your heart and you can experience freedom from living a lie and masking the real issues that you deal with. That will make that long walk to the judgment seat of God a lot easier to make!

Thank you for your honest and much needed reflections, Bro. Keith!

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