Book Review: The Emotionally Healthy Church by Peter Scazzero
In The Emotionally Healthy Church, Christian author and pastor Peter Scazzero explains how church leaders and congregants can become self-aware, learn how to deal with emotions, and change harmful behaviors. He describes an ideal church in which people seek
to better understand each other by better understanding themselves. Reality falls so short of this ideal, says Scazzero, because church leaders lack emotional health.
Having learned this the hard way, Scazzero begins by explaining what prompted him to cultivate emotional health in his own church. He was caught off guard when, after eight years of marriage, his wife called his ministry into question and threatened separation. Fed up with her husband's inability to address problems in their congregation, she no longer respected his leadership skills and didn't want to be involved with the church. Struggling to save his marriage and ministry, Scazzero was forced to reexamine his attitudes and habits.
It took a crisis for Scazzero to acknowledge the problems in his church. He confesses that he was often too busy, doled out unhelpful advice, and failed to actively listen to the problems of his congregants. He also had personal conflicts with other church leaders that resulted in people leaving the church. It was only when Scazzero learned to acknowledge his personal shortcomings that things began to change in his ministry.
Scazzero explains how many of the problems that plagued his own church also plague churches all over. He paints a grim portrait of the church in general, perhaps embellishing the crisis at times to strengthen his argument. He writes of evangelists who neglect their own families and church leaders who are habitually dishonest about their weaknesses. Scazzero's thesis is that such problems can be remedied only if church leaders learn to tend to their emotional health.
Having learned this the hard way, Scazzero begins by explaining what prompted him to cultivate emotional health in his own church. He was caught off guard when, after eight years of marriage, his wife called his ministry into question and threatened separation. Fed up with her husband's inability to address problems in their congregation, she no longer respected his leadership skills and didn't want to be involved with the church. Struggling to save his marriage and ministry, Scazzero was forced to reexamine his attitudes and habits.
It took a crisis for Scazzero to acknowledge the problems in his church. He confesses that he was often too busy, doled out unhelpful advice, and failed to actively listen to the problems of his congregants. He also had personal conflicts with other church leaders that resulted in people leaving the church. It was only when Scazzero learned to acknowledge his personal shortcomings that things began to change in his ministry.
Scazzero explains how many of the problems that plagued his own church also plague churches all over. He paints a grim portrait of the church in general, perhaps embellishing the crisis at times to strengthen his argument. He writes of evangelists who neglect their own families and church leaders who are habitually dishonest about their weaknesses. Scazzero's thesis is that such problems can be remedied only if church leaders learn to tend to their emotional health.
Related information
- This book covers useful topics such as embracing limits and learning how to grieve loss.
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