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A Framework for Social Healing
Andrew Sears
Introduction
This material provides an introduction to a vision of “Social Healing” as a
way to transform ourselves, our churches and our society to address
injustice and bring the Gospel to our communities and the world.
Hopefully, this material will help us to better understand our own church
cultures and how to foster minority cultures within our church communities
to develop communities that can more effectively address injustice.
Inwardly Strong and Outwardly Strong Church Cultures
One of the most significant splits in the “Church” is that between churches
focused on inward needs of the congregation and churches focused primarily
on the outward needs of the “world.” While both inward and outward church
cultures can be strongly focused on evangelizing those outside the church,
the key distinction between these two groups is to what extent felt needs
of the world beyond just the congregation are being met. Many would
characterize this difference in churches as falling across racial lines
(this is often the case); however, it is much more commonly correlated to a
“class” or income-level difference. For those who are economically
disadvantaged, this issue is especially important because there are often
basic needs that need to be met before they can enter a church community.
While there has been much focus on church division across racial and socio-
economic lines, this difference between churches/ministries focused
inwardly on their church attendees needs and those focused outwardly on the
world’s needs seems in many ways to be the key dividing issue. While I
recognize that the language “inward” and “outward” can imply value
judgments, that is not what is intended and clearly both church models have
great value but also have areas to grow. I have yet to come up with better
language, and have kept the current language because it is helpful in
indicating how each side can learn from the other. The table below defines
what constitutes an inward or outward church.
Inwardly-Strong Culture Outwardly-Strong Culture
General Characteristics General Characteristics
| Perception: primary problem is |
Perception: primary problem is |
| personal |
social/systemic |
| Focus inwardly on needs of church |
Focus outwardly on needs of the |
| attendees |
community and or the “world” |
| Needs addressed: spiritual, |
Needs addressed: physical, |
| emotional |
economic, spiritual |
| Focus on getting saved/sanctified |
Focus on helping others |
| ourselves |
| Focus on evangelism |
Focus on social justice |
| Personal growth model: |
Personal growth model: ethnic |
| inner-healing |
identity development |
| Focus on where we are: the real |
Focus on where we should be: the |
| ideal |
| Focus on personal growth |
Focus on challenging others, |
| systems and society |
| Primarily value psychological |
Primarily value life experience in |
| health in leaders |
leaders and |
| and being in touch with personal |
being in touch with the world’s |
| brokenness |
brokenness |
Inwardly-Strong Culture Outwardly-Strong Culture
| Individual Action/Egalitarian |
Collective Action/Strong Leadership |
| Leadership |
| Less than 1/3 of resources focused |
More than 1/3 of resources focused |
| outward on |
outward on |
| needs of others (often less than |
needs of others (often more than |
| 10%) |
50%) |
Primary Defense Primary Defense
| Avoid social healing |
Avoid personal healing |
| ”I didn’t cause the injustice.” |
”They caused it. They are |
| responsible.” |
| Do not see how their personal role |
Do not see how failure to forgive |
| contributes to social injustice |
hurts us more than it hurts others |
Primary Sins Primary Sins
| Denial of the pain of others and |
Denial our own pain and need for |
| injustice |
healing |
| Pride and failure to learn about |
Failure to let go of anger and |
| injustice |
forgive |
Consequences of Sins Consequences of Sins
| Church perpetuates injustice |
Church divides from broken |
| relationships |
| Church is sheltered from reality |
Individuals burn out and leave |
| and suffering |
ministry/Jesus |
The failure of the two sides to talk across these differences and
understand each other on these issues is one of the most significant
sources of the church dividing and losing its effectiveness. Too often, the
result is that the inwardly-strong church is unaware of injustice and can
unknowingly perpetuate injustice. The outwardly-strong church too often
“burns out” from too much work or divides again and again into different
“camps” that will not talk to each other. Very rarely do people from these
two sides come together and learn from each other, and even more rarely do
people from these two sides stay within the same community. The result is
that neither side learns from the other, when what they most need is to
learn from each other. What is needed is an approach that combines the
strengths of both perspectives and finds the middle ground-the “social
healing” approach. “Social healing” is the process of stepping into deep
relationships in another culture in a way that provides us with perspective
on our own culture, healing of our culture’s brokenness in ourselves and
structures/systems, while appreciating and growing into the strengths of
the other cultures.
