ELIZABETH (speaking in Stephen Ministry training session): I just don’t know what to do.
DEBORAH POTTER, correspondent: Sometimes you just need someone to listen.
ELIZABETH: I just don’t know how to resolve this in my head. I’m just really upset. I can’t forgive myself.
POTTER: Sometimes you need something more—a hand to hold, and maybe a prayer.
PAMELA (praying with Elizabeth): Dear Lord, Thank you for watching over all of us today. In your name we pray.
ELIZABETH: Amen. Thank you. I feel so much better.
POTTER: At Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Raleigh, North Carolina, parishioners are training to become caregivers.
STEPHEN MINISTRY TRAINEE: The key thing that I saw is you leaned into her. You engaged her and told her, “I’m listening to you.”
POTTER: They’re learning to be Stephen ministers, named for Saint Stephen, the first Christian martyr who cared for the poor. Parishioners are recruited and interviewed by the pastor, then trained to offer one-to-one care to people in and around their congregation. They commit to be available as needed for two years, but many serve longer. Pam Montgomery has been involved for two decades, balancing Stephen Ministry with responsibilities at home. But sometimes the caregiver is the one who needs care.
PAM MONTGOMERY (Stephen Minister): This is my dad and my mom.
POTTER: Seven years ago, Pam’s father died of cancer. Just two weeks later she lost her grandmother. As she grappled with her grief, a friend surprised her with a suggestion: What if Pam herself asked for a Stephen minister?
MONTGOMERY: When you’re so close to it I didn’t even think about me having one, and that Stephen minister was the best gift I could have given myself. She came week after week after week when other people, even my wonderful neighbors, even my wonderful friends, stopped asking, “You doing okay?” She came and she prayed for me, just for me, and that’s really powerful.
REV. KENNETH HAUGK (Founder, Stephen Ministries): When a person allows you into their life and shares their feelings and their hurts with you, they are giving you a fantastic gift, and I think when you listen to them and when you accept their feelings and when you love, share Christ’s love to them, you are giving them a similarly powerful gift.
![]() Rev. Kenneth Haugk |
POTTER: Kenneth Haugk started Stephen Ministries in 1975, when as pastor of a church in St. Louis he found he just couldn’t do it all. So drawing on his background as a clinical psychologist, he enlisted and trained a handful of lay people to offer confidential care to their fellow parishioners. And then it spread, becoming a nonprofit juggernaut.
Good Shepherd is one of 10,000 congregations around the world where parishioners serve as Stephen ministers. More than 150 Christian denominations have adopted the program.
HAUGK: Christianity is not a spectator sport. It was never intended to be a spectator sport. God gave to the church apostles, evangelists, and pastors and teachers whose job is to equip the saints for ministry.
MONTGOMERY (speaking to trainees): How did it feel to have your confession treated in that way?
POTTER: Stephen ministers go through 50 hours of instruction and practice, learning to help care receivers express their feelings, to listen without judging, and how to bring faith and the Bible into the conversation.
ALLAN (speaking in training session): Can we pray? Dear God, give Rene the absolute confidence of his forgiveness…
POTTER: They also study specific situations, like dealing with grief and divorce. But Stephen ministers are not counselors, so they also learn when to call in professional help from a pastor or therapist. Their work is supervised at the parish level, and if a care-giving relationship doesn’t work out, which does happen sometimes, either party can be reassigned.
Good Shepherd’s senior pastor, David Sloop, introduced the program here in 1987.
REVEREND DAVID SLOOP (Senior Pastor, Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Raleigh, NC): It took a while for people to say, instead of “I need to speak to the pastor,” to also say, “Or can I have a Stephen minister?” And that’s a cultural shift, but it did occur, and we’re grateful it did. That old Lutheran concept of the priesthood of all believers—Stephen Ministry helps you live that out.
MONTGOMERY (speaking to trainees): Consider your stewardship of a precious resource: God’s gifted people…
POTTER: To enroll in the program, parishes pay a one-time fee of about $1700, giving them access to materials and leadership sessions like this one in Orlando, Florida, where experienced Stephen ministers and pastors learn how to train more care givers back home.
JACLYN HICKS: I was a care receiver, and I tell everybody, even before I became a Stephen minister, about my experience.
POTTER: Jaclyn Hicks and her husband were struggling with infertility when her pastor at Church of the Savior United Methodist in Cincinnati suggested a Stephen minister.
HICKS: It changed my life. It changed my life just having somebody be there for you, supporting you.
