The relationship between mental health and Christian faith is deeply interconnected, not competitive. Christian belief can offer hope, meaning, community, and resilience, while mental health care can provide language, tools, and treatment that help people flourish.
Mental Health in the Church
The Importance of Emphasizing Mental Health in the Church: New Mental Health Series (Part 2 of 12)
Emphasizing mental health in the church is not a side issue; it is part of faithful pastoral care. When churches take mental health seriously, they create space for honesty, reduce shame, and help people receive the support they need.
Mental Health Stigma in the Church: New Mental Health Series (Part 3 of 12)
Mental health stigma in the church is often one of the biggest barriers to care. When people believe mental illness is a sign of weak faith, moral failure, or spiritual immaturity, they are less likely to seek help and more likely to hide their struggles.
Neurodivergence, Autism, ADHD, and NVLD in the Church: New Mental Health Series (Part 11 of 12)
Neurodivergence is a broad way of describing brains that work differently from what is considered typical. It includes autism, ADHD, and nonverbal learning disability (NVLD), along with related challenges in sensory processing, executive functioning, social communication, and visual-spatial skills
Mental Health and the Means of Grace: New Mental Health Series (Part 12 of 12)
The ordinary practices of the church – preaching, prayer, fellowship, the sacraments, and pastoral presence – can be a source of real stability, hope, and belonging for people who are struggling.
Supporting Family Caregivers in the Church: New Mental Health Series (Part 10 of 12)
Family caregivers often carry the heaviest emotional load in a mental health struggle, yet they are easy to overlook. A church that cares well for the person in crisis should also care for the spouse, parent, sibling, or child who is trying to hold everything together.
A Church Policy for Mental Health Care: New Mental Health Series (Part 9 of 12)
A church policy for mental health care should make compassion easier to practice, not harder. Clear policies help leaders respond consistently, protect vulnerable people, and know when to involve professional help.