Many churches are struggling with the contradiction of the
continued ministry of the Gospel and government-mandated shutdowns imposed by
COVID-19 mitigation strategies. This essay explores risks and
resultant damage imposed as we pass yet another week with empty churches.
What’s at Risk?
A risk analysis seeks to express the intensity and
likelihood of harm and the most effective ways to mitigate both the probability
and severity of risks. We applied this approach in establishing our church
security team and protocols. We desired to mitigate risks within the
constraints of our facilities, available personnel, resources, the law, congregational
sensitivities, available intelligence (sources of threats and intent), and existing
capabilities.
The US military mission is a continuous process of collecting,
aggregating, and analyzing information, identifying existing and emerging
threats, and amassing the capabilities required to deter, disable, and/or destroy
specific threats. While military risk analysis is process-heavy, it reflects what
we do “naturally” as we conduct risk assessments continuously (and often subconsciously)
nearly every waking moment. We take in a situation, determine what path
presents the least overall risk within the objectives we have in mind, and then
choose the best option. For example: to cross a busy street, we assess the density
and speed of the traffic, the availability of pedestrian signals, the
likelihood that drivers in this location will act in accordance with laws, and
the distance across the street. We then consider our ability to cross the
street within the allotted time. Then we might re-assess whether the shop
across the street is worth all the trouble.
In this essay, I will review the current COVID-19 and
ancillary situations within a risk assessment framework as a contribution to a
church’s decision-making process.
Risk Assessment Process
A
risk assessment is a structured, objective method
of cataloging potential threats to business, organization, or church’s mission
and goals (why it exists).
A formal risk assessment groups
findings into categories:
probability, threats, vulnerabilities, variables, harm,
and
assets.
Once risks are identified,
mitigations are employed
to reduce the probability, vulnerabilities, and/or the potential harm. All
mitigations are subject to
constraints: the limitations of resources and
time.
Mission and Goals
Before risk can be properly addressed, we need to know who
or what is subject to harm or loss. Where there are people there will be a need
for a church whose purpose is to teach, model, encourage, support, and conduct
outreach to those who are not believers.
Implied in this mission are several goals:
·
Teaching (instruction) and disciple-making
(modeling, encouragement, mutual support)
·
Fellowship (the facilitation of free
communication and open dialogue)
·
Witness (the establishment and sustainment
of the church’s reputation in the community as representatives of God and the proclamation
of the Gospel)
Activities Support the Mission
A church’s mission requires both individual and corporate
efforts. The primary corporate activities are Sunday morning worship, weeknight
teaching times, small groups, counseling, and formal instruction (Sunday
school). Supplemental and supporting corporate activities include bible
studies, nursery and childcare, music, drama, youth activities, workdays, and
meetings. Other supporting activities occur outside the church, such as visitation,
hospital visits, fellowship and care of the aging and infirm, counseling, and
other outreach. This brief catalog of church activities reinforces the conclusion
that gathering and personal interaction is essential in fulfilling the goals
and mission of the church.
Threats
There are many external and internal threats to the church,
from overt hostile actions (i.e. active shooter) to latent hazards (icy
walkways). As believers trusting in God, we leave many threats in His hands
(meteorites striking the building, nuclear war, giant sinkholes, volcanoes,
earthquakes, etc.). Many churches have worked to address more likely threats
such as fire, theft, child abuse, aggressive intruders, protestors, deranged
individuals, child abduction, and more.
COVID-19 Risk Assessment
The most recent threat to directly impact the ministries of
every church is the COVID-19 epidemic. The virus poses a direct threat of
infection and subsequent sickness to individuals. Secondary effects of the
virus include lack of elective and primary care and deferred tests.
Probability
The likelihood of church members being infected by COVID-19
remains unknown. The guidance on mask-wearing as a prophylactic measure varies
(guidelines form the World Health Organization, the US Centers for Disease
Control, state and local Departments of Health are not consistent). Many who
have tested positive remain asymptomatic or suffer only mild, cold-like
symptoms.
