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  Church and Society Magazine
Encircling Care: A New Vision for Congregational Caregiving
 
             
 

Introduction by Patricia K. Gleich

View this issue's table of contents.

 
             
  No volume of this size can do more than begin the process of describing the varying and complex images of caregiving: the warm and spiritually led volunteers who gather around someone who needs an assist; the family caregivers who put aside their own immediate needs to lovingly support a spouse or partner, parent or child through difficult times; the congregation that must first look within and accept the vulnerability of its own members before beginning a caregiving ministry within its own walls.

These few pages can impart only a portion of the thought and experience that under-girds the caregiving movement. It can share only a few of the examples and models that have emerged.

Caring and caregiving are concepts that are at once both simple and universal, varied and intricate. The simplicity derives from the very human and elemental need to care and be cared for. The complexities arise from that same core and the multifaceted dynamics of the relationships between the people involved.

In the first section, The Changing Context of Caregiving, we see that family caregiving largely affects women. We read that changing demographics in both church and society have created an environment in which new modes of compassionate care are required. We then learn of the evolution of care team ministry, from tentative and scattered responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic to a widely accepted new model for congregational caregiving for persons facing a wide variety of needs.

Moving on, we are privileged to be able to reprint "Congregational Caregiving" by Earl E. Shelp and Ronald H. Sunderland (chapter one in their foundational work, Sustaining Presence: A Model of Caring by People of Faith, Abingdon, 2000). The authors' premise is that "to be church requires caregiving" (p. 11). Nevertheless, the contemporary church often finds itself challenged to provide more than pastoral calls, prayer and the occasional covered dish when members find themselves in situations of short-term health-related crisis. When the condition becomes chronic and long-term, few know how to respond. Increasingly, parishioners turn to paid professionals rather than to their faith community. While there are cultural reasons for both members' reluctance to ask for help and congregations' hesitation to offer it, the authors suggest that the underlying problem is that most congregations do not have in place a ministry specifically designed to respond to the needs of the people who are chronically ill or severely disabled among their membership.

Growing out of their experience of developing congregationally-based care teams in Houston, in response to the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s, the authors go on to develop a significant rationale for an inclusive care team ministry in response to a variety of life-challenging needs. They write,

Congregations in most instances are not gifted to meet all the needs of a member or family in crisis. But, without exception, congregations are gifted to be a sustaining presence in solidarity with broken people, bearing their burdens with them …. We are excited about and in awe of the care that congregations give when their gifts for caregiving are discovered and nurtured. (p.26)

The balance of their book and the balance of this issue of Church & Society serve to tell the story of and provide resources for congregational care team ministry.

Thus, Biblical and Theological Resources for Care Team Ministry constructs a biblical and theological framework for the Christian call to care through a program of congregational care teams. The importance of the "spiritual center" in one's sense of health and wholeness, particularly when the role of caregiver suddenly becomes a major part of one's life pattern, is also discussed. While we learn ways in which caregiving can take a toll on the caregiver, we also find suggestions for both personal and congregational support—support that can extend the energy and commitment of both primary caregivers and the care team volunteers who assist them.

As Shelp and Sunderland suggest, congregations are not always prepared—theologically or organizationally—to provide intentional and compassionate care to their members with chronic health needs. As we read in the story of McKinley Memorial Presbyterian Church ("Learning the Ministry of Care" by Laura Aull Johnston), persons who have spent their lives thinking of themselves as strong, capable and called to give to and care for others, the shift to needing support and assistance is psychologically very difficult. Likewise, a congregation that has focused its ministry outward has challenges when it tries to provide a more intentional program of care of its own members.

Some 50 years ago, sociologist, Dr. Talcott Parsons, suggested that there was a self-assumed negative connotation surrounding the state of not being well (The Social System, Free Press, 1951). Those who are in need of care feel or are seen as helpless or incompetent or even as having abdicated or evaded societal responsibility. Such deeply held perceptions lie at the core of the challenges congregations face.

How does all this impact congregational caregiving? It alerts congregations to ready themselves for the eventuality that some members will need caregiving, to be certain to integrate a simple mechanism for access to the care team into the other ministries of the church, and, to recognize that care team members may have to take initiative, gently, to identify persons among their members who might benefit from the program of intentional caregiving. It also reinforces the need for those who become care partners to be treated with respect and dignity, assured of their continued viability and autonomy through both language and team actions.

While some congregations struggle, others have met the challenge of organizing and providing care through a variety of means. Through the Stories of Congregational Caregiving provided here, we glimpse many facets of care team ministry—in urban centers and semi-rural communities, in congregations large and small, in collaborative programs that bring the resources of several congregations together, in programs that address a particular disease and those that prepare teams to be flexible.

Building on this montage, the next section The Presbyterian Care Team Community: Encircling Care outlines the emerging denominational emphasis on the care team approach to caregiving ministry. The method as well as specific materials and resources that congregations can access to help with care team development are described.

Finally, to fully complete the circle of care requires something more: vigilance and the historic Presbyterian sense of social justice. At times, and for some, the most effective way to demonstrate care is to serve as an advocate. Where Do We Go from Here? includes basic information for those who are willing to become advocates, as well as health- and caregiving-related topics that will need our attention and advocacy in the months and years to come.

Welcome to this issue of Church & Society—and welcome to the ministry of compassionate caring through care team ministry. We hope that these materials stimulate your thoughts and creativity, and move you to expand your personal and congregational approach to caregiving.

 
             
 
  Patricia K. Gleich was appointed to the position of associate, Office of National Health Ministries in Fall of 2001. She has been involved in both direct care and program administration in the fields of public and mental health and health education, as well as human rights. Pat holds degrees in English (AB) and Counseling Psychology (M.A. and EdS.) She has completed additional graduate work in Medical Sociology.  
             
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