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Just as Jesus healed people struggling with mental, emotional and physical ailments,
United Methodists reach out to their sisters and brothers who seek
healing. In this series, United Methodist News Service shares stories of individuals and congregations tackling the challenges of mental health through a variety of ministries.
A UMNS Report
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
7:00 A.M. ET July 12, 2013
Almost 50 percent of United Methodist clergy who answered a survey
conducted by the United Methodist Board of Pension and Health Benefits
said their jobs stressed them out. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
Answering God’s call shouldn’t be bad for your health.
But for about half of all ordained United Methodist clergy, it is.
Close to 50 percent of United Methodist clergy who answered a survey conducted by the United Methodist Board of Pension and Health Benefits said their jobs stressed them out.
Five percent suffer from depression,
26 percent report at least some functional difficulty from depressive
symptoms and 47 percent experienced hostility in their congregations.
To show some perspective, for matched U.S. adults used as a
benchmark, only three percent suffer from depression and 12 percent
report difficulty working, taking care of things or getting along with
others.
The survey also found United Methodist clergy have a higher
percentage of physical conditions including obesity (40 percent), high
cholesterol (51 percent), borderline high blood pressure
(prehypertension) (11 percent), asthma (17 percent) and pre-diabetes (9
percent).
Emotional and mental health issues
exacerbate physical conditions, said Kelly Wittich, manager of health
and wellness at the Center for Health, United Methodist Board of
Pension and Health Benefits.
“If you look at our disability claims for clergy, you see that mental
health ends up being a much higher reason (for resigning) than in an
average workplace setting,” she said. “These are mental health issues
extreme enough to keep people from continuing.”
It’s just the job
Some of the stress risks are systemic, Wittich said. A report by the Church System Task Force in 2011 identified 13 key factors that differentiate between healthy and unhealthy individuals.
Stressors that seem to come with the job include trouble maintaining
a healthy work/life balance, frequent appointment changes and
relocations and existential burdens of ministry — feeling obligated to
carry the weight of others’ emotional and spiritual burdens or
overwhelming needs.
A built-in stressor is The United Methodist Church’s itinerant
system, which moves pastors from church to church in their conferences.
“Think of how stressful it is when you have to move … to leave a
support network, routines and have to start from scratch,” Wittich
said.
Other stressors range from striving to live a healthy lifestyle while
surrounded by high-caloric, fat-saturated potluck dinners to problems
with living authentically and failing to live according to deeply held
personal values and beliefs.
Compassion fatigue
“The very acts that get clergy rewarded in their ministry can also be
the very things that wreak havoc on their family, personal, physical
and spiritual lives,” said the Rev. Sheri S. Ferguson, executive
director of the North Alabama Annual (regional) United Methodist Pastoral Care and Counseling Center.
“The
very acts that get clergy rewarded in their ministry can also be the
very things that wreak havoc on their family, personal, physical and
spiritual lives.”
—The Rev. Sheri S. Ferguson
Ferguson cites one study of psychologists that points to four factors
that contribute to burnout: being young, having low income, engaging
in little personal psychotherapy and feeling overly committed to
clients.
“These factors certainly apply to clergy,” she said.
Ferguson said clergy could do specific things to prevent compassion burnout and mental health problems.
“Clergy need support/accountability systems where they can talk about
the demands of ministry in a confidential environment,” she said.
Other healthy tips include having hobbies, nurturing humor and
working to keep a balance between work and family. She also suggests
clergy should participate in worship outside of the place where they
are the leader.
Game changers
The Church Systems Task Force report identified four areas that, if changed, would have a positive impact on clergy health:
- Adjustments to the itinerancy and the appointment systems
- Emphasis on a good match between the clergyperson and the congregation; acceptance and use of clergy gifts and graces
- Spiritual support for the clergyperson from someone other than the district superintendent
- Revisions to the district superintendent role to better support clergy
In addition to a change in the “system,” congregations also need a paradigm shift in their expectations for their clergy, Ferguson said.
“I don’t think a lot of the folks in the pews realize or think of
their clergyperson as a human who has the same vulnerabilities as all
of us,” Wittich said.
“I
don’t think a lot of the folks in the pews realize or think of their
clergyperson as a human who has the same vulnerabilities as all of us.”
—Kelly Wittich
Some tips for congregations include:
- Make sure your clergyperson is taking time off for Sabbath and
vacation. Don’t schedule meetings every night of the week. Give pastors
time to spend with their families.
- Welcome new pastors and their families. Be the emotional support for them instead of just expecting it from them.
- Handle conflicts in a loving, Christian manner.
“This is a long-term process, and it really requires the whole
denomination to stand up and take notice and do something about it,”
Wittich said. “You want more for your clergy and congregants than for
them to not to be depressed but (also) for them to be emotionally
healthy. It’s moving from wanting them to survive a mental or physical
health issue to wanting them to really thrive.
“Can you imagine if every leader of the church were emotionally
thriving, what an impact that would have on the mission of the church?”
*Gilbert is a multimedia reporter for the young adult content team at United Methodist Communications, Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.