Inwardly-strong church cultures are not motivated to bring social healing
because they are not exposed to social injustice on a daily basis. In
addition, since people in the church are not able to see how the church can
be involved in perpetuating social injustice, they have the attitude “I
didn’t cause it, so I’m not responsible.” This results in an attitude that
social justice is only for those “called to it,” and others can disregard
the issues it brings up because the church assumes it is not perpetuating
social injustice. Because inwardly-strong churches have this perspective,
social justice proponents in an inward-church context are often accused of
being “guilt-based” or too idealistic when they suggest that their church
should explore these issues. When these types of conversations happen too
frequently, the church can become a hostile environment for those called to
social justice as a vocation, when they actually try to pursue their
calling. Usually the result is that social justice proponents learn to keep
silent about their opinions, and the possibility of a “collective wrong” or
of corporate responsibility of the church is not seriously considered. This
is largely because inwardly-strong churches do not have a framework to
recognize a collective wrong/sin. If the church were able to see its
involvement in a collective sin, no one would deny that it should be
addressed, but collective sins are essentially “invisible” to inward-
focused churches because of a lack of learning that would provide tools and
a framework to see these issues.
The outwardly-strong church cultures need to grow in forgiveness and to see
how failure to forgive only hurts ourselves. Because outwardly-strong
churches are most often experiencing injustice-whether racism, classism or
other forms of injustice-forgiveness is particularly important. It has
often been observed that those involved in social justice have an unusually
high occurrence of heart attacks. While some of this justifiably could be
attributed to spiritual attack, medical science has shown conclusively that
anger and unforgiveness are two of the leading causes of heart attacks. In
addition, outwardly-strong churches and communities too often are weakened
by splits from relational fallouts and personal burnouts largely because of
the lack of focus on personal healing. In addition to spiritual attack,
these churches are often experiencing social injustice directly which
contributes to the stress causing these disasters. But the outwardly-strong
church too often is missing the tools and framework for personal and
relational healing. This causes the personal sin of unforgiveness to either
be “invisible” or an issue that cannot be addressed no matter how hard we
try.
Because the inwardly-strong and outwardly-strong communities rarely
communicate, they fail to learn from each other. Too often, inwardly-strong
churches fail to see their role in enabling societal dysfunction and
increasing the need for social healing, and the outwardly-strong ministries
fail to recognize interpersonal dysfunction, to forgive and to seek
personal healing. Here we see that personal healing is not enough-whatever
side of the oppression you are on-because if the oppressed group forgives
(or the oppressing group repents) without actual social change, then the
church (both oppressors and the oppressed) will continue to perpetuate the
cycle of injustice. Social change is also not enough, because even if
injustice is addressed, if we continue to live in anger and not forgive, we
will continue to be divided and feel the personal consequences of our
unforgiveness. True reconciliation involves both forgiveness and change,
but before we can do that we must first understand each other. While we can
forgive without seeing change, and we can change without being forgiven,
true reconciliation involves both forgiveness and change.
A major barrier to helpful conversations between inward- and outward-
focused communities is that these two groups have very different
understandings of what personal growth and “health” look like, which
creates one of the primary breakdowns in communication. The inwardly-
strong church often has an individual/personal framework/tools and
understands the need for healing on an individual level, which may involve
counseling, inner-healing, conflict resolution and an individual
relationship with God. Most often, a key part of the healing process on a
personal level involves naming the offense and forgiving it. Because of
this, a common breakdown occurs when an inward-focused/personal healing-
focused individual encounters someone with a strong “racial anger”
resulting from past racism, and they dismiss and/or avoid the angry
individual because the disproportionate anger is seen as “unhealthy,” a
sign of not forgiving past hurts.
The outwardly-strong church often has a collective/social framework and
understands the need for healing on a social or systemic level, which may
involve social service programs, changing legal/economic systems, re-
prioritizing/redistributing Church budgets/resources, a collective
relationship with God as the body of Christ which could lead to collective
action to influence public policy, business decisions, etc. The primary
personal growth model in these churches is the ethnic identity development
process, which helps individuals gain a positive ethnic identity and relate
to other cultures in a “healthy” way. This is because, for someone who may
have their deepest personal wounds as the result of racism, the ethnic
identity process is the primary way to heal that wound, to go through a
personal healing journey! Because of this perspective, a majority culture
individual that is not very far in his or her ethnic identity development
process is viewed as being “unhealthy” and usually will be dismissed or
“shut down” because of their lack of understanding of other cultures. As
each side (inward and outward) dismisses or more actively rejects other,
they both become more angry and distant, sadly validating the negative
stereotypes that each one has of the other!
