Occasionally, I like to do link roundups, either of great
websites/blog posts I encounter, or sometimes, YouTube
channels. I always like to share great material I encounter with my blog
audience, especially great post for fellow bloggers. You never truly appreciate
how much work goes into a great blog post until you become a blogger, and so it’s
always good to lend a hand to a great blogger, and send some people their way.
Here’s my favorites for this week:
Are ministers more
depressed than the general population?
A recent post by The Friendly Atheist talks about a recent
study of Methodist pastors by Duke Divinity school. They surveyed and interviewed
over 1,700 pastors from the United Methodist denomination in the US , and found that of the pastors they
contacted, 8.7% had depression to some extent, compared to 5.5 % of the general
US
population.
I wonder if the same holds true for other denominations, and
I have a feeling that it’s probably worse in fundamentalist denominations. My
feeling is probably that it’s due to the fact that many congregations have a
tendency to run their minister ragged, expect too much from him (or her), and
don’t give them a break when they really need it.
Congregations can be very demanding on pastors, people get
too emotionally connected to their minister, look to them to provide for their
feeling of spiritual and emotional well being, and put them on a pedestal. Then
there’s the constant stress, long hours, and middle of the night phone calls
telling them about some disaster or another that has come upon a member of the
congregation, or a friend/family member of a church member.
The last full time pastor at the church I am undercover in
had his share of this. He would often visit members and their relatives in
nursing homes and hospitals, many younger ministers today don’t do that (he was
the son of a pastor, and his father taught him to do that). Then, on top of
being a pastor of a church that averaged about 350 people each Sunday at the
time, he was also one of my town’s 3 volunteer police chaplains.