POTTER: After becoming pregnant and having a daughter, Hicks became a Stephen minister herself.
![]() Jaclyn Hicks |
HICKS: It’s huge to be on the flip side, to be able to just care for someone during their time of need. It’s been a tremendous blessing, and I get, as a Stephen minister, just as much out of it as I feel my care receivers do.
POTTER: Care-giving relationships are always same-gender, and the program tends to attract more women than men. Rene Anctil of Good Shepherd wasn’t sure at first that he was cut out to be a Stephen minister.
RENE ANCTIL: I tended to rely on myself a lot, and throughout this process I’ve kind of learned that I’m truly the care giver. I’m not the cure giver, and that’s God’s part.
POTTER: While Stephen Ministry relationships are strictly confidential, Anctil’s care receiver, Ed, said we could sit in on one of their weekly sessions. They started meeting more than a year ago, after Ed’s wife died.
ANCTIL: You mentioned that your daughter mentioned to you that she thought you were depressed.
ED: Yeah, oh yeah.
ANCTIL: How did that make you feel?
ED: I don’t think I’m depressed, but you get moody once in a while. Your body wears out when you get old. You always want to do something that you can’t do. That’s the hardest part.
ANCTIL: I think I recognize God in my life a lot more than I had in the past, and a lot of it is because of Stephen Ministry. I see God working not only with my care receiver but with me, which I never saw before.
POTTER: In the 35 years since the program started, half a million people have been trained as Stephen ministers, each one touching at least one other person—and being touched in return.
ANCTIL: I’m not going to go away. I’m going to be there as long as he needs me. I don’t know where the end’s going to be, but we’re going to do it together.
For Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly, I’m Deborah Potter in Raleigh, North Carolina.






SM, is an amazing ministry, that has given me, a business owner, so many opportunities to give back to society. Jesus commanded all believers to make desciples of nations, and as a SM I can let my witness to the Lord be seen through His work through me. I can’t tell you what a privilage that has been for me these past 6 years. Thank you Ken Haugk, and thank you for How to Be an Assertive Christian and Don’t Sing Songs to a Broken Heart. Best care giver books I’ve read.
I have read through all four of your books, and they are very helpful. I lost my husband of 30 years September 17,2008, This was my second marriage, as my first husband died at the age of 51 after 27years of marriage. The last one died at the age of 92, and I was a caregiver for the last several years and it is always hard to lose someone that you care so much about, but the books are amazing! I had a niece that took the course, bur I don’t remember where she went to take it. She has since died, but she was a very devoted christian, and had some trying times in her life. Thank you for the books, as they will help anyone to find the way out of their grief. I had my 89th birthday on May 16, and am gradually finding my way, with the lord, and your books as an example. These are the best!!
I talked with a chaplain at a Christian free medical clinic today who did not know that Stephen Ministry could fit into his workplace. Can you tell me how to link him with your information on hospital chaplaincy ministry? Thanks. AnnMoore
What a powerfull video! I sure would ike our church to get a copy to share with members. I once was a care receiver ,my SM was a real blessing to me.I have just started to study to be a SM at First United Methodist Church in Crestview,Florida. I want to be able to better serve the needy and homeless in our area. It is a strong
connection to hurting people at the soup kitchens, food banks and clothing ministry.God is guiding me in this wonderful program to help his lambs. God Bless All.
Love this! How can our church get a copy of this on DVD(?) so that we can use it for recruitment for SM????
I wish this could be made into a CD that I could share more widely.
Well done PBS. As a Stephen Minister I found this episode provided a great view of Stephen Ministry.
We would be blessed if this short episode could be used in our awareness campaign in our congregation. God Bless you all.
I became suicidal in 1991 as I could not handle the pain of losing my best job in my life and my beloved mother at the same time. One Stephen minister came along and stayed with me throughout the healing process. If I am alive today, it is because of the committed and dedicated Stephen minster who went along with me. This is incredible. After my healing, I have volunteered myself as a Stephen Minster since 1992. You may be scared of a Psychologist or any professional therapist. But, Stephen Ministry is a non threatening and a very personal help program for anyone. If you know anyone who is in a crisis, please refer the person to http://www.stephenministries.org. The only things he/she will miss are emotional pain and surffering
Wish you Happy New Year 2011
.
. By God grace this year he lead us and we are going to enter into a new year. May this year be a great blessing for all of us.