What we see here is that each side shuts down the other and ignores them as
being unhealthy. Individuals on both sides fail to understand how to grow
using the tools and methods that the other side brings. What outwardly-
strong churches most need is the forgiveness that can come through
counseling and an inner-healing process. What inwardly-strong churches
most need is a change in perspective and a radical heart transformation
that comes through the ethnic identity development process and getting in
touch with the world’s brokenness.
The social healing approach combines the best of the social justice and
inner-healing traditions in a way that brings healing that involves both
forgiveness and change. With inner-healing and personal growth, the key
issue is whether a person is intimately in touch with their own needs and
brokenness and working on personal healing. With social justice the key
issue of credibility is whether a person is intimately in touch with the
world/community’s needs and brokenness and whether they are working on
their part of addressing that social brokenness. The social healing
approach requires that people be intimately in touch with both their
personal brokenness and the world’s brokenness and are actively working on
healing in both areas. The goal of inner-healing and social healing is not
just that we can find healing ourselves, but also that we can become more
effective at loving others and bringing healing to the world.
As we choose to take down our boundaries and become more in touch with the
world’s brokenness, we are exposed to a new level of fire and intensity in
our walk with God. Social healing combines the “fire” that comes from
being in touch with the world’s brokenness with God’s purifying process of
inner-healing. The result of this combination of “fire” from the intensity
of the world’s brokenness and the purifying power of inner-healing is that
we grow and are cleansed to new levels of purity and closeness with God.
Social healing is a way to intentionally engage with God’s refining fire as
we engage with the world and find increased healing ourselves.
For an inwardly-strong church, it may be helpful to view the path to social
healing as being similar in ways to inner-healing. The path of social
healing can be a fairly painful path that involves uncovering new truths
about ourselves and society in a way that will result in a radical heart
change that will correct our roles in societal dysfunction. The primary way
this can happen is through church members seeking deep relationships with
people who have the outwardly-strong perspective and to ask them to teach,
disciple and challenge them in that other perspective. This will
ultimately bring people through an ethnic/cultural identity development
process and they learn to relate with those that have experienced social
injustice because of their race, class or for other reasons. This process
also involves having the inwardly-strong church invite strong teaching and
discipling from the outwardly-strong perspective.
In the same way that a church which wants to take inner-healing seriously
needs to encourage participation throughout the church body, social healing
requires people at all levels in the church and especially leaders to be
engaged in this process. With inner-healing, this does not mean that
everyone in the church has a calling to pursue inner-healing as a vocation,
and the same applies to social healing. For social healing to work
effectively, people at all levels of the church need to be challenged to
engage in dealing with their role in social brokenness. With leaders this
is especially important because (like with inner-healing), people cannot
lead others to a place they have not been themselves. Just as it is
important for people to be in touch with their own issues and brokenness,
it is also important for them to continue their process of healing by
understanding their role in social brokenness. To really bridge the gaps
between these two groups as a leader, it is most helpful to be fully in a
community that understands social justice and a community that understands
inner-healing. Social healing goes much beyond the simple strategy of “go
find a friend of a different race,” not just because it requires a level of
depth of relationship. Social healing will affect how we relate to
everyone, just like inner-healing does, and it will also result in
collective change, such as a group changing their priorities and strategies
as they realize their collective role in social dysfunction.
The primary cause of a church culture initially becoming inward or outward
is the degree to which church members and leaders have personally
experienced injustice. Churches with many members that have not experienced
intense societal injustice will usually be disproportionately inward, and
churches with members and leaders that have experienced significant
injustice will generally be disproportionately outward. There are two
primary causes for this difference, the first is that those who have
experienced injustice are very aware of the pain and injustice that exists
in the world and that Jesus always modeled meeting both physical and
spiritual needs. Secondly, those who have experienced injustice often
better understand those who are economically disadvantaged and this is
especially important because there are often basic needs that need to be
met before economically disadvantaged people can enter a church community.
In addition, churches that turn disproportionately outward can also do so
because individuals in the church fail to get healing for the wounds of the
injustices that they have suffered; these individuals can be avoiding their
own pain by focusing on the pain of others thus increasing the outward-
focus of the church. The path of social healing is one which leads both
inward- and outward-sided to find more balance and the chance to see both
personal and societal redemption and transformation.
