Redeeming Church Conflicts

Redeeming Church Conflicts Our goal is to encourage Christians to redeem their churches’ conflicts. Welcome to the FaceBook page for RedeemingChurchConflicts.com. Thank you! But oh! And so.

We are the two authors for this page: David V. Edling and Tara Klena Barthel; and we are also coauthors of the book, “Redeeming Church Conflicts“ (first edition, Baker Books, 2012; second edition, Hendrickson Publishers, 2014; foreword by Ken Sande). When we first founded our blog and this public FB page, our goal was to encourage Christians to redeem their churches’ conflicts. Specifically, we hoped to do this in three primary ways: 1) Expand on the topics included in our book; 2) Link to worthwhile articles and resources to help you in your journey of redeeming conflicts; and 3) As appropriate and as time allowed, address questions and topics that you submit to us. What does “as appropriate” mean? Specifically, three things:

While we do invite your questions related to church conflict, we will not attempt on this blog to “counsel” or advise specific people regarding specific conflicted church situations. This means that we invite your contact and questions, but even if we reply, it is only in a generic way. We are not acting as formal mediators for you. Also, we will not usually, publicly, post your comments and our responses to any specific questions. We realize that this is different from most blogs/FB pages, but we also realize (from experience!) that in order for us to serve conflicted churches well, we would need to have far more information than one person’s perspective and we would need to have far more time than either of our schedules currently allow. The bottom-line is that it would be foolish and unloving for us to attempt to intervene in a conflicted church via blog or FaceBook comment exchange and thus, we will not do so. We will, however, carefully read all comments and questions submitted to us and, as we deem best, we will write general posts concerning the various topics.

** — UPDATE AS OF 2019 — **

Please note: although we dearly hope that the resources we have created will encourage and help all readers to redeem their conflicts, especially church conflicts, Dave is officially retired from serving as a Christian mediator, although he is still an active member of church’s peacemaking team. And Tara is focusing more of her time on writing, teaching peacemaking at the college level, and serving her family and local community. Therefore, while she still accepts the occasional speaking request or Christian conciliation case, she declines most invitations to serve. (You can read more about Tara’s speaking and mediation services at “www dot tarabarthel dot com”.) We sincerely hope that the content on our RedeemingChurchConflicts blog and this public FaceBook page provide helpful and encouraging articles. But we do not anticipate keeping them up to date. Tara’s public FaceBook page () does provide regular posts on redeeming conflict, surviving a childhood of neglect and abuse (and related ACES-informed Christian mediation), conflicts involving trauma (including sexual assault), addiction, and other mental health challenges. And these are the topics for which she is most likely to accept speaking invitations and mediation cases. And blessings to you—

SDG
- Dave & Tara

*****

Dave Edling is an experienced Christian conciliator who has worked with many conflicted churches. During his decade of service on the senior staff of Peacemaker Ministries, he participated in over 200 mediation and arbitration cases and worked with nearly twenty thousand Christians engaged in conflicts affecting churches of almost every denomination. Dave holds several graduate degrees in addition to his Bachelor of Science degree from Oregon State University. They are: Master of Arts in Human Behavior, United States International University (now Alliant International University); Juris Doctor, California Western School of Law; Master of Arts in Religion, Westminster Seminary California; and Master of Arts in Biblical Conflict Resolution, Birmingham Theological Seminary. Dave has served as a trustee on the Board of Directors for Covenant College and Westminster Seminary California and has taught in the Doctor of Ministry programs for Reformed Theological Seminary, Mid-Western Baptist Theological Seminary, and Westminster Theological Seminary. In addition, Dave has been a lecturer in practical theology for several other Christian colleges and seminaries. Dave has been married for over forty years to his wife Pat and they have two adult children and six grandchildren. They live near Colorado Springs, Colorado, and Dave continues to minister in the private practice of Christian conciliation by writing and serving through his church’s reconciliation ministry.