In Christ
Ramesh & family
Tamil Nadu South India
I understand what your organization is all about and I have kept my eye on it through the years, I have been training all my life to be a care giver. I have been studying biblel counceling more intencely for 16 years. What I would like from you is for you to send me an e-mail, what are the book or resourses you have avaiable for me to buy. I love the “Speaking in the Truth in Love,” my favorite book do you still have it? Thank you, i will be shareing that you have this training ministry availably. Thank you, In Christian Love, If you can not e-mail me, just send resourses available to me to
Linda Olson
RR2 Box 2106
Hermitage, MO 65668-9512
You might consider doing a story on Community of Hope, developed at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital in Houston to train lay chaplains, and now similarly launched as a nationwide nonprofit that supports lay pastoral ministry in congregations.
I’m the minister of a Lutheran church in Barrie, Ontario, Canada. It’s a new congregation, only 12 years old and we’re still a mission church (supported by our synod). I would love to offer the possibility of Stephan ministry, but we would not be able to manage the $1700 fee. Are there grants available, or could a couple of small churches join together?
thanks
Rev. Ann Krueger
My church will be hosting a half day workshop in the L.A. area on September 10, 2011 that introduces churches to Stephen Ministry, and gives a taste of what the training is like. If your church is located in the area and you’d like more information about the workshop, or to register for it, contact Stephen Ministries at (314) 428-2600 or visit http://www.stephenministries.org/stephenministry/default.cfm/918.
Thank you for covering Stephen Ministry in such a valuable way. It is a wonderful ministry that well prepares lay people to care for another, with a focus on Christ Jesus. Speading the word about Stephen Ministry will allow us to care for those individuals who want someone to walk beside them for awhile. Thank you again.
What are your views re: homosexuality?
l would like to have a contact email for Stephen Ministry of your congregation and other details of the same.
God bless you for the work you are doing.
Dear brethren
Greetings to you in the mighty and blessed name of our lord jesus
christ.Iam nathan nyabuto from kenya,..Iam a servant of the truth
and the gosple.Brethren! its today that i have been brevelleged and
blessed to have visited you web site and i have found it teaching and
so much touching in spritual matters up to have reached the point that
iam filling to partner up with you so as to teach me this truth deeper
and also to expand the kingdom of God to other brethrens.
Hope to hear from you as soon as you are able.
Yours in the lord.
Nathan nyabuto
Was very excited about the coverage on PBS. I am a Stephen Minister at Beach United Methodist Church in Jax Beach, FL. The training for this program has been of tremendous value in so many aspects of my life. I have been serving in this capacity for over a year now and have found it to be extremely rewarding. I think I get as much back from the ministry as my care receivers get out of it. The bi-monthly continuing education element is an excellent support for us as ministers and the mentoring we receive is priceless.
Would it be possible to get a copy of this video for promotion and continuing education purposes? If so, please let me know how to obtain it. Thank you.
Verna
I am in my 5th year as a Stephen Minister and my 2nd year as a Stephen Leader at St. Michael Catholic Community in Bedford, Texas. My journey becomes more profound as each day, week, and month pass by. I learned early on that I was called to care for others, but for years I had no idea what a blessing that calling is. Furthermore, and even more importantly, I have learned through this ministry, how much alike all of our Christian faiths really are. I will be forever owing to Dr. Hauck and his organization for helping me see that all of God’s children are equal, and equally deserving.
Blessings to all,
Don
I trained as a SM in the 80’s in Pa in a Lutheran church. Now I am retired in SC and still a Lutheran and would like to do SM work again. My church does not have the program though. Could I become active with my pastor’s support or do we need a group? Also, do I need a refresher course? I kept my old mterial and am reviewing it.
I became a SM in the 90’s. I also am an addictions counselor, hold a CADC and PCGC for gambling addictions therapies. I work at a treatment center and do In-Patient, clinical, case management. I am thinking about going back to school to take get a certification to be a Chaplin. Do you know of any programs in or around the Chicago or St Louis area that would recognize my SM work/classes? This would possibly be toward a Masters program but doesn’t have to be. My goals are to take my knowledge and experiences and tie them together to help in a hospital or clinic setting.
Sincerely,
Linda M. Lake
During the past 18 years I have served as a Stephen Minister and Stephen Leader. It has changed my life in a very powerful way and I have had the joy of being used by God as He changed the lives of my care receivers. What a privledge!
How can I find out which churches in Nashville TN have a Stephen Ministry? Thanks, Diane