by Stephen Grcevich MD | May 4, 2018 | Advocacy, Key Ministry, Mental Health
Since 1949, the month of May has been officially designated as Mental Health Awareness Month. This year our ministry is honored to join with HHS Center for Faith and Opportunity (@Partners for Good) along with three of the most prominent mental health advocates...
by Catherine Boyle | Apr 10, 2018 | Hidden Disabilities, Mental Health
Sally often works out at the local YMCA. My interactions with her are typically in the ladies’ locker room, where I am usually in a hurry to get to a class or move on to the next item on my daily to-do list. Photo by Jan Laugesen on Unsplash Sally never...
by Stephen Grcevich MD | Apr 1, 2018 | Autism, Hidden Disabilities, Key Ministry, Mental Health
April is recognized as Autism Awareness Month. and Monday, April 2nd has been officially designated as Autism Awareness Day. In my blog posts this month, I’d like to call attention to a critical need that has been greatly overlooked in the North American church....
by Stephen Grcevich MD | Mar 18, 2018 | Inclusion Fusion, Key Ministry, Mental Health, Training Events
We’re only a little more than a month away from Inclusion Fusion Live, a disability ministry conference sponsored by Key Ministry and hosted by Bay Presbyterian Church on April 20th-21st, 2018. Inclusion Fusion Live will feature over two dozen speakers and...
by Key Ministry | Mar 13, 2018 | Anxiety Disorders, Hidden Disabilities, Mental Health
How many people does it take to change a light bulb? The answer to the joke depends on who’s changing the bulb. If it’s lawyers, it’s five (one to change the bulb, five to write the environmental impact statement). If it’s dumb blonde women, the answer is one hundred...
by Key Ministry | Feb 13, 2018 | Anxiety Disorders, Depression, Hidden Disabilities, Mental Health, Spiritual Development
At some point, as it has for many of us, life confronted you with the devastating truth that it was not going to live up to your visions and dreams. You had plans for the way your daily life would look, expectations of what your church life would be, and assumptions...