*****

Tara Klena Barthel earned her law degree and M.B.A. from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and her B.A. in psychology from Augustana College (Illinois). Currently teaching peacemaking at the college level, Tara delights serving her family as a homemaker, her community as a Rhetoric teacher, and she still occasionally accepts speaking invitations and mediation cases. To learn more about Tara, please visit her website at: www.tarabarthel.com or follow her on FaceBook ().

*****

A more personal greeting from Tara ...

Hello! It is a pleasure to meet you and tell you a little bit about my journey ...

In 1999, I moved from Chicago, Illinois (a city of 3+ million) to Billings, Montana (a state with only 900,000 people—livestock outnumbered humans by 12 to 1!), to serve as the first female senior staff member of The Institute for Christian Conciliation, during its tenure under Ken Sande. At the time, I described myself as a “recovering lawyer” because I had left behind my practice in high net-worth (charitable) estate planning in order to oversee all Christian mediation-arbitration cases, conflicted church-organizational interventions, and the certification and ongoing compliance of all members of the international network of Christian ADR specialists. In 2003, I signed my first book contract (“Peacemaking Women”), gave birth to our first child, and officially began to think of myself as a homemaker—even though my best friend says that anyone who flies 75,000+ miles a year can’t really be a stay-at-home homemaker. (I continued to fly regularly in order to serve at leadership conferences, retreats, and to lead mediation and arbitration cases.) Our second child died in utero in 2007. I was actually filming my first video series (“Living the Gospel in Relationships”) during that pregnancy–getting violently sick between each take, but counting it all joy because we were thrilled to be having another child, having suffered through 8+ years of infertility prior to the birth of our first daughter. Only two years later, our youngest child was born and one of my women’s retreats was simultaneously translated into ASL and videotaped on a tripod–so our family now has an ASL-translated video series (“Becoming Who You Already Are”) that we offer for free to any person or ministry who would benefit from it. In the more recent past, I experienced one of my greatest joys in life–coauthoring “Redeeming Church Conflicts” with my friend, Dave Edling. I also experienced one the hardest things in my entire life–I was sexually assaulted in an airport returning home from serving at a women’s leadership conference. This happened three years before the campaign, so my criminal and civil matters related to it were resolved before this topic began to be in the daily fare of current media. But even though my formal case was resolved, the physical and spiritual impacts of that assault required me to seek out biblical counseling and trauma counseling–and that process required me to face the many sexual assaults and other “adverse experiences” of my childhood. (I encourage you to read the “ACES Study” if you, too, or someone you love, has had difficulties in childhood. Much wisdom to be gained there! I’m a 9/10 ACES.) Sadly, the sexual assault in 2014 was followed quickly by even more suffering—all related to broken relationships among professing Christians whom our family had loved and trusted as friends. It was the hardest season of life our family has ever endured. God is close to the brokenhearted (Psalm 34:18) and really does bind up our wounds (Psalm 147:3). Today I am 25+ years the happy wife of Fred and the mother of two daughters—one in elementary and one in high school. I am a sexual assault survivor and a CPTSD—Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder— survivor, and I keep working on my own growth in grace in these areas (and many more!). I still accept a few speaking invitations each year, and a few mediation cases, but most I decline due to my teaching schedule at the college level, my treasuring our last few years with both of our daughters at home, and my delight in helping the young people in my life to take seriously philosophy of theology, epistemology, apologetics, and worldview. (Teenagers are natural philosophers!) Plus, of course, I am honored every single time one of them talks and prays with me about a living and vibrant relationship with our Savior, Jesus Christ. Other joys in my life include my slow progression through Reformed Theological Seminary’s excellent courses, our family’s efforts to send girls to school in Kibisi, Uganda, and the regular jamming out at the piano as our family sings musicals galore. Thanks so much for allowing me to introduce myself to you! If you ever need to reach me re: a speaking event, writing request, or Christian mediation case, the best way to contact me is through my website (tarabarthel.com) or my public page (). In Christ our Hope—
Tara Barthel

Charitable presumptions toward all. Humility. Gentleness and respect. Kindness. Not quarrelsome. Not resentful, even of ...
11/05/2020

Charitable presumptions toward all. Humility. Gentleness and respect. Kindness. Not quarrelsome. Not resentful, even of those who oppose you. Always listening well.

