Stephen Ministry

 Contact:  Cynthia Cummings (352) 620-2697 or (352) 895-6780 

The Stephen Ministry of Christ the King Anglican has 15 Stephen Ministers.  Some of our members have been active for over 10 years.  They were members of the initial class that Fr. Don Curran generated when he felt the need for this ministry.  Well over half of our ministry has faithfully served for over six years.  The initial commitment is only 2 years.  

 

History: Stephen Ministry began in 1975 when the Rev. Kenneth C. Haugk, Ph.D., a pastor and clinical psychologist, trained nine laypeople at his congregation in St. Louis to be Stephen Ministers. They assisted him in providing distinctively Christian care to members of the congregation and community. These trained caregivers were so enthused about their ministry, they encouraged Dr. Haugk to offer Stephen Ministry to more congregations. Over the next few years, Dr. Haugk traveled to congregations and trained Stephen Ministers. This quickly proved to be inefficient, since he could visit only a limited number of congregations, and these congregations were then dependent on him to train additional caregivers. There also was little organizational structure to supervise Stephen Ministers after they were trained. So in 1978 Dr. Haugk held the first Stephen Series Leader’s Training Course and trained the first Stephen Leaders—representatives of various churches who then returned home to train and supervise their congregation’s Stephen Ministers. Since that time Stephen Ministries St. Louis has specialized in “equipping the equippers” through the Stephen Series ministry system.  

The Organization: Stephen Ministries St. Louis is a not-for-profit, transdenominational, religious and education organization founded in 1975. The St. Louis-based staff of 45 provides support for the ministry in more than 10,000 congregations worldwide. Dr. Haugk serves as executive director.  

The Name: The name Stephen comes from St. Stephen, who was the first layperson commissioned by the Apostles to provide caring ministry to those in need (Acts 6).  

Congregations: More than 10,000 congregations are enrolled in the Stephen Series. These congregations represent more than 150 different Christian denominations and come from all 50 states, 10 Canadian provinces, and 23 other countries.  

People: More than 55,000 individuals (pastors, church staff, and laypeople) have been trained as Stephen Leaders at Leader’s Training Courses. These Stephen Leaders have returned to their congregations to train more than 500,000 laypeople to be Stephen Ministers. It is estimated that since 1975 Stephen Ministers have provided distinctively Christian care to more than a million people through formalized one-to-one caring relationships and have used their caregiving skills to touch the lives of millions of others in an informal way.  

The Stephen Series Logo: The logo Stephen Ministry congregations use consists of a cross and circle, together with a broken person and a whole person. The broken person stands behind the cross, symbolizing the brokenness in our lives as a result of our sin. The whole person stands in front of the cross because it is through the cross of Jesus that we again are made whole. The circle symbolizes both the wholeness we receive through Christ and God’s unending love for us.  

How the Stephen Series Works: Pastors, church staff, and lay leaders from a congregation attend a weeklong Leader’s Training Course, taught by the Stephen Ministries St. Louis faculty, to learn how to implement and direct the Stephen Series in their congregations. These trained Stephen Leaders then return to their congregations to set up and administer a Stephen Ministry program. Stephen Leaders recruit and select laypeople from the congregation to serve as Stephen Ministers and provide them with 50 hours of training in Christian caregiving. Some of the training topics include listening, feelings, assertiveness, confidentiality, and ministering to people in specific situations such as divorce, terminal illness, grief, and childbirth. Stephen Ministers also are trained to recognize when a care receiver’s needs go beyond the care a Stephen Minister can provide and where and how to refer the care receiver for additional care. Upon completion of the training, these laypeople are commissioned as Stephen Ministers. Stephen Leaders then link each Stephen Minister with a care receiver—a member of the congregation or community who is in need of quality Christian care. A Stephen Minister normally is assigned to only one care receiver at a time and meets with the care receiver for an average of about one hour each week. Stephen Ministers also meet twice monthly for peer supervision and continuing education. Stephen Ministers initially commit to two years of service, but after those years many recommit to serve additional years.  

Important to Note

  • Stephen Ministers are not counselors. They are trained Christian caregivers. Their role is to listen and care—not counsel or advise. Please do not refer to them as counselors.
  • Stephen Ministry is a supervised ministry. Stephen Ministers engage in twice-monthly supervision to ensure that they are providing the best-quality Christian care.
  • Stephen Ministry is a confidential ministry. What a care receiver tells a Stephen Minister remains confidential. Even in supervision, the names of care receivers and specific details are never discussed. 
  • Stephen Ministers do not make cold calls. They are assigned only to people who agree to receive the care of a Stephen Minister.

STEPHEN LEADERS:

Cynthia Cummings (2001)

Jerry Lea Garber (2000)

Cynthia Pyle (2000)

Dennis Wicklein (2007)

Fr. Matt Walter (2009)

STEPHEN MINISTERS

Diane Townsend (2000)

Judi Barrack (2005)

Red Zell (2004)

Buce Camlin (2007

Robert Wood (2007)

Tom Carson (2009)

Judy Curry (2009)

Karen Esbenshade (2009)

Laurie Smith (2009)

Joe Smith (2009)

 Sharon Hanly (2011)

Jay Carmichael (2011)

Karen Myers (2011)

Ray Myers (2011)

Ann Edwards (2011)

Ida Broh (2011)

Susan Porter (2011)

Leslie Gilbert (2011)

INACTIVE STEPHEN MINISTERS

Diane Anderson

Betty Lawrence

Chuck Hurley

Michele Wisham (2004)

Mollie Zell (2004)

Diane Hogan (2006)

Mike Hogan (2005)

Perry Nichols

Brenda Sharpe

Deb Johnson

Winona Wilson