Often we pray and pray to break inherited generational sins (within our
family) when often some of the most significant generational sins are those
inherited by our culture and society. While this praying can make it
possible for God to change us as individuals, unless we are willing to go
through the process of Him changing our social brokenness through social
healing, then generational sins of our culture and society are likely to
stay with us! That process of social healing is what I believe God is
calling us into.
A Roadmap for Social Healing
The whole purpose of social healing is to transform ourselves, our churches
and our society so that we can more effectively carry out the Gospel which
includes addressing injustice. The foundation of the vision for social
healing is that both the individual and the collective perspectives are
important and valid and provide different but complementary views on the
world. Similarly social healing also involves engaging both the “head” and
“heart” to bring healing. The “head” uses reason to understand the truth
of injustice and how structural change can help address systemic injustice.
The “heart” provides emotional understanding and a spiritual perspective
that provides the foundation of our culture. When these perspectives are
combined they provide four elements of pursuing social healing by combining
the individual and collective perspectives with the understanding that is
brought by combining our head knowledge with heart transformation as shown
below.
[pic]
The challenge in pursuing social healing is that everyone has their primary
“language” that they prefer to use and have the strongest background in.
Because of this, as people approach understanding injustice and
reconciliation, they often are limited to one particular perspective in
their understanding of injustice. Someone with a strong background in one
perspective will be able to fairly quickly see the issues from that
perspective, while they may have a much harder time seeing issues that are
revealed in other perspectives. This occurs because of a lack of language,
tools and experience in using that other perspective.
For many people, their strongest “language” is the individual-head
perspective (academic and personal action), and may be most comfortable in
just learning about injustice. Others may have a first language of the
individual-heart perspective (counseling, psychology and mercy ministry),
may have a strong understanding of “inner-healing,” and may most quickly be
able to relate to concepts of cultural identity development. Those whose
first language is the head-collective perspective (sociology, government
and justice systems) may be quick to understand the structural changes
needed to address injustice. Finally, those who have the heart-collective
perspective (artists, leaders and prophets) may best understand the
concepts of how to transform our cultural understanding to address
injustice.
Therefore, a major challenge in making progress in social healing is that
to understand each other, we must all grow in languages and tools that may
not be our primary languages and tools. If we only have the language and
tools for a given perspective, then we are likely to not be able to make
progress in other areas. If we take too much of an individualistic
approach toward social justice then we may be able to make some progress,
but the momentum of collective structures and culture will limit that
progress. In addition, if we only work to transform structures and culture
without moving individuals towards personally learning and growing, then
that progress will be limited by those very individuals’ remaining stuck in
an insular perspective, opposing structural change.
The goal of gaining these perspectives is to experience social healing in
ourselves, in our churches and in our society. An often used analogy for
an individual experiencing growth through inner-healing is that growth is
like peeling the layers of an onion where as we peel away one layer through
growth, we are able to see the next deeper layer. This analogy of the
layers of growth could also be extended toward a church experiencing social
healing. As the church grows in social healing our understanding of “what
the problem is” will also grow and we will encounter deeper layers of
issues. The following is a visual diagram of the layers that a church
encounters when pursuing social healing.
As shown in the diagram, each of the four core approaches to addressing
injustice (Charity, Relational Ministry, Systemic Transformation and
Cultural Integration) corresponds to the four perspectives (Academic
Learning, Personal Growth, Systemic Progress, Cultural Integration). The
following is a summary of each layer of growth that a church can experience
in pursuing social healing.
. Denial: At this level, a church will either deny that there is
a problem or deny that loving the poor and addressing injustice in
this world is an essential part of the Gospel.
. Guilt: At this level, a church will recognize that a key part
of the Gospel is loving the poor and addressing injustice, but either
will not know how to effectively do that or will not devote resources
to address injustice.
. Charity: At this level, a church will work to address injustice
primarily through service activities where the “giver” can give from
a relational distance. While charity can help meet immediate needs,
the lack of depth of relationship makes it not very effective in
bringing a spiritual transformation.
. Relational Ministry: At this level, a church may still value
service activities, but will attempt do them in ways that develop
deeper relationships with those being served. In this model of
ministry, those doing the ministry will grow and learn from those
receiving ministry as much as they are serving and they will find
healing for their own cultural brokenness. For relational ministry
to be effective, those ministering will need to be able to meet
others where they are in their own culture (to be ready to be the
ones that “stretch” rather than needing the other person to do so).
