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The Mission of Trauma Recovery

Making the Church a Safe Place for Victims. The Mission of Trauma Recovery. Philip G. Monroe, PsyD Biblical Seminary www.wisecounsel.wordpress.com. What is the heart of the Gospel?. Right theology? Salvation story? . A better answer. Justice Mercy. Gospel power. Isaiah 42

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The Mission of Trauma Recovery

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  1. Making the Church a Safe Place for Victims The Mission of Trauma Recovery Philip G. Monroe, PsyD Biblical Seminary www.wisecounsel.wordpress.com

  2. What is the heart of the Gospel? Right theology? Salvation story?

  3. A better answer Justice Mercy

  4. Gospel power • Isaiah 42 Justice to the nations Releases captives from prison Will not yield to another

  5. And yet…mercy A bruised reed he will not break Guide blind over unfamiliar paths Make rough places smooth

  6. The exchange • Isaiah 61:3 Beauty for ashes Praise for heaviness Now called trees of righteousness

  7. True Gospel and the vulnerable? James 1:27 Religion that God our Father accepts as pure And faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world

  8. Thesis True Gospel ministry DEMANDS care for vulnerable populations How? • Understand experiences • Make the church a safer place for healing

  9. Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse Common Experiences as children AND adults

  10. Factors that impact trauma reactions Background Support Level of Traumatic Response Traumatic Event Environment Resilience Factors Fawcett (2003), as cited by Boecker (2007)

  11. Experiences as a child • Relational confusion • (IDENTITY) • Inability to predict or act toward future • (POWER) • Decreased capacity to express self • (VOICE)

  12. As an adult: TORN! • Depressed…BUT • Panicked and anxious • Distrusting of others…BUT • Self-loathing • Withdrawing…BUT • Dependent

  13. As an adult: TORN! • Emotionally shutdown…BUT • Reliving • Reticent…BUT • Impulsive • Afraid of the future…BUT • Afraid of the past

  14. Anxiety Depression Trauma

  15. Is it all in my head? • Consciousness/thoughts • Prefrontal cortex • Emotion processing • Limbic systems • Flight/fight/freeze • Brainstem

  16. Remember what abuse does Oppresses Objectifies Deceives

  17. Dangers in the church? Parishioners are expected to: • Trust and submit to leaders • Receive exhortation from leaders • Develop intimacy with each other • Receive healing

  18. Making the Church a Safe Place for Trauma Victims Three Things Every Church Can Do!

  19. 3 Things you can do! • Listen and acknowledge • Promote safety • Promote connection to God

  20. Listen and acknowledge If no one remembers a misdeed or names it publically, it remains invisible. To the outside observer, its victim is not a victim and its perpetrator is not a perpetrator; both are misperceived because the suffering of the one and the violence of the other go unseen. A double injustice occurs—the first when the original deed is done and the second when it disappears. MiroslavVolf, The End of Memory, p. 29

  21. Listen and acknowledge • Take concerns seriously • Don’t minimize suffering and losses • Don’t talk too quickly of healing

  22. Promote safety • Integrity in all things • Set and keep boundaries • Encourage voice

  23. Promote a God who understands • Teach about God’s heart for the vulnerable • Teach about how God heals • Teach about how God responds to anxious people

  24. 2 Trajectories • Safety • Remembering • Mourning/lament • Reconnection • Hope • Silence • Forgetting • Forced reconciliation • Isolation • Fear Notice: the goal is not the removal of “getting past, over” or removing all signs of abuse

  25. There IS healing! • Be present • Be watchful for day-by-day healing • Be ready to give (show) your reason for hope

  26. Let your church be known for: Giving scandalous grace to victims even as we give the same to offenders

  27. Resources! www.globaltraumarecovery.org www.dianelangberg.com www.wisecounsel.wordpress.com

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