This month is Domestic Violence Awareness month. Did you know that one in four women report some sort of abuse in her most intimate relationships?

We’ve all been in situations where we have a gut feeling something isn’t quite right or someone has disclosed something to us and we’re not sure what to do. Sometimes we respond by pretending as if we don’t see it. Jesus tells a story like that, where the religious leaders who should have helped someone who had been mistreated, instead ignored him and pretended not to see. (Luke 10:25-37)

Could Jesus have been talking about you? Or me?

Men, women, and children who attend our church and live in our neighborhood are suffering in homes where abuse is present. Yet we don’t want to see it, and it’s easy to ignore. But that would be wrong. It hurts them, and it hurts us. When we ignore someone desperate for help, they continue to suffer and we lose our humanity.

Jesus tells his followers, “Whenever you helped someone who was overlooked or ignored, that was me – you did it to me” (Matthew 25:40 The Message). When we take our time to help someone, Jesus says, we are ministering to Him.

Here are five things that you can do if you suspect or know someone is in an abusive relationship:

1.   Listen hard, speak little.  People who experience abuse in their marriage usually feel a great deal of shame. It’