In addition, poor use of statistical analysis has skewed
perceptions. In the most egregious example, “Fatality rates” were reported as:
Total Fatalities/Total Tested Positive. This is flawed as the numerator should
not be “total tested positive” but “total with the disease.”
“But how would we know how many have the disease if we
don’t test?”
This is an excellent question, but guidance from the Center
for Disease Control (CDC) and the most state Departments of Health was testing was
not recommended if symptoms were mild. The direction was to “stay home.” There
is no way to know the total number with the disease until an antibody test is
used to ascertain exposure. This would provide a more realistic denominator.
The severity of COVID-19 varies tremendously. Those infected
by COVID-19 experience symptoms ranging from “none” to severe breathing
problems and a patient’s condition can deteriorate from mildly ill to fatal in
days.
In North America, up to 75% of all reported COVID-19 fatalities
have occurred in long term care facilities. This aligns with reports from other
countries.
The CDC stated that “... older
adults and people of any age who have serious underlying medical conditions
might be at higher risk for severe illness from COVID-19.” The CDC also listed
pre-existing conditions that increase the likelihood of fatal complications due
to COVID-19. These include asthma, chronic kidney disease, chronic lung
disease, hemoglobin disorders, liver disease, serious heart conditions, serious
obesity, and those whose health is immunocompromised.
Threats and Harm
COVID-19 threatens the health of individuals directly (sick
with the flu) and indirectly (lack of access to routine medical testing,
“elective” procedures, and testing).
Very often fixation on a single threat obscures other risks.
The COVID-19 mandates place risks on
several essential church ministries. In addition, new risks have manifest due
to the extensive use of online tools for maintaining communication.
It is important for church leaders to understand these risks
to establish an overall context. Despite reductionist arguments on both sides,
the issue is not binary (e.g. “Abide by all state requirements vs. people die.”)
Ministries
The state-mandated lockdowns directly affect the teaching
and disciple-making efforts of the church by forbidding all activities.
While online communications can act as a stop-gap, it can never replace
in-person interactions (and presents new risks as described below). The risks
are short term (e.g. lack of exposure to regular teaching) and long term (e.g. an
increased tolerance for missing church activities move to parachurch online
sources, inconsistency, lack of continuity, and breaking bonds that encourage
disciple-making).
The lockdowns also threaten the critical fellowship aspects
of the church. There is the threat of community dissolution due to friction
over the perceptions, political implications, and the narrative of the pandemic. In-person
interactions have been severely curtailed (this problem is exacerbated for
those who do not have local family or friendships outside the church). Outreach
efforts have been halted as personal interactions with the aged and infirm are
severely limited. In-person counseling has been paused, as have any evangelistic
efforts. Less demarcated but as important are the everyday interactions of
believers with non-believers in workplaces, recreation venues, and other public
areas. There is also the threat of stress-related issues due to worry, fear,
concern that can manifest as sharp responses, anger, impatience, and other
unpleasantries.
The church’s witness also suffers through this time.
There is an emerging threat of division over the method and timing of resuming
the ministries of the church, compounded by the politicization of all aspects
of life fueled by reductionist media outlets that thrive in conflict. The risk
to the church’s testimony is binary, for there will be those who arguing that
by open “too soon” a church will be “risking peoples’ lives” while those that argue
the church should reopen immediately will question the commitment of the church
to scriptural mandates that place ministry over government edicts.
A church can be accused of “breaking the law” even as the governor’s
orders are contradicted by other levels of government.
There may be disaffection with
church leaders who are perceived as abiding by state orders that directly
contradict scriptural mandates.
While some will argue that abiding by the prevailing norms
is a “good testimony,” this approach ignores all other risks and consequent
harms this imposes.
No matter the response, compromise, in this case, is difficult:
The church either resumes ministry or does not. Any decision will be met with
dissatisfaction from some elements of the congregation and the greater community.
Therefore, the leadership’s decision-making process must consider perceptions
by various interests across the spectrum. Maintaining the status quo is a decision
and not necessarily the most effective testimony.
