Church Health and Illness

I heard a striking comment this week. Dr Peter Steinke, in his book Healthy Congregations: A Systems Approach, says that church health and illness are not opposites – they are complements.

Just let that sink in. We live in a time where we believe we have a right to avoid negativity. We parent by intentionally exposing our children to positive messages and shielding them from negative ones. We imagine health and sickness are opposites and believe we can have the good without the bad.

Not so, says Steinke. “Health and Illness are compliments. We need to be ill in order to be healthy.”  A vaccine exposes your body to a small, weak amount of a negative virus, creating a mini-illness. But this illness awakens your system to create T and B cells that will combat this foreign agent in the future. Churches function like this, according to Steinke. Mini illnesses create resilience and the resources to combat future and greater undesirable influences.

If he is right, this is a telling observation. According to Andrew Root in The Pastor in a Secular Age, our historical context has created an expectation where congregation members imagine, and some churches even promise, that the church’s role is to add value to your life by adding Jesus. The consumerist worldview makes the pastor and church something of a provider of religious goods and services that will improve your life. If this church is not a net blessing to your life, then parishioners may vote with their feet and attend elsewhere, or attend less and less, and after a while, perhaps not at all.

Root tells us congregation members come less if church does not look and make us feel healthier, and Steinke tells us that in order to be healthy, a church will, in some seasons, experience illness.

What rang true about Steinke’s comment was its balance. Steinke ‘diagonalises’ health and illness. Some preach the so-called ‘prosperity gospel’, emphasising the blessing and riches of the kingdom of God. Others regularly find another refrain – that Jesus invites us to take up our cross, to serve and sacrifice. Tim Keller labels this the stoic gospel. Neither alone represents a balanced view of life inside the church or the kingdom of God. As Paul puts it, “suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” (Rom 5:3-4)

The next time your church experiences illness or you hear of attendance decline in the Western church, I invite you to reframe it. Might God be allowing a mini-illness that will awaken the church to resilience and greater health in the future? Might God be using death to bring life? No, to bring a new Yes? Do you trust Jesus is building his church in such a way that gates of Hades will not overcome it? (c.f. Matt 16:18)    

Rev David Rietveld

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