Able to teach—gently, concisely, and clearly explain your convictions—while being so full of sincere honor and a willingness to learn, that your opponents (neighbors / enemies) would say of you, right after you described and explained *their* convictions:

“YES! That is what I believe. My opponent (neighbor) listened to me well and understands what I believe. She completely disagrees with me and I completely disagree with her. But she has accurately stated my position. Oh. And I am 100% confident in her *love* for me and her commitment to my good.”

Please, God. Help us all to grow in grace and wisdom (pure, peace-loving, considerate, sincere, full of mercy and good fruit). May we all be more irenic.

(And sure. A little moderate enjoyment of that good ol’ clearance candy might not be too bad of an idea either, eh? 🙃)

With love and so much prayer,
Tara Barthel

PS
None of these ideas are my own, of course. If you read the New Testament, check out 2 Timothy 2:24-26 and James 3:17-18. And I am sure a bunch of people could easily and readily post, not only a ton of other Bible passages, but also sources from other religions + worldviews, too.

PPS
I would really like to know the creator of this cartoon so that I could give proper attribution!

Released today! Backordered on Amazon but WTS Books still has copies at an amazing $9.99 price!I’ll put my review from l...
09/17/2020

Released today! Backordered on Amazon but WTS Books still has copies at an amazing $9.99 price!

I’ll put my review from last month below.

Thank you, Darby Strickland!

May God help us all to understand better how to help when someone we care about (especially in our churches!) is facing the heartbreaking, complicated, horrible evil of abuse—

And may our churches repent and change so that they stop fostering environments wherein abuse thrives and abuse survivors are blamed and shamed.

Please, God.

Relying on Christ + in the battle, too—

Yours,
Tara



An Essential Resource for All Christians Who Love, Lead, and Serve Abuse Survivors

After reading this magnificent book by Darby Strickland (foreword by Ed Welch), I not only thanked God that its wise, biblical, and practical content would be available for all Christians to benefit from in years to come, I also sincerely thought to myself: “This is the best book I have ever read on the topic of Christians and abuse.”

To test myself, I went down to the shelves in my personal library that are packed with resources related to Christians and abuse / trauma, and I sat for hours re-reading my outlines, notes, and other marginalia in all of the best, most Christ-centered, most rigorously biblical and yet eminently accessible, books I have read over decades of study on the topic of abuse. My time spent in this review only solidified my initial inclination:

In her book, “Is It Abuse? A Biblical Guide to Identifying Domestic Abuse and Helping Victims,” Darby Strickland provides Christians and their churches with the best resource on the topic of abuse that I have ever read. I could not more highly recommend it.

If you are already versed in biblical teachings related to oppression / abuse, and if you have your own set of memories of working with abuse survivors, you may enjoy simply reading through this book in its entirety. This is well-written, well-organized, and engaging prose that elucidates rich and important content.

But if you are new to the topic of abuse and you need to step slowly into the layers of complexity associated with this heartbreaking reality, you have a trustworthy and gentle guide in Ms. Strickland. She thoroughly explains terms without losing the reader in dry, clinical definitions. She facilitates reflection on new concepts through excellent review questions. And she provides appendices, charts, and other resources for your review and use in the future—in fact, she even specifically encourages her readers to “copy and reuse” the tools in this book. What a heart of ministry!

Built on sound exegesis and wise application of Scripture in abuse situations, Darby Strickland’s book, “Is This Abuse?” is exactly the tool Christians need to stop making the devastating errors that lead to continuing abuse in Christian homes and churches.

Please. Read it. Live it. And then introduce your church leaders and friends to its content, too.

