We have probably heard a story something like this. A loud crash is heard in an adjoining room. Mom or Dad rushes in and finds a child in collapsed chair. The child’s response: “It was already broken when I sat down on it.”
Although the chair was probably not already broken when the child sat down, it certainly was not in shape to handle the weight of the child or perhaps some healthy childlike activity!
This is a good illustration of what has happened to many congregations during the volatile events of the COVID-19 pandemic. The church may have looked good on the outside and was functioning adequately, but the pressures of change brought on by these times exposed latent inadequacies.
In the fall, Pam Durso, president of Central Seminary, and Carol McEntyre, pastor of First Baptist Church in Columbia, MO, conducted a survey of Baptist pastors who had left their congregations between July 1, 2020, and October 17, 2021. For the survey, their definition of “pastor” included everyone in a ministerial role. Their responses illustrate the reality of this situation.
According to Durso and McEntyre, numerous pastors stated that the pandemic served to amplify challenges already present within the congregation and magnified previous conflicts. One wrote, “COVID-19 intensified anxiety levels and intensified dysfunctional dynamics already at work within the congregation.” Another commented, “It amplified everything that was honestly already there to unbearable decibels.” Still another noted, “I have no doubt the underlying contentious decisions of COVID added to the overall divisive nature of my congregation.”
What is happening just below the surface in your congregation? What are those things that “we will get around to addressing at the right time” need to be dealt with right now? Perhaps now that these challenges are exposed, we can acknowledge and deal with them.
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