Vulnerabilities
All the church’s ministries are vulnerable to harm at this
point as a large part of the church has been suspended.
Variables
The only variable to consider is time: the longer the
shutdown orders last, the more harm from some risks will increase, though an
accelerated opening may increase the risk of COVID-19 exposure or infection.
Assets
The primary assets at risk are the reputation of the church
and the commitment of its members. The longer the shutdown order lasts the more
likely fissures will arise between those that differ on timing. Some may choose
to break fellowship to attend other churches that more closely aligned with their
preferred re-opening strategy. While this may seem a less than compelling
reason to leave, it must be considered, because the underlying assumptions are
not trivial (Does the church answer to the state when the state directives
contradict the clear teaching of scripture? Do we believe God is still in
control during a pandemic? Do we place fellowship and ministry high enough to
risk exposure to this disease?)
Capabilities and Constraints
Constraints are limitations that preclude total
mitigation of a risk. Constraints are always present and include money, time,
law, facilities and equipment, social tolerance, and available information. Fire
is a threat, but lack of funds will preclude installing a whole-building halon
fire suppression system.
Capabilities are inherent or available actions that
can be taken to mitigate a risk. Fire suppression capabilities include
observation, fire extinguishers, and fire prevention practices.
Constraints in the case of COVID-19 are incomplete information
, state mandates
, testing limitations
, health data access
, limited indoor space to
accommodate “social distance” requirements, and limited cleaning staff. Several
of these constraints are limited by budget (i.e., indoor space and cleaning
staff). Others are externally imposed (state mandates, testing, information).
Despite these constraints, many churches have several
inherent capabilities. These include compliant congregations, modern facilities,
and a growing expertise in communication technologies. Many churches have volunteers
with medical, risk management, technology, building, fabrication, and legal
expertise. A unique capability advantage is that a church is not a business dependent
on production, inventory, or foot traffic.
Mitigation Strategies
The mitigation options for the health risks of COVID-19 are:
comply with all mandates, comply with some mandates, or ignore all mandates. However,
there is significant ambiguity as to which mandates apply to churches. Furthermore,
the United States Attorney General has warned that “[E]ven in times of
emergency, when reasonable and temporary restrictions are placed on rights, the
First Amendment and federal statutory law prohibit discrimination against
religious institutions and religious believers...”
On May 16
th a
federal judge reversed North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper’s restrictions on indoor church
services.
On May 15
th U.S. District Court Judge Gregory F. Van Tatenhove
granted a temporary restraining order Friday against the Democratic governor on
behalf of Tabernacle Baptist Church in Nicholasville. The decision allows
in-person religious services that follow social distancing and hygiene
guidelines, two weeks ahead of the governor’s reopen date.
The legal system is
slowly reaffirming the unique protections afforded by the First Amendment.
Since ignoring all mandates can be perceived as reckless, a
reasonable course would comply with the mandates that apply to churches and
accord with the best interests of the congregation and the ministry (a
recommended list based on CDC guidance can be found at the end of this essay).
Beyond the health risks are risks to the teaching and
disciple-making efforts of the church. The lack of exposure to regular teaching,
the increased tolerance for missing church activities, the move to parachurch
online sources, lack of continuity, and breaking bonds that encourage disciple-making are threats that need to be addressed. Mitigation can take many forms,
but total reliance upon online communication cannot be the sole mitigation
strategy (in the section “Other Threats: Online Communications” below I lay out
the limitations and risks of this dependence). Efforts need to be made to
extend in-person teaching in whatever forms are possible without irresponsibly flaunting
health best practices.
The loss of fellowship threatens the community. Creative
approaches need to be considered to replace or supplement in-person
interactions – especially with the aged and infirm. Leaders need to
resume in-person counseling using virus mitigation best practices such as
distancing and frequent cleaning. Church leadership must also acknowledge and
continually address stress-related issues due to worry, fear, and concern.
