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Stilling the Storm

A book review

“Teacher, don’t you care if we drown?” the disciples asked Jesus, waking him, during a storm. Perhaps this question is one we’ve asked Jesus, too, during difficult times in our own congregation. Many of us have asked questions like these:

• Jesus, don’t you care if we drown in financial troubles since we didn’t meet our budget last year?

• Jesus, don’t you care if we drown in anger and misunderstanding surrounding the departure of a beloved minister?

• Jesus, don’t you care if we drown in sorrow following the death of a high school student?

• Jesus, don’t you care if we drown in these ashes of our burnt building?

• Jesus, don’t you care if we drown in confusion as we attempt to discern our next step together?

In Stilling the Storm, Kathleen S. Smith, associate director at the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship, navigates the stormy waters of worship planning and congregational leadership in times of crisis, transition, and conflict.

The book:

Stilling the Storm: Worship and Congregational Leadership in Difficult Times

By Kathleen S. Smith

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Why I picked up this book:

I starting reading this book at first because I had to. (It was a required text for a seminary course on worship.) But I continued reading it because I wanted to. I kept thinking, “I wish I would have read this earlier!” This book offers a unique framework for the relationship between corporate worship and pastoral care.

Who should read Stilling the Storm:

Everyone in congregational leadership (pastors, elders, worship ministers, etc.), unless your congregation never experiences crisis, transition, or conflict. (Please email me privately if your congregation is like this. I’d like to plan a visit!)

What’s in store for you:

Stilling the Storm offers a readable, go-to resource for those who actively work as worship planners and leaders as well as those who shepherd the vision and direction of the congregation. There is both a micro-vision that includes specific worship resources (songs, prayers, liturgies) as well as a macro-vision that describes and guides both the meaning and purpose of worship as well as how it can be a tool for congregational healing.

Smith begins the book by telling true stories of churches facing the three types of “difficult times” she categorizes: crisis, transition, and conflict. Additional chapters flesh out the nuances of these types and offer examples of how congregational lament can be a balm to crisis and corporate confession and reconciliation can heal conflict.

My personal takeaways:

In the conversation about conflict, Smith describes congregational resistance to change and utilizes Harvard leadership expert Ronald Heifetz’s metaphor that compares leadership to American football. “In a football game, the players don’t chase and tackle the quarterback because they dislike him. They do it because he’s carrying the football.” It’s a blessing to be reminded that resistance is not because you’re a leader but because you’re carrying the football.

What others had to say:

One of my professors, Rev. Howard Vanderwell, cautioned my class, “Not to put [this book] away as ‘something I read for seminary once.’ Keep it handy and make a vow now to read it again in four to five years, or at any point in which you enter a time of conflict. I can assure you, from my own experience, that one of the hazards of a time of conflict is that we become so bound up in it that we lose the big picture, and thus our objectivity. By rereading this book again you'll have the opportunity to look at your conflict-situation from the balcony with a little distance. Then we also are able to identify some of the things we're currently doing that are counterproductive instead of helpful.”

Twitter-worthy quotes:

“Worship is somewhat like the holiday dinner, when everyone in the family comes home.”

Smith quotes Alban Institute consultant Gil Rendle: “We have deep preferential language but shallow theological language.”

“See worship-space transitions not simply as building programs, but as theological adventures.”

Another book I would recommend on this topic:

Worship Words: Discipling Language for Faithful Ministry by Debra Rienstra and Ron Rienstra (Baker Academic)

Joy-Elizabeth Lawrence (MCS, Regent College) is an M.Div. student at Calvin Theological Seminary, a writer, a speaker, and a biblical storyteller. Find her at www.pathlightstories.com.


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