Couples split up for all kinds of reasons, but let it not be because they didn’t get any support from their church when they were feeling overwhelmed.
Sadly, you don’t have to look too hard to find that the statistics for families of children with additional needs breaking up are catastrophically high.
Psychology Today reports that “… the rate of divorce in families with a child with disabilities may be as high as 87%. The divorce rate in families with a child with autism is about 80%”.
While these alarming figures are at the top end of those published, the general consensus seems to be that the rates are considerably higher, perhaps twice as high, for families of children with additional needs, than for the rest of the population which hovers around 40-42% (itself still alarmingly high).
The internet is awash with legal firms offering advice and services for parents of children with additional needs wanting to leave their family behind. It’s heartbreaking to see.
The pressures of parenting a child (of any age) with additional needs are very real, and can and do bring parents to the brink.
A significant decrease in the secular support offered to families in the last few years, largely as a result of covid and then a massive decrease in funding available to local authorities, has meant that families have often been left to cope on their own without much, if any, help. Many have found it all too much.
So, is there hope, some light in the darkness? And is there a role for the church in filling some of the gaps that have been left as secular services have reduced or stopped?
I believe the answers to both of these questions can be “Yes”.
A family I know found themselves at the beginning of the long summer holidays with no secular respite provision available to help them with their two children, both of whom have various additional needs and health conditions and need constant care and supervision.
In desperation, they reached out to their church and asked if there was anything that the church could do to help… and their church stepped up magnificently.
Here are just some of the things the church did.
This is just one example of churches stepping up to meet the needs of additional needs families when they needed it most. Maybe other churches could follow this lead?
Maybe churches could see the need and respond in love to bless families that might otherwise massively struggle.
Maybe, in doing so, churches could play a part in reversing some of these catastrophic figures relating to families with additional needs splitting up.
Couples split up for all kinds of reasons, but let it not be because they didn’t get any help and support from their church when they were feeling overwhelmed and desperate, when they needed their church family to step up and help them the most.
What can your church do?
Mark Arnold, Director of Additional Needs Ministry at Urban Saints. Arnold blogs at The Additional Needs Blogfather. This article was re-published with permission.
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