In other words, those ministering will need to grow in their own
cultural identity development process to be effective. The most
helpful perspective at this level is the Personal Growth Perspective
to bring individual cultural healing through a cultural identity
development process. A big challenge at this level is for people
growing in their cultural identity to not be marginalized from the
larger church community, as they may be greatly outnumbered by those
who are not aware of, or sensitive to, this key growth stage.
. Systemic Transformation: At this level, a church will address
systems, structures and priorities within the church to bring healing
to individual and collective cultural brokenness within the church,
and it begins to consider and address its role in collective
brokenness outside of the church. This may involve recognition of
systemic barriers to minority leaders or other injustices within the
church. There is recognition that systemic brokenness is perpetuated
by more than just the sum of individual actions and culture, and
church leaders will respond in ways that address the roots of the
issues. At this level the church develops systems, priorities and
resources to enable all church members to experience social healing.
In addition, the church will become effective at serving the poor and
addressing systemic injustice outside the church. The most helpful
perspective at this level is the Systemic Progress Perspective to
understand how our strategy and structures as a church can be
transformed to help us be more effective in addressing injustice.
Starting this systemic transformation process enables the dominant
culture within the church to be challenged to help move toward
cultural transformation in the next stage.
. Cultural Transformation: At this level, a church will recognize
the limitations and brokenness of its own collective culture. It
will recognize the need to integrate the Godly strengths of other
cultures while retaining the Godly strengths of its own culture. It
will learn to recognize how the church culture can be hostile to
other groups and seek healing for this collective sin and cultural
brokenness. The church will recognize that while some of this can be
addressed individually through individuals going through a cultural
identity process, it will also recognize that the collective culture
itself needs to be addressed as well changes to systems within the
church. At this level, the church adopts a value that all church
members should pursue social healing themselves even if they may not
be called to social justice or reconciliation as a vocation. The
most helpful perspective at this level is the Cultural Growth
Perspective by understanding and healing our collective cultural
brokenness within a church community.
Often the reason for communication breakdowns in discussions about social
justice and reconciliation is that some people may only be able to perceive
the outer layers of the “onion,” while others see the more core issues.
One person may be thinking “Of course I get all this because I know we need
to love people who are different from us, and we need to love the poor” but
not see much urgency to these issues because they are only able to perceive
the outer layers of the “onion.” Another person may understand more core
layers of systemic abuse happening against groups and wonder why others do
not see it as very significant.
In order to make progress in all four areas, it is helpful to provide a
common basis and language for understanding the issues across these four
perspectives, as follows in the four documents described below. The four
areas shown in the quadrants provide a roadmap for understanding Social
Healing across these perspectives:
. “Social Healing and the Cultural Identity Development Process” uses
the Social Healing perspective examines how individuals can go through
a heart transformation and healing their individual cultural
brokenness by growing in their own social identity. A good book that
takes the personal growth perspective and presents the ethnic identity
development process is “Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in
the Cafeteria”
. “Social Healing and Church Strategy” uses the Systemic
Progress perspective to examine how our strategy and structures as a
church can be transformed to help us be more effective in addressing
injustice. A good book for understanding systemic issues within the
overall Church in the USA is Divided by Faith.
. “Social Healing and contemporary majority-culture churches” uses the
Systemic Progress perspective examines the collective culture within
one contemporary evangelical church with a majority culture, and
provides perspective on areas of potential collective growth. Two
good books for providing perspective on how church culture may fit
within the global Body of Christ are The Next Christendom and Fire
from Heaven.
While each of these documents can promote learning, if people just read
them, then they are never actually leaving the Academic Learning
Perspective. The limitation of all these documents is that they are only a
roadmap. To actually move out of the Academic Learning Perspective
requires that people actually go engage the process being described in
every section. Personal growth in relating cross culturally only happens
by engaging in your own cultural identity development process, not just by
reading or hearing about that process. Systemic growth only happens by
pursuing structural change, not just by learning about systemic problems
and solutions. Cultural growth happens by transforming a culture by
integrating the Godly strengths into our collective culture, not just by
learning about other cultures. Social Healing involves actually going down
the road in all four areas to address injustice through academic learning,
personal growth, systemic change and cultural transformation. The
following sections will hopefully provide more clarity to this vision of
pursuing Social Healing.———————————-
Denial
Guilt
Charity
Relational
Ministry
Systemic Transformation
Personal Growth
Academic Learning
Cultural Integration
Systemic
Progress
Perspective
Approach to Addressing Injustice
Personal Growth
Cultural
Transformation
Cultural
Growth