I wish with all my heart that a book on abuse and Christians was not needed, but after decades of serving as a Christian attorney and mediator, I know with complete certainty that it is.

Thank you, Darby Strickland, for this profound gift to all who despise oppression and abuse, and all who delight in the goals you have for this book—to “drive out sin and protect the vulnerable.” Amen and amen.

Tara Klena Barthel, JD MBA: Christian attorney/mediator, author of "Living the Gospel in Relationships" and coauthor of "Peacemaking Women" and "Redeeming Church Conflicts”

God does not intend for marriage to be a place of oppression. Providing practical tools and exercises, biblical counselor Darby Strickland prepares potential helpers to pick up on cues that could point to abuse and investigate them wisely.

Please spread the word about this resource. I am in no way affiliated---i just wish every pastor and church leader (orda...
08/13/2020

Please spread the word about this resource. I am in no way affiliated---i just wish every pastor and church leader (ordained and lay) would understand and apply its content.

** An Essential Resource for All Christians Who Love, Lead, and Serve Abuse Survivors **

After reading this magnificent book by Darby Strickland (foreword by Ed Welch), I not only thanked God that its wise, biblical, and practical content would be available for all Christians to benefit from in years to come, I also sincerely thought to myself: “This is the best book I have ever read on the topic of Christians and abuse.”

To test myself, I went down to the shelves in my personal library that are packed with resources related to Christians and abuse / trauma, and I sat for hours re-reading my outlines, notes, and other marginalia in all of the best, most Christ-centered, most rigorously biblical and yet eminently accessible, books I have read over decades of study on the topic of abuse. My time spent in this review only solidified my initial inclination:

In her book, “Is It Abuse? A Biblical Guide to Identifying Domestic Abuse and Helping Victims,” Darby Strickland provides Christians and their churches with the best resource on the topic of abuse that I have ever read. I could not more highly recommend it.

If you are already versed in biblical teachings related to oppression / abuse, and if you have your own set of memories of working with abuse survivors, you may enjoy simply reading through this book in its entirety. This is well-written, well-organized, and engaging prose that elucidates rich and important content.

But if you are new to the topic of abuse and you need to step slowly into the layers of complexity associated with this heartbreaking reality, you have a trustworthy and gentle guide in Ms. Strickland. She thoroughly explains terms without losing the reader in dry, clinical definitions. She facilitates reflection on new concepts through excellent review questions. And she provides appendices, charts, and other resources for your review and use in the future—in fact, she even specifically encourages her readers to “copy and reuse” the tools in this book. What a heart of ministry!

Built on sound exegesis and wise application of Scripture in abuse situations, Darby Strickland’s book, “Is This Abuse?” is exactly the tool Christians need to stop making the devastating errors that lead to continuing abuse in Christian homes and churches.

Please. Read it. Live it. And then introduce your church leaders and friends to its content, too.

I wish with all my heart that a book on abuse and Christians was not needed, but after decades of serving as a Christian attorney and mediator, I know with complete certainty that it is.

Thank you, Darby Strickland, for this profound gift to all who despise oppression and abuse, and all who delight in the goals you have for this book—to “drive out sin and protect the vulnerable.” Amen and amen.

Tara Klena Barthel, JD MBA: Christian attorney/mediator, author of "Living the Gospel in Relationships" and coauthor of "Peacemaking Women" and "Redeeming Church Conflicts"

(This review is based on my pre-release reading of this manuscript. I received no compensation for this review. You can pre-order this book on www.amazon.com.)

04/29/2020

Ever since my coauthor retired from Christian ADR, I stopped maintaining the www.RedeemingChurchConflicts.com website. I do, however, reread many of the articles that he, Dave Edling, wrote—especially the ones that go beyond our brief book. (I think I have over 700,000 words in my notes from writing with Dave what ended up being a 75,000 word book.)

I particularly love this (long, dense) paper that he and I presented at a conference in 2014. I remember so well the debates and the breakout discussions, and Dave’s unflappable, compassionate, brilliant replies.

