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PACEs in the Faith-Based Community

Trauma-informed churches

In our world today many children are experiencing early childhood trauma. We now know through a lot of research that childhood trauma can affect a child for the rest of their lives. The website ACEs too High (Adverse Childhood Experiences) explains through several articles and research reviews about how trauma in early childhood can affect a child’s behavior and health during childhood and can cause life long problems.

We know that early trauma causes toxic stress on the brains of young children. So much so that the American Academy of Pediatrics has issued a policy statement about this issue. They encourage pediatricians to aid a child who is experiencing toxic stress.

 

This means they will need to not only check a child for the normal ear infections, colds and administer the typical childhood immunizations but they will also need to ask questions about the home life. In essence baby doctors have been told, “Your new job is to reduce toxic stress.”

 

We have schools that are becoming trauma informed schools. They are reaching out and changing the way they work with children with challenging behaviors and teens with out of control behaviors.

They are going from punitive discipline to informed discipline measures. Instead of a strict no tolerance policy they are developing policies of conscious discipline of love and comfort. Without realizing it many schools are now treating children like Jesus did in the Bible, pulling the children up on His lap and comforting them.

In San Francisco at the El Dorado Elementary school administrators and teachers are rethinking ways of resetting their classroom discipline policies. Now in each El Dorado Elementary school there is a “peace corner” where kids can take a break if they need to. Beanbag chairs, books, squeeze toys, blankets, stuffed animals, windmills to blow into, pencils, crayons and paper crowd the peace corners at El Dorado. This is not a time out but simply a place to go to calm down and de-stress.

 

Why am I talking about pediatricians and elementary schools when this is a blog about churches and children of divorce?

Because the adverse childhood experiences that changes a child’s life and for many children add layer upon layers of toxic stress is divorce. While the divorce rate is going down, the co-habitation rate is going up. When a child’s parent’s separate or one of the partners leaves, to the child it is a divorce. It is the death of what they have known as “the family”.

 

Many in the church realm think the only children affected by trauma are children who have experienced severe child abuse, neglect, poverty, or a tornado or some other act of nature, etc. Many of us don’t think we have these children in our churches.

 

I get calls, emails, texts and Facebook messages from ministers who are experiencing out of control and unruly children. They are most often clueless as to what to do or how to help turn a child’s behavior around. The majority of these children are children who have experienced the childhood trauma of divorce.

Along with the divorce they have also experienced things children should never be exposed to. Rarely is a divorce just a division of property and assignment of a visitation schedule for kids. It is a war and many times ugly things happen as a result of this war.

 

Following are just a few situations children I know have experienced. And these are all children are in churches.

  • A 7 year old witnessed his military dad with PTSD throw his mom in the closet. When the mom was finally able to break out, the dad was kneeling with a loaded rifle aimed right at her chest
  • A 6 year old was sexually molested by his sister’s dad
  • An 8 year old girl was touched inappropriately by her birth dad
  • Two elementary age boys watched as their mom hit a hole in the wall because she was so frustrated and angry at the dad
  • A 13 year old saw the sexting on her dad’s phone
  • An 8 year wittnessed his mom having an affair with his dad’s best friend
  • As a preschooler she saw her mom repeatedly get high

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Comments (4)

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You’re right! I agree. And the church needs to go equipped into the highways and byways as Luke 14 instructs and meet them where they are. I’m looking for fellow travelers in Texas or I’ll become the rally post to get the movement started here. The numbers are staggering.

The church needs to go where the traumatized, abused or neglected child is and not expect the church walls to magnetically attract them to the church property.  People make up the church.

I am interested in finding out if there are congregations in Texas, including the Houston area that are either involved as a trauma-informed congregation, want to become one or interested in training in becoming a trauma informed congregation.  They can contact me at ernest@traumainformedministry.com or text me at 214.477.5875.  Blessings!

 
 

Thanks. I think it sums it up.  Docs need to be involved (but there are definitely times when we aren't going to see the kids in the most danger).  Kids who are being traumatized have generally speaking two places where they will be seen -- at school and in the church.  They may not come to the church but the church can always come to them.  My family did not go to church except when I went to catholic mass with my grandpa.  My siblings and I were also sent to bible study at a small local Mennonite church that had a bus that would come by on Sundays and take us there. So kids see resilience factors through school and the church.  The Stutzman's were so kind to me and my brother when everyone else pushed us around and bullied us --- they occasionally (whenever they could) gave us cookies and milk a small but large and very welcome comfort for two lonely and starving children.  Thank you from the bottom of my heart Benny and Ada Stutzman.   

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