If you have gifts for caring, encouragement, and listening, please consider joining our ministry this fall. For more details, email stephenministry@judeatl.com
Stephen Ministry is the one-to-one confidential lay caring ministry that takes place in congregations that use the Stephen Series system.
Stephen Ministry congregations equip and empower lay caregivers—called Stephen Ministers—to provide high-quality, confidential, Christ-centered care to people who are hurting.
How do I get a Stephen Minister at Saint Jude?
Email our Stephen Ministry and you will be contacted by a Stephen Leader.
How Stephen Ministry Works
The best way to understand how Stephen Ministry works is to learn about three groups of people involved in this ministry: Stephen Leaders, Stephen Ministers, and care receivers.
Stephen Leaders
Stephen Leaders establish and direct Stephen Ministry in a congregation. Their responsibilities include:
- build awareness of Stephen Ministry within the congregation and community
- recruit and train Stephen Ministers
- meet with potential care receivers to assess their needs
- match care receivers with Stephen Ministers
- provide Stephen Ministers with ongoing supervision and continuing education
People learn to serve as Stephen Leaders by attending a Leader’s Training Course—a one-week conference that introduces the resources used to lead Stephen Ministry. Saint Jude has two Stephen Leaders: Chris Giglio and Mary Pat Davis.
Stephen Ministers
Stephen Ministers are parishioners trained by Stephen Leaders to offer high-quality, one-to-one confidential Christian care to people going through tough times. A Stephen Minister usually provides care to one person at a time, meeting with that person once a week for about an hour. Twice a month, Stephen Ministers gather with their Stephen Leaders for supervision and continuing education.
Care Receivers
Care receivers are parishioners who receive care from a Stephen Minister. These are people struggling through a difficult time in life—experiencing grief, divorce, job loss, chronic or terminal illness, or some other life crisis.
Some important guidelines for this caring relationship protect both the care receiver and the Stephen Minister:
- The relationship between a care receiver and a Stephen Minister is confidential.
- Men are matched with men; women with women.
- When a care receiver’s needs exceed what a Stephen Minister can provide, the Stephen Ministry team makes a referral to an appropriate mental health professional or other community resources.
Learn more:
Care Receivers Tell Their Stories
Articles That Demonstrate the Many Benefits of Stephen Ministry