I do need to update the title of its link on our site, though, because my sexual assault in the MSP airport was just a few weeks after that conference ... and the retraumatization I experienced at the hands of Christians (who apparently, charitably, had no idea what trauma reactions were) began just a few months later. Exactly on my 45th birthday (in 2015).

So this link SHOULD be titled: “The Rest of the Story of Redeeming Church Conflicts At Least Up Through October 2014–But Watch Out Because Then Tara Is Going To Face Conflict and Suffering and Complete Abandonment in the Church Like You Cannot Believe So WOW! She Is Going To Rethink Every Single Thing She Has Ever Written, Taught, and Prayed About Church Conflict and THEN She Is Going to Start Serving Churches and Survivors in the / Movements and THEN She Is Going To Go Dark Through Five PTSD-Filled Years to See If She Even Survives More Or Less Ever Teaches Or Writes Anything Ever Again.”

Catchy, eh?

May God have mercy on all whom I have ever inadvertently hurt by my well-intentioned, best efforts at the time. But oh, I see now, how lacking my efforts were in my 30’s and 40’s. If I live a few more weeks, we shall see if my 50’s demonstrate even a modicum of greater wisdom, compassion, mercy, and love. Oh. And also insights about the impact TRAUMA has on our “outer man” (bodies - limbic systems - cardiac systems, etc.) too.

For God’s glory and love of both neighbor and enemy—

(Especially enemies in the church.)

Your 9/10 ACES Study friend,
Tara
www.tarabarthel.com

https://acestoohigh.com/got-your-ace-score/

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4617302/

https://redeemingchurchconflicts.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/embracing-church-conflict-the-implications-of-doctrine.pdf

“There are people in the church who have been in the church so long they have forgotten they are hypocrites.”Sadly, unbe...
04/16/2020

“There are people in the church who have been in the church so long they have forgotten they are hypocrites.”

Sadly, unbelievers on the membership rolls of every church are the norm rather than the exception. The church is a mixture of true believers and those who may think they are believers but actually are hypocrites. (See the frightening words of this reality at Matthew 7:21-23.) These are the friends needing our greatest care, mercy, and love … they need the Gospel for the first time! Repeated denial of ones sins is clear evidence of unbelief going beyond spiritual blindness. We would expect a true believer to actually “see” their sins when mercifully confronted about them by a friend and to repent and do everything possible to change. That is clear evidence of belief and faith. Repentance and confession is the norm for a Christian. Everyday life in the kingdom is reflected by one simple character trait: humility.

I have been in too many churches where conflicts go on and on because there is no repentance, no confession, and no humility. I fear at the heart of those conflicts there are people who are unregenerate but who think they are Christians.

The Bible teaches us that sin is something that is spiritually discerned (see, for example, Romans 1:18-32), and that too often we expect people in the church to quickly change and turn from their sin when, in fact, they simply cannot because they have no ability for spiritual discernment. In many church conflicts what is most evident is a level of spiritlessness that defends sin rather than discerns it. Authors Tim Lane and Paul Tripp put this far more delicately and articulately when they say in their wonderful book How People Change:

“The average Christian defines sin by talking about behavior. Beneath the battle for behavior is another, more fundamental battle — the battle for the thoughts and motives of the heart. Everything we do is shaped and controlled by what our hearts desire. As much as we are affected by our broken world and the sins of others against us, our greatest problem is the sin that resides in our hearts. That is why the message of the gospel is that God transforms our lives by transforming our hearts. Lasting change always comes through the heart. This is one of Scriptures most thoroughly developed themes, but many of us have missed its profound implications” (pages 14-15).

