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Posts Tagged ‘clergy’

Pain in the Pulpit

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Suicide, in some church cultures, is still considered to be the unforgivable sin. Some consider it to be the ultimate rejection of God’s ultimate gift. While many other churches don’t go quite so far — the deed may be wrong, but it doesn’t necessarily risk a person’s immortal soul — there’s still a powerful taboo when it comes to this most violent, most heartbreaking act.

Yet even pastors are not immune.

The Religion News Service recently offered a story (published here in USA Today) that tried to explain why pastors sometimes commit suicide. The conclusion, probably, shouldn’t surprise us. Pastors have one of the most stressful, most thankless jobs around. And when things go wrong, very often they have no one to turn to:

A pastor is like “a 24-hour ER” who is supposed to be available to any congregant at any time, said Steve Scoggin, president of CareNet, a network of 21 pastoral counseling centers in North Carolina. “We create an environment that makes it hard to admit our humanity.”

It’s a job that breeds isolation and loneliness—the pastorate’s “greatest occupational hazards,” said Scoggin, who counsels many Baptist and other ministers. “These suicides are born out of a lack of those social supports that can intervene in times of personal crisis.”

ELCA Welcomes Gays

Monday, August 24th, 2009

 

photo courtesy ELCA

photo courtesy ELCA

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America officially voted to “open the ministry of the church to gay and lesbian pastors and other professional workers living in committed relationships,” according to an ELCA press release. The final tally was 559 in favor, 451 opposed.

 

The ELCA is the largest Lutheran denomination in America, with about 4.6 million members.

Want more? Here’s a quick link to the L.A. Times coverage on the matter. And, really, what religion story is complete without a little commentary from the folks at GetReligion.com?