The complete title of Erik Carter's Monday Morning presentation at the 2012 Summer Institute on Theology and Disability was What Matters Most: Families, Disabilities, and Compelling Congregational Supports. He shared research he is doing on practices of faith communities and the importance of congregational supports for youth with disabilities. Later in the week Eric lead a discussion meaningful markers that indicate a congregation is doing a god job of welcoming individuals with disabilities.
Research Project on Congregational Supports for Youth with Disabilities
People with development disabilities are often not very known or understood. The problem: professionals sometimes wonder if it is their role to support people with disabilities in this dimension of their lives and many congregation leaders struggle to provide needed welcome and support. Some background on the Strengths, Spirituality, and Well-Being Among Young People with Autism or Intellectual Disabilities Project:- 6 million people have the label of developmental disability in the United States (approximately 3%).
- 30% of all families have a member of their immediate family or a relative who has a developmental disability.
- Developmental disabilities cuts across every demographic group.
- Jake would like to attend your congregation, but has autism and will needs some people to sit with him all of the time.
- Jake is a new member of your congregation, he'll fit in well with the others in his youth group and is great at remembering names.
Meaningful Congregational Markers
Later in the week, I sat in on a breakout session with Erik where he led on a discussion on identifying markers of welcoming congregations. Erik began by citing a study that showed among 400 families, 33% had changed their place of worship because of lack of accessibility. If we are trying to creating inclusive and belonging congregations it is helpful to understand what we are talking about, what are the indicators that any congregation is welcoming? It is also important to note that there are differences in welcoming indicators for different group of people- consider the needs of members with a specific disability or families in different circumstances. Erik outlined 6 factors on current practices:- Parent advocacy
- Professional advocacy
- Legislation
- Litigation
- Self-advocacy
- Research
- Was a person missed when absent? Does someone check in if they are gone?
- Authentic relationships (that include going through hard times together/arguing).
- A person to call when in need?
- A person that you can call a friend who is a peer.