I strongly believe that one of those profound implications is the fact that the heart of an unbeliever is unable to spiritually discern sin. Thus, we have no right to expect change. What we ought to do instead is prayerfully and lovingly bring our friend to the Gospel in such a way that the truth of their behavior convicts them of their inability to spiritually discern. In effect, we are saying:

“Even though you have professed Christ as your Lord and Savior you seem to be demonstrating that your passion and desire for _______________ is more important and stronger than your love and passion for Jesus Christ. Your behavior is one condemned by Christ as sin, yet you persist in it. Will you please allow me, as your friend, to help you to see the Gospel and all of its implications so that you can have the sure foundation of a real relationship with God and a real relationship with your loved ones (including me)?”

Jesus Himself spoke directly to this issue in Luke 6:

“Why do you call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do what I say? I will show you what he is like who comes to me and hears my words and puts them into practice. He is like a man building a house, who dug down deep and laid the foundation on rock. When a flood came, the torrent struck that house but could not shake it, because it was well built. But the one who hears my words and does not put them into practice is like a man who built a house on the ground without a foundation. The moment the torrent struck that house, it collapsed and its destruction was complete” (Luke 6:46-49).

Church conflicts are like floods. Will your house, your church, stand or fall in the torrent? Does the foundation of true belief reside in every member’s heart? You will certainly know as soon as the flood of conflict hits.”

(Excerpt from Redeeming Church Conflicts by Dave Edling & Tara Barthel)

Dr. Bob Kellemen, Ph.D., Executive Director of the Biblical Counseling Coalition, Author of Equipping Counselors for Your Church “In my roles as a biblical counselor, pastor, seminary profess…

Just over two years ago, I had the great privilege of endorsing Pastor Curtis Heffelfinger‘s book, “The Peacemaking Chur...
04/10/2020

Just over two years ago, I had the great privilege of endorsing Pastor Curtis Heffelfinger‘s book, “The Peacemaking Church.” And due to at least three conflicted churches that I am serving right now, I thought it would be a good time to dig it up again for your consideration and review.

I will copy below my entire formal endorsement—but I wanted to draw your attention to one specific excerpt from my review, because it seems particularly on-point these days ...

“Thanks to Pastor Heffelfinger’s biblical scholarship, we also learn many new cultural, geographical, and lexical nuances of key peacemaking passages of Scripture. I particularly appreciated the careful analysis given of what I consider the most common and insidious way that seemingly mature Christians ‘thrust swords of words’ (Prov. 12:18a) into their vulnerable brothers and sisters in Christ ...

No, the most common and destructive ‘sword words’ are not hateful words or profane words. In point of fact, they are not even words at all. Instead, they are the selfish, rash, loveless shutdown tactics of ‘withdrawal, the cold shoulder, and passive aggressive silent treatment.’ The young people these days call it ‘ghosting.’ The Bible calls it graceless, faithless, lovelessness (the exact opposite of Exodus 34:6-7).”

If you are currently ghosting someone; if you are an ordained or lay leader in a church that is currently ghosting an entire family; if you have chosen the (temporarily) “easier” route of avoidance and denial ... please consider reading “The Peacemaking Church.” And even more importantly, please read all of the Scripture passages that it contains—and then pray for grace, faith, and courage to believe God’s Word and obey it.

This I pray!

- For the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace (Ephesians 4:3)

- For the precious oil rolling down and even saturating Aaron’s beard because so many brothers and sisters are striving to outdo one another in humility, repentance, confession, forgiveness, restitution ... love (Psalm 133:2)

- For God’s glory and our good

Your hopeful friend,
Tara Barthel

***

TARA BARTHEL'S ENDORSEMENT OF "THE PEACEMAKING CHURCH" (by Pastor Curtis Heffelfinger, Foreword by Ken Sande)

On a broad scale, Pastor Curtis Heffelfinger has given the Bride of Christ a great gift with his wise and winsome book, “The Peacemaking Church.” His application of biblical truth, with prayerful, humble reliance upon Christ alone, is exactly what Christians in conflicted churches need. In fact, there is so much eternal hope in these pages that I believe “The Peacemaking Church” will be of great help to Christians even before their churches descend into destructive conflict.

I only wish that this book had been available for the first twenty years that I served as a professional Christian mediator! It definitely will be required reading for my conciliation clients going forward.

