The key to preventing conflict in a group – whether it’s your family, your workplace, your neighborhood, or your church – is understanding the role that anxiety plays.
This is what family sytems theory teaches.
In my last post, I mentioned a woman named Ethel who is undergoing overwhelming anxiety in her own life.
Then she comes to church on Sunday … hoping to receive encouragement and comfort … and discovers that the music director has left the church without explanation.
With her anxiety already sky-high, she begins doing what all anxious people do.
She complains … to anyone who will listen.
The church is now in a dangerous place.
There are two kinds of anxiety in a church: acute or chronic.
Acute anxiety is crisis generated. When the giving is falling behind budget, or there’s an influx of new members, or there’s a major shift in lay leadership, acute anxiety appears.
In a healthy congregation, the events causing acute anxiety are acknowledged and addressed so the anxiety is eventually abated. People regain their perspective and are able to control their reactivity.
But chronic anxiety is embedded deep within the church system. It’s a condition that never ends. Even the slightest change in a church triggers reactive behavior.
To obtain relief from this anxiety, chronically anxious members act out their anxiety by making accusations, exaggerating events, and spreading rumors. They’re uncomfortable with the way they feel, and so attempt to displace their anxiety onto others.
Imagine that you’re a member of the church I mentioned above. The music director is no longer on the staff, and Ethel comes to you after the service to complain.
She’s angry with the pastor for not getting along with the music director.
She’s angry with several people on the music team she suspects pushed out the music director.
She’s angry that the music director is gone because she liked both him and his music.
What should you do?
First, let Ethel know that you can’t do anything about her complaints.
Second, encourage her to speak with the pastor or board members and share her concerns with them. In fact, offer to go with her to speak with them if necessary.
Finally, let Ethel know that while she has the right to speak with a leader about this issue, she does not have the right to complain indiscriminately to others in the church.
Because Ethel wants someone to listen to her, validate her feelings, and take away all her anxiety.
But if you agree with her complaints – and throw in a few of your own – you have assumed her anxiety and you are dangerously close to becoming divisive.
It is not divisive to disagree with church leaders mentally.
It is not divisive to disagree with church leaders to their faces.
It is not divisive to disagree with church leaders when talking to a friend or family member.
But it is divisive to pool complaints with others … because people who share gripes are ripe to form an unofficial coalition. And if they can find a leader … or a complainer offers to take on the task … they will start meeting in private.
And then they will put the needs of their group ahead of the church and start making demands.
And then you have division.
Church consultant Peter Steinke writes:
“It is the chronically anxious individuals in the church family who are apt to conduct a ‘search and destroy mission.’ They will not hesitate to impose their wills on others. They make hostages of their gifts, attendance, and participation. They employ their stewardship as brinksmanship. Their ultimate threat is to run away from home – transferring or terminating their membership if an action is not rescinded, a person is not removed, or a demand is not satisfied. These tactics are effective in church families that place a premium on peace and harmony.”
If those who are upset about the departure of the music director would speak with church leaders directly, they might discover the real reason why he left … which might alleviate their anxiety.
But if they don’t engage the leaders, and decide to take matters into their own hands, they’ll just make a mess of things and trigger even more anxiety in their congregation.
If and when those with complaints share their concerns with the church’s leadership, the way the leaders respond is crucial. The key to church health is how the leaders respond whenever anxiety surfaces.
The more threatened the leaders feel, the more the congregation can be disrupted.
The more calmly the leaders manage anxiety, the safer people feel.
According to conflict expert Ronald Richardson, it’s the job of effective leaders to help keep down the anxiety level in the emotional system of the congregation.
And effective leaders do this best by managing their own anxiety.
When my wife and I were first married, we lived behind a church.
One Sunday, we visited that church.
As soon as we walked into the worship center, you could cut the tension with a knife. Seriously.
The pastor stood up and gave announcements for twenty minutes. The church was making changes in their scheduling, and he wanted to explain the changes to the congregation.
Good move.
But he spent so much time explaining that he became defensive. I could sense that his explanation wasn’t working.
It wasn’t long before he was looking for another job.
I don’t know who, if anyone, was the human culprit in that situation. But I do know that unchecked anxiety assumed control of that church. I could feel it … and I was an outsider.
People probably blamed the pastor for things.
He probably blamed some board members and powerbrokers.
But most likely, the leaders allowed anxiety to run amok … and when that happens, chronically anxious individuals either leave the church or try and push out key leaders … usually the pastor.
The lesson is simple:
If you’re a parent, keep the atmosphere in your home calm.
If you’re a boss, make sure and manage the anxiety in your workplace.
If you’re a church leader, do what you can to keep anxiety from spilling out into your congregation.
Because as anxiety goes up in an organization, conflict escalates.
But when anxiety goes down, so does conflict.
What have you witnessed along this line?
How Anxiety Creates Church Conflict, Part 1
Posted in Change and Conflict in Church, Church Conflict, Church Health and Conflict, Please Comment!, tagged anxiety and church conflict, causes of church conflict, church disunity, church division, complaining and church conflict on May 16, 2012| Leave a Comment »
I felt very uncomfortable in church last Sunday.
My wife and I are living in a new area and we’ve been looking for a church home. Last Sunday, we visited a church several miles away that meets in a small converted warehouse. Our daughter was with us because it was Mother’s Day.
There was much about the church that I liked.
They sang some praise songs I knew.
They acknowledged the mothers in their midst and gave each of them a gift.
They showed a cute video about Mother’s Day.
The pastor’s message was biblical and heartfelt.
But something bothered me … something personal.
When I brought it up to my wife and daughter in the car afterwards, they felt differently.
But I still felt uncomfortable … even anxious.
If I made that church my home, I’d remain anxious about this issue. I don’t want to feel the way I do, but I do.
And this is how thousands of Christians feel every Sunday … at their home church.
They feel uncomfortable about:
*pews that are too hard
*theatre seats instead of pews
*the way the pastor dresses
*songs they don’t know
*songs they do know but have sang way too many times
*the style of the music
*the worship leader
*music volume
*the greeting time (“I don’t want to shake hands with people I don’t know!”)
*the pastor’s speaking voice (his accent, pitch, rhythm, clarity, volume)
*the pastor’s stories (too many, too few, too irrelevant)
*the pastor’s points (biblical? relevant? realistic? meaningful?)
*the pastor’s body language (does he smile? stand up straight? wave his arms?)
When I leave a worship service these days, there are many criteria I can use to determine whether I’ll visit again:
*How much like me are the pastor and congregation?
*How well was the service done?
*How meaningful was the music?
*How wisely was Scripture used?
*Did God meet me there?
But increasingly, I find myself measuring a service by how the worship experience made me feel.
And one dominant question rattles around inside my spirit:
How comfortable did I feel in that service?
The more comfortable I feel, the more likely I am to return for a second visit … and eventually stay.
The more uncomfortable, the more likely I am to cross that church off my list and visit another one the following weekend.
Here’s how all this is relevant:
When most people attend a worship service, they want to feel comfortable there.
While they may be open to being challenged intellectually and spiritually, they wish to feel safe emotionally and socially.
If they visit a church once, and it feels comfortable, they may visit again … and again … and again … until they can predict that they’ll feel safe every time they attend.
And if the rest of their family has a similar experience, they will finally make that church their spiritual home.
But there are two wild cards that can mess things up and lead to conflict.
The first wild card is sudden or drastic change that makes them feel even more uncomfortable.
The second wild card is their own personal anxiety that they bring with them to church.
I will discuss both of these wild cards in my next article.
And I hope you feel comfortable until then!
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