Saturday, September 16, 2006

Mr. David Miscavige
Acknowledges the Scientology Volunteer Ministers

Why do Volunteers Burn Out?

People want to help. But how frustrating is it when you use your own precious free time with the idea of helping people and it just doesn't work?

Anyone who has tried to help friends or family members has run into this phenomenon: You see someone who obviosly is in trouble, or he or she comes to you for advice. You are distant from it and can see so clearly what they should do to improve the situation. But you suggest it and they tell you - no and give you one or five and 50 reasons why it can't work.

Or what about this: You have a friend or family member who has experienced a terriby loss - a love affair gone wrong, the death of a dear friend or a sister or husband - or even worse, the death of a child. Maybe they think they're to blame for it. If only they had.... You see their lives change before your eyes. The enthusiasm and joy of living is gone. They are encased in a universe that resonates with the loss. What can you possibly do to help them?

No wonder there so many organizations are plagued by volunteer burnout. They put time and money into training volunteers only to have them disappear after a year, a month, a week.... It's just not viable.

That's what is so differenet about the Scientology Volunteer Ministers program. Because it uses the Scientology Handbook, the volunteers it trains have the skill they need. When you see that your help IS help, when you can see that the people you help feel better, are more confident and actually change their lives for the better because of what you have given them.

After 9/11, David Miscavige, Chairman of the Board of Religious Technology Center, called upon all Scientologists to increase their committment to improving society. Scientologists DO have a technology that covers such a broad range of subjects, from improving relationships to overcoming iliteracy, and ever the skill to help people overcome the emotional and spiritual factors in of trauma and illness so a person can heal faster and overcome losses and get on with their lives. With that knowlege comes a commensurate responsibility. After all, if you had discover the cure for HIV/AIDS and then didn't USE it, how could you live with yourself while millions whom you could save, died.

In his speech called This is Scientology, delivered at the Church of Scientology Celebrity Center International in August 2004, David Miscavige described the Scientology Volunteer Ministers program to an audience of over 2000 leaders in the fields of the arts, entertainment, commerce and government. Mr. Miscavige described the Scientology Volunteer Ministers program to them in these terms:

"The final word, as regards our front-line work bringing our help wherever and whenever needed is our corps of 30-thousand Scientology Volunteer Ministers — on call, 24 hours a day in scores of nations."

He goes on to say:

"They have become internationally known and recognized for what has been described as spiritual first aid, and to that end they are ready and organized to respond to any disaster — 'man-made' or by force of nature."

Mr. Miscavige sums it up with the following:

"And it's all with no desire or wish for anything in return — other than the satisfaction of an indiscriminate act of kindness and compassion.

"That's how, and why, just since 9/11, our Ministers brought personal aid, one-on-one, to over 1.7-million people.

"So when it comes to helping those in most desperate need, we not only know we can help, we are doing something about it."

In the two years since he gave this speech the Scientology Volunteer Ministers have responded to disasters all over the world and tens of thousands of new Volunteer Ministers have been trained and hundreds of thousands more helped.

And why do they keep helping? Because they CAN!