Luke 5: 18 -19 - Through the Roof

“Just then some men came carrying a paralyzed man on a stretcher. They were trying to bring him in and lay him before Jesus,[e] 19 but, finding no way to bring him in because of the crowd, they went up on the roof and let him down on the stretcher through the tiles into the middle of the crowd[f] in front of Jesus.”


Reflection from Revd Helen Cameron, Moderator of the Free Churches Group

One of the most enjoyable things about being Moderator of the Free Churches Group is the connections that can be made. I was glad to travel to Wales to join my sisters and brothers in Free Church leadership there for conversation and careful listening about their perspectives and context particularly concerning issues of language and culture. It was an interesting day not just to talk to a wide range of leaders in Free Churches in Wales but also to see a frontline project addressing poverty in creative ways. I was then asked that day If I would be willing to lead a workshop for Welsh Baptist Ministers addressing themes of rest and restoration. Someone heard a recording of that webinar and then made contact with me directly. This was Katie Mobbs – Through the Roof Roofbreaker Team Leader and Co-ordinator for Wales, West and South West of England

Katie is Team Leader for the Through the Roof “Roofbreaker” project which aims to equip, encourage and resource volunteer disability champions in churches and ministries across the UK. She also has a particular focus on reaching churches in Wales, West and South West England. Katie is based in Cardiff and has Cerebral Palsy and is a wheelchair user. She has a background in health and social care law and disability advocacy in the public and third sector. Katie works alongside people with a range of disabilities and access needs, through her work with Through the Roof and in her local church. 

Contact and conversation with Katie and her colleagues allowed me to reflect personally about issues of access, belonging and inclusion in the life of the local Church as well as issues of policy and advocacy around full participation of all people in the life of the church at every level. In the webinar I led I had spoken quite personally about how issues of neurodivergences for someone close to me affected how they could ever feel included, welcome and be confident that they belonged at work, at leisure and perhaps most importantly for them, at church and in their faith and spirituality. I was used, as a former physiotherapist, to considering how someone with reduced mobility might need church to create flat and level paths, entrances and worship spaces. I was also used, as a teacher, in ministerial formation to consider carefully how students who were visually or hearing impaired might access their learning equally with their peers. Dyslexic students explained to me what would help them learn and how their patterns of thinking enabled a profound creativity. I was enriched in my teaching by what they asked me to consider. My fairly clear diction when speaking results, I remain convinced, from the fact that my mother for many years while I was learning to preach was profoundly if temporarily deaf. She would sit near the front and lip read. I learned not to cover my mouth or turn away to utter an aside. 

Photo courtesy from Throughtheroof.org.

What Katie helped me consider is what it takes for us to raise our voices as champions, as advocates and as those willing to become “Roofbreakers”, those willing to dismantle barriers to inclusion. Personal experience may alert us to some blockages and barriers but the kind of change and transformation required seems to require our whole attention to the imperative provided to us by God in terms of God’s will and purpose for the whole of creation. So in Isaiah 1:17 ( NIV) we read the words of the prophet to the people,

“Learn justice, do what is right and defend the oppressed”.

Our faith must be a lived reality others can experience. Love is what justice looks like in public.

So I have signed up to become a Roofbreaker, an advocate for the full participation of people in our churches and I wonder if you might too. A free webinar is offered to churches when a member signs up as a Roofbreaker advocate.

I wonder too if you mark Disability Awareness Sunday in your church?

In 2023, the date publicised for Disability Awareness Sunday was Sunday 17th September. But any Sunday can be Disability Awareness Sunday! So it is never too late to celebrate, and join the hundreds of churches across the UK - and the world - to share about church disability inclusion. There are 16 million disabled people in the UK (Family Resources Survey 2021-22) who need to know churches are supportive places to experience God’s love.

Over 20% of the UK's population are disabled people (Family Resources Survey, 2021-22). Not all disabilities are visible, but disabled people are still under-represented in UK churches – especially in positions of responsibility.

I am so glad that Katie Mobbs contacted me, so glad to be able to invite the Free Churches Group to consider this issue and to encourage you to draw on the excellent free resources of the Through the Roof Trust.

Find out more about the blessings and benefits of joining over 600 Roofbreaker disability champions in UK churches here.

 Helen Dixon Cameron

Moderator of the Free Churches Group