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Study on "serious mental illness" |
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ACSWP task force is preparing policy paper on serious mental illness
Study guide sent to churches, to help committee develop
proposed GA policy [8-30-06]
The
Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP) has
distributed a study guide aimed at getting the entire Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.) engaged in a comprehensive study of serious mental illness.
The 24-page document -- "Serious Mental Illness: Seeking a
Comprehensive Christian Response" -- was compiled by ACSWP's Task Force on
Serious Mental Illness. The 11-member panel is developing a proposed policy
for church ministry to people with serious mental illnesses, such as
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
More >>
To order or download the study guide online,
click here, or
call the Presbyterian Distribution Center toll-free at 800-524-2612. Specify
PDS #68-600-06-001 when ordering. |
| Task force members
approved ACSWP
group will study issues related to 'Serious Mental Illness'
by Evan
Silverstein,
Presbyterian News Service
SAN FRANCISCO --
January 27, 2005
-- The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)'s
Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy
(ACSWP) has approved 12 members to serve on its newly formed task force
examining serious mental illness issues.
ACSWP's Task Force on Comprehensive
Serious Mental Illness will develop a policy with principles and
recommendations to assist the church in ministering to those living with
serious mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, which
is also known as manic depression.
The 12-member task force is expected to
hold its first meeting sometime this spring. Its proposed report is due to
the PC(USA)'s 218th General Assembly in 2008. ACSWP develops
social policies for GA consideration.
Task force members, whose appointments
were unanimously approved during a regular ACSWP meeting here Jan. 22, range
from clergy to a psychotherapist to a clinical psychology professor.
"The skills each member brings will create
a very good group dynamic to look at these complex issues and we will also
be hearing from other experts in the field as they provide presentations to
the task force," said the Rev. Belinda Curry, ACSWP's associate for policy
development and interpretation. "We will also consult with the appropriate
entities of the General Assembly Council like the Office of Health
Ministries, our colleagues in the Presbyterian Health, Education and Welfare
Association and also the Presbyterian Board of Pensions."
The 211th General Assembly (1999) directed
ACSWP, in consultation with the appropriate entities, to develop a
serious-mental-illness policy for presentation to the Assembly. In November
2003 an ACSWP-approved prospectus guiding the work of the task force was
sent to every PC(USA) presbytery and synod and to the libraries of all
PC(USA)-related seminaries.
The prospectus says those stricken with a
serious mental illness comprise a group often oppressed in American society,
sometimes being denied jobs, housing and access to quality treatment while
bearing the burden of having a "stigmatized illness."
As church members these persons often are
denied access to decision-making bodies. There is also a lack of pastors and
caregivers qualified to minister to them.
"They fear revealing their pain will
separate rather than bring them closer to fellow congregants," according to
the prospectus.
Among the topics the new social witness
policy is to address are justice-related issues and full participation for
those with serious mental illness in the life of the church and society.
According to the Royal College of Psychiatrists in London, serious mental
illness affects 1--2 of every 100 people.
The newly appointed members of the Task
Force on Comprehensive Serious Mental Illness are: the Rev. Robert A.
Butziger of Albuquerque, NM; Ethel M. Charles of Hollis, NY; Mary Helen
Davis of Louisville, KY; the Rev. Thomas Crawley Davis of Wilmington, DE;
Timothy C. Engelmann of Burlingame, CA; Brenda Burch Gales of Conyers, GA;
the Rev. Kum Ock Kim of Bayside, NY; Matt Morse of Taylor, MI; Joséé R.
Rodriguez-Gomez of Hato Rey, PR; and Alyce Woodall of Brunswick, ME.
Two elected ACSWP committee members will
also serve on the task force: The Rev. B. Gordon Edwards of Stillwater, OK,
and the Rev. Leslie Klingensmith of Silver Spring, MD.
Serving as a consultant will be the Rev.
Susan J. Dunlap of Durham, NC. Curry will represent ACSWP's staff.
For more information
contact Curry by mail at 100 Witherspoon St., Room 3611, Louisville, KY
40202; by phone at (800) 728-7228, ext. 5813; by fax at (502) 569-8041; or
by email at
bcurry@ctr.pcusa.org.
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GA actions
ratified (or not) by the presbyteries
A number of the most important actions of the 219th
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confirming most of them as amendments to the PC(USA) Book of Order.
We provided resources to help inform the
reflection and debate, along with updates on the voting.
Our three areas of primary interest have been:
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Amendment 10-A,
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Amendment 10-2,
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Amendment
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