Now let’s focus on one aspect of these principles, personal
service. Teleios recently evaluated the effect of personal service on wellbeing
at Grace Community Church (1). We surveyed 309 adults in two services on one
Sunday.
The survey showed that individuals
who routinely participated in a community or church-based service program,
compared to those who did not, had better wellbeing scores in contentment,
peace, joy, purpose and community acceptance. Wow! Who wouldn’t want that? Additionally, people who
served had a better global wellbeing score (average of seven questions together)
than those who did not serve.
Interestingly, the
study showed the benefit of service might occur with as little as just one hour
a week helping others! The benefit was even
greater when people served up to 6 hours per week. In addition,
the perceived benefit of the service did not depend on the type of service,
whether in the church or in non-church sponsored community service.
That leads us to ask why personal service would help wellbeing. We
don’t know this answer for certain but there are several potentials:
v Serving
others provides us with a sense of purpose.
v Serving
provides a comfort that our lives are useful.
v When
we serve we realize we are being obedient and living consistently with God's desires.
v Serving
takes our eyes off ourselves so we don’t focus just on our problems but also on
assisting others.
This raises the question; do all types of community service impact
wellbeing equally? In other words, does spiritual service have as
much impact as service that is purely social? To
participate in our latest poll question - please visit our website at http://teleiosresearch.com/#anchorpoll
Thanks for visiting. I look
forward to seeing you again next week.
WC
Stewart
1.
MacIlvaine WR, Nelson LA, Stewart JA, Stewart WC. Association of strength of community service to personal wellbeing. Community
Ment Health J 2014;50:577-582.
Response policy
The purpose of the comment section is to promote discussion that
is encouraging, propels the further search of Scripture and raises interesting
and thought provoking Biblically related questions. You may feel free to
disagree with me in a constructive manner using appropriate language.
I reserve the right to remove your comments if they are profane,
pornographic, libelous or I do not consider them constructive or consistent
with the policy stated above. By posting you no longer own your comments
and you are granting me an unrestricted worldwide license to use your comments.
No comments:
Post a Comment