The church’s witness must be carefully guarded from
the emerging threat of division over the method and timing of ministry
resumption. The church must clearly articulate the division between mandates of
men and mandates of God and stand firm on those issues without apology. The
church must also be sensitive to the wide variety of opinions within the
congregation, and work hard to provide frequent, well-reasoned, and scripturally
sound guidance and policy explanations. Leaders must also recognize differences
of opinion and remind members that those differences do not grant superiority
or favored status. People who argue for immediate reopening must be treated no
differently than those in favor of continued quarantine.
Most churches have increased use of “virtual” activities as
a temporary expedient for ministry. However, online communications are not
without risks. All systems have various conditions buried deep in the ubiquitous
EULA (End User License Agreements). Most include legal language that surrenders
various privacy rights and remedies in exchange for the use of the platform.
Even online platforms that tout privacy controls are subject to sophisticated
data-gathering attacks.
These abuses of privacy are elusive and therefore
underreported. For example prayer requests posted to a church-hosted site may
become accessible information through nefarious data-gathering activities. The
person may post with a full expectation of privacy yet may never be aware that
his “requests” became data about him. He will never know the reason he was
turned down for a job was that the prospective employer did not want to accept
the risk of a cancer relapse. Another person types “Amen” under a link for a
sermon where a specific behavior is condemned may be subject to overt (or more
likely covert) sanction as a “hater,” blocked from promotion because her views
are “too extreme.”
Online activity must be assumed to be public. Some are aware
of this and accept it, but most are not aware how pernicious this invasion into
private life has become. Even if people are scrupulous in their use of websites
may not be aware how much data is being captured each day. Everyone who carries
a smart phone has created a historic trail of locations, activities, health
provider visits, buying preferences, associations, and connections to
privately-owned corporations (primarily Apple and Google).
Smart Phones have become personal tracking devices (a fact
largely unknown by most users, since various aps default to continue collecting
data even when the app is not in use). The average smartphone user touches her
phone 2,617 times a day, with extreme phone users touching theirs more than
5,400 times a day.
A typical smart phone user has within his pocket a device
that tracks where he lives, where he sleeps, who he sleeps next to, that
there’s a guest in his house, when he wakes up, his interests, who he follows,
his email contacts, what he eats, how long it takes him to prepare his
breakfast, who he eats breakfast with, who he is married to, where she works,
what time she leaves, when she arrives, how fast she drives, where she exceeds
the posted speed limit, his exercise activity, his typical heart rate, blood pressure,
and temperature, his medical concerns, his bank account balance, the companies
he owes, how much he has saved for retirement, and his Amazon purchase history.
Most people are initially shocked when presented this
information, but old habits die hard and they quickly resume “life as normal,”
with the assumption, “I have nothing to hide.”
Sadly, this naive approach assumes everyone agrees on what
activities should be hidden and which are acceptable. The further we drift from
societal moral consensus, the more likely an activity will be deemed as
threatening, hateful, or even immoral.
Consider some recent examples:
- · The chairman of the board of the Jelly Belly
company donated $5,000 to an organization that provided therapy to children
struggling with sexual identity. For this he was widely condemned and Jelly
Belly subject to boycotts.
- ·
The founder of clothing chain Urban Outfitters donated
$13,150 to former Senator Rick Santorum’s presidential campaign. For this he
was widely condemned and Urban Outfitters subject to boycotts.
- ·
The Journal News published the names and
addresses of everyone with a gun permit in two New York counties. Several other
web sites and news publishers followed suit.
- ·
A student’s parent complained of finding
pictures of a Georgia public school teacher drinking wine on her personal Facebook
page. School administration said the images “promoted alcohol use.” The teacher
was forced to resign.
- ·
In May, 2020, the San Antonio city council unanimously
passed a resolution that makes terms such as “Chinese virus,” “Kung Flu,” or “Wuhan
virus” a hate crime. Anyone writing using these terms on a Facebook, Twitter,
or Instagram post is subject to prosecution under Federal Hate Crime laws.
