Spiritualité Saine et Résilience

Violence at Churches in the USA: Pastoral Leadership, Theological Coping, and the Psychosocial Governance of Physical Security.

J Relig Health

Résumé

Deadly violence at US churches raises urgent public health and psychological questions about how religious leaders govern protective capacity in "soft target" environments. The trauma of these events fractures communal well-being and introduces profound psychosocial burdens to pastoral leaders navigating the tension between spiritual sanctuary and physical vulnerability. We surveyed 255 Protestant senior pastors (Baptist, Methodist, Non-denominational) across three US regions (yielding a 3.74% response rate) using the Servant Leadership Profile-Revised and Defensive Theology Scale to assess their relationship with the presence of a designated security responder. While bivariate analysis suggested that pastors utilizing a "Defensive Theology" (reliance on God's sovereignty) as a religious coping mechanism were more likely to implement security, a multivariate logistic regression model revealed that Servant Leadership is the primary driver. A 1-SD increase in servant leadership predicted significantly higher odds of responder presence (OR 1.40, 95% CI [1.03, 1.89]). Post hoc path analysis confirmed a full mediation model: Defensive theology acts as an antecedent to servant leadership (β = .202), which in turn drives security adoption. Furthermore, social polity played a critical role: Methodist affiliation significantly reduced the likelihood of security adoption (OR 0.26) compared to Baptist affiliation. These findings challenge the assumption that faith precludes physical preparation, suggesting that for modern clergy, security governance is a psychosocial operationalization of the "Shepherd" role-a duty of care driven by theological coping that actively mitigates congregational anxiety, preserves holistic well-being, and sustains meaning in life.

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