Practicing Compassion in Churchwide Disagreements

Practicing Compassion in Churchwide Disagreements
“Give yourself the gift of finding one person with whom you disagree and commit to having coffee once every few months with each other for the rest of your life."

Your questions [from the MSMC Ministerial Council] have been bumping around in my heart and head for the past few days, and have generated a fair number of reflections and further questions.

In the wider church, and in and across our country, we seem caught in divisive turmoil that has left us emotionally frayed and without a doubt frustrated no matter which side we may fall on.

Unfortunately, these divisive challenges tend to express themselves in ways that would be hard to describe as loving kindness. Rather they track toward defensiveness, blame, escalating polarization, and at times painful dehumanization, and this is experienced on all sides.

Your questions hold a challenging paradox: The need to make a decision knowing that there is no perfect answer that will attend to the deep feelings on all sides of this issue while showing respect and honor…

Lederach, John Paul. “Practicing Compassion in Churchwide Disagreements.” The Mennonite, January 30, 2017.

Originally published by The Mennonite, a predecessor of Anabaptist World.

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