- ·
A paper published in the International
Journal of Work Innovation warned: "Job seekers should be aware that
their future employers are closely observing their Facebook profiles in search
of a window into their personality...Though this practice raises many ethical
issues, it is an emerging phenomenon that is not slowing."
Anyone that communicates online must be aware that all words,
gestures, and behaviors uploaded to websites may at some point be considered
“hateful” or “violent.” All past comments, likes, and connections may be
surfaced out of context and used to damage reputations of the church and of
individuals. In other cases, birthdays, names, addresses, car models and other
data may be used to build a digital footprint, used to trace activity across
the web or parse out a password to a bank site. Paul warns us in Titus 1:15
that “Unto the pure all things are pure...” Sadly, this often leads to naivete that
can be very hazardous in a globally connected online ecosystem. Therefore,
while online communication is helpful, it must be used cautiously. Church
leadership needs to be aware of the risks and work to mitigate those risks. A
careful review of tools, license agreements, data storage and recovery, and
privacy must be conducted to identify and mitigate the risks of misused online
information.
Summary
Severe harm to an individual causes injury or death, while
severe harm to an organization results in dissolution. Organizations dissolve
every day for a variety of reasons, from market changes to mergers and
acquisitions to outright failure. Yet the church is not a mere organization --
it is the local representation of the Body of Christ on earth. Therefore, the
consequences of harm to the ministry and testimony of the church are far more
severe.
Political matters become unavoidable when state actions
intrude upon the church. Various state Governor’s lockdown orders are such a
case.
In a free society any panel of experts must be subject to
critique. This is true for any scientific, academic, or professional debate:
experts disagree on causes, effects, and best paths forward. Within our own
congregation, the acceptability of lockdown mandates is a contentious issue.
Within any large group of
people there will be some who are credulous, others who defer in order to keep
the peace, and some who are predisposed to assume the worst. In the ambiguous
center are most people who are not quite sure who is right, who has an agenda,
or whose proscriptions are trustworthy.
No church that seeks to honor God actively incites divisions
that cause separation. Reasonable accommodations can be made or even accepted
levels of tolerance enable people to attend and worship in harmony.
COVID-19 has prompted a variety of mitigation strategies,
from nationwide lock downs (Spain, France, Germany, Italy) to regional
quarantines (USA) to personal awareness and avoidance (Sweden). These
strategies have political implications. Therefore, it is impossible to remain apolitical
when addressing this topic, for politics are how we aggregate, diffuse, and
exercise power. That power has been exercised in such a way that it intrudes
upon the ability of the church to function as a church.
Those seeking to resume church gatherings are chided with
the cliché that “the church is not a building.”
Nevertheless, buildings
are where we gather for worship, instruction, and fellowship. These activities
are commanded, not merely suggested.
Challenge: Relationship to Government
The current situation raises a key paradox of the
relationship of church and individual believers to the state. The church has
wrestled with this relationship since Pentecost. Peter and John were arrested
because the Jewish authorities were “greatly disturbed because they were
teaching the people and proclaiming in Jesus the resurrection from the dead.”
This was not mere squabble over religion — this was a significant social,
economic, and political challenge to the status quo. This “new teaching”
threatened the temple economy and the uneasy tolerance of Rome, challenged the
established social order, pit the educated against the uneducated, suborned
tradition, and exposed the injustice of a system under which Jesus was tried
and convicted:
Acts 4: 18 And when they had
summoned them, they commanded them not to speak or teach at all in the name of
Jesus. 19 But Peter and John answered and said to them, “Whether it is right in
the sight of God to give heed to you rather than to God, you be the judge; 20
for we cannot stop speaking about what we have seen and heard.” 21 When they
had threatened them further, they let them go (finding no basis on which to
punish them) on account of the people, because they were all glorifying God for
what had happened;
In many regions of the world today Christianity is an
oppressed minority. In those areas the relationship is clearly delineated,
making the choice simple: survive. In most of the West, churches are still open,
and Christians gather and practice the norms, traditions, and rites of the
faith.