My strong recommendation goes beyond a mere professional analysis, however, because I first read “The Peacemaking Church” soon after my family and I endured what can only be described as the worst church-based relational breech in our entire lifetime of faithful church membership. My emotional wounds were raw and I was quite guarded when I began this book. But by the end of “The Peacemaking Church,” my eyes were gently lifted up and confidently fixed back on the eternal hope and assurance of our True Home to come.

Pastor Heffelfinger not only encouraged me to recommit to a lifetime of ministry as an “ambassador of reconciliation” (2 Cor. 5:19-20), he also refreshed in my mind a number of biblical reminders to “reject, hate, despise, deplore, and abhor strife and discord among the brethren“ (Prov. 6:19b).

- If you are exhausted by church conflict and tempted to give up on any efforts to pursue genuine peace, I am confident that “The Peacemaking Church” will motivate you to keep praying and striving for unity.

- If anger, bitterness, and wrath have gained evil footholds in your conflicted church (or ministry, family, business—really, any corporate entity), “The Peacemaking Church” will help you to slay those “giants which lurk in all our hearts.” (to use Pastor Heffelfinger’s words).

Thanks to Pastor Heffelfinger’s careful exegesis and relatable, real-life examples, everyone from a new Christian to an experienced mediator will be refreshed with a deep vision and passion for unity in the Body of Christ.

Thanks to his biblical scholarship, we will also learn many new cultural, geographical, and lexical nuances of key peacemaking passages of Scripture. I particularly appreciated the careful analysis given of what I consider the most common and insidious way that seemingly mature Christians “thrust swords of words” (Prov. 12:18a) into their vulnerable brothers and sisters in Christ ...

No, the most common and destructive “sword words” are not hateful words or profane words. In point of fact, they are not even words at all. Instead, they are the selfish, rash, loveless shutdown tactics of “withdrawal, the cold shoulder, and passive aggressive silent treatment.” The young people these days call it “ghosting.” The Bible calls it graceless, faithless, lovelessness (the exact opposite of Exodus 34:6-7).

Whatever the title for such peace-faking and peace-breaking, we all know the result: disunity. Brothers and sisters, this should not be the case! Let us listen to Pastor Heffelfinger and he calls us to listen to God’s Word ... and let us do the hard, prayerful, sacrificial work of actually pursuing real peace (Ps. 34:14, Heb. 12:14).

Thank you, Pastor Heffelfinger, for this important contribution to the biblical peacemaking literature. You are correct that, “Unity is an exceedingly fragile thing.” But thanks to “The Peacemaking Church,” all Christians will be better equipped to pursue and protect the “unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” (Eph. 4:3).

Tara Barthel: Attorney, Mediator, and Author/Coauthor of Redeeming Church Conflicts, Peacemaking Women, and Living the Gospel in Relationships

Peacemaking Church

03/26/2020

When Using Criminal or Traumatic Offenses as Illustrations of Forgiveness by Brad Hambrick | Mar 24, 2020 | Counseling Reflection | 0 comments This article is one post in a series entitled “When Talking about Forgiveness.” Let’s start this reflection by admitting something – we like to use e...

02/29/2020

I have always believed that the highest character trait of a Christian is humility. There are many statements in the Bible that support my position. Here are just a few: This is the one I esteem: h…

02/04/2020
“Faithful shepherds protect their flocks not only from harmful outside influences but from the self-serving among the sh...
02/04/2020

“Faithful shepherds protect their flocks not only from harmful outside influences but from the self-serving among the sheep.

Many congregations have experienced the intimidation of bullies within their midst when leaders fail to take responsibility to shepherd the flock. It is often the strong-willed, outspoken, highly opinioned folk who fill the void.

There will always be leaders—the issue is whether they are the leaders called and gifted by God to shepherd his flock or those who push themselves forward so that they can push others around.”

(Redeeming Church Conflicts at page 17)

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