Augustine described this relationship in his City of God,
where he described differing domains of interest. Sometimes those domains
overlap: an example would be the state’s interest in buildings that meet
certain standards of access and safety. In other areas the domains are clearly
separate: the pastor preaches the truth of the Word no matter the “officially
acceptable guidance” from the state.
But which laws must we abide by? Various levels of
government have issued contradictory mandates. Recently several counties
determined to open ahead of the state governor’s timetables.
At the same time the Federal government defers on some
topics to the states but contradicts state guidance on others. A clear example
of inconsistency is the mandatory mask rules imposed by many states. The CDC’s
guidance reads: “CDC recommends wearing cloth face coverings in public
settings where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain...”
Yet the Pennsylvania Department of Health has decreed masks are required.
What is the message if we disregard a law? (We’ll concede
for sake of argument that the orders have been deemed “lawful” by the state).
Proponents of a “quiet witness” approach will argue that it is our duty to obey
the government (Titus 3:1), that governments are ordained by God (Romans 13:1)
and upholds the good of all (1 Pet. 2:14), and that Christians should respect
and honor those in authority (Romans 13:4). Further, we are commanded “...to aspire
to live quietly, and to mind your own affairs, and to work with your hands, as
we instructed you...” (1 Thessalonians 4:11).
These verses are aspirational, but not necessarily
normative. Jesus, Peter, Paul and others contradicted edicts when the state
overstepped its bounds. Pushback against illegal orders has been essential component
of Christian witness: Hus before the Council of Constance, Luther before the
Diet of Worms, Wilberforce and the Slave trade, Marin Luther King against
separate but equal, and March for Life protests against abortion. Confrontation
has been a critical element of the salt and light aspect of Christian testimony
since the beginning.
Christians have been at the forefront of many changes to society,
culture, and laws. These changes include the establishment of hospitals,
orphanages, and universities; the promotion of art, literature, and music
academies; outlawing infanticide, pedophilia, child abandonment, and abortion;
instituting humane prison reforms; granting property rights and suffrage to
women; banning polygamy; advancing universal education; abolishing slavery; and
the insistence that every person is equal before the law and before God. In
every case these efforts were opposed by some elements of the established
order.
The promotion of justice, the sanctity of life, the
individual as an image of God, the defense of the oppressed all reflect the
Christian understanding of the Gospel. The history of the relationship between
church and state in the west ranges from tolerance to symbiosis to adversarial.
It is certainly within the realm of Christian testimony to
challenge infringements on religious freedom.
This confrontation need
not be acrimonious, but it must be unambiguous. As citizens of the United
States we can appeal to law in the same way Paul was able to appeal to Caesar
as a citizen of Rome. There is no guarantee the appeal will be successful, but
it must always be an option lest it become meaningless.
There are many risks in life and one of the dangers of
freedom is that we need to assess risk and then determine our level of
tolerance. Ignoring risk does not make it go away. There is no time when all
risk is eliminated. We may do everything possible and still fail miserably. Or
we may continually –and unknowingly -- fail but no threat ever manifests. In
either case we can’t claim success. We are charged to do the best we can with the
resources available. Anything beyond that is in God’s hands.
Recommendations
Churches should establish a path to resume all ministries as
early as practical after adopting the following mitigations:
COVID-19 risk mitigations:
·
Establish a COVID-19 subcommittee with
medical and risk management expertise to review and formulate disease
prevention protocols and policies specifically for the specific church (the
following list is adapted from CDC recommendations for business):
o
Focus protections on the vulnerable: such
as the elderly, immunocompromised, those with pre-existing conditions, etc.
o
Provide video
stream access to all church
events and services, with remote access in separate room for Sunday AM
worship.
o
Offer alternate building access pathways
for those who choose to attend (to include staggered dismissal).
o
Reinforce basic rules of hygiene: cover
when sneezing / coughing / yawning, hand washing.
o Intensify
facility cleaning, disinfection, and ventilation
o
Encourage reasonable distancing whenever
feasible. Recommend use of mask when in proximity.
o
Train everyone on health and safety protocols.
Encourage anyone who is sick (to include children) to stay home.
o
Establish entry protocols to include observers
charged with assessing people for symptoms of illness as they enter the
facility. Assign medical volunteers who can assess symptoms. Develop a go-no
checklist with recommended responses.
Teaching and disciple-making and Fellowship risk mitigations
·
Appoint outreach lead responsible for
coordinating and encouraging modified outreach activities.
·
Develop an outreach plan for the elderly
and infirm.
·
Establish small group meetings for those
who are under age 65 with no long-term health issues (This may not align with
existing small group membership) that can meet regularly at church.
·
Establish virtual small group meetings
for those who over age 65 or with long term health issues. Provide technical
support and devices as needed.
·
Establish regular telephone check-ins for
those who are unable to meet or leave a facility or home.
Church witness risk mitigations
·
Establish a Reopening subcommittee with
broad representation to continually analyze and address reopening issues, concerns,
policies, and procedures. Publicize the names of the members so that the
broader church membership can interact with the subcommittee.
·
Communicate frequently and completely: Reinforce
safety and hygiene rules, support those who deny access to someone who is sick
or otherwise a health risk (example: turning away sick kids from the nursery).
·
Provide online safety best practices training
for all staff, volunteers, and church members.
·
Remind congregants that differences in
opinion on this topic are expected and that leadership is working
diligently to consider all reasonable courses of action.
·
Set a date for resuming church services
followed by a date for all other church ministries.
·
Update congregants weekly on reopening progress.
·
Remind congregants to talk to leadership, the
Reopen or COVID-19 subcommittees, or security if there is a concern with any
mitigation protocol or any potential risk.
Risk Assessment Glossary
Probability is the weighted likelihood of an
event occurring. Many events occur with such regularity we assume a probability
of 100% likelihood of occurrence (such as the sun rising in the morning, or
snow accumulation in winter). The closer to a probability of 100% the more
prepared we should be to mitigate (e.g. address in a useful way) the event when
it occurs. Smart people living in Buffalo own snow shovels. Events with lower
probability -- such as meteorite striking your house -- are possible but
occur very infrequently. Thus, we don’t install ballistic shields to guard
against meteorite impacts.
A threat is a person, circumstance, or force
with the ability and opportunity to cause harm. Some threats are active, with
an intentional malice that seeks to harm a particular target. Other threats are
arbitrary and yet can still cause harm. A sinkhole forming in your basement may
be very harmful, but there’s no “intent” by the earth to swallow your house.
A vulnerability is an opening or means where
harm can be inflicted. An unlocked door makes your house vulnerable to a thief.
Harm is damage or loss if a threat manifest.
For example, a fire can cause loss of property, injury to people, and damage to
church reputation.
Variables are factors that if changed,
increase or decrease the likelihood and/or the severity of the risk. An example
of a variable would be the number of people in a building: If a fire broke out,
the probability of harm would be greater with 500 people than 50, for it
would take longer to get a large crowd out of the building and it’s more likely
that someone would linger behind or go the wrong way.
An asset is something that’s been cultivated
and demands protection to avoid loss. In business, assets are people,
information, facilities, processes, and capital (money). In the military,
assets are personnel, information, weapons, support equipment, facilities,
locations, and time. Church assets include reputation (e.g. witness), people,
organization, facilities, and property.
Mitigation is any effort to minimize the
probability and/or consequence of a risk. Any mitigation is limited by constraints
that preclude comprehensively addressing all threats For example: To address
the threat of fire the church must determine what capabilities already exist
(extinguishers, alarms, fire prevention practices, frequent inspections) and
which need to be added to address the risk (sprinkler systems, fire drills,
annual site survey). Some mitigations are cost prohibitive: a facility-wide
halon-extinguisher system may be the most effective fire suppressant, but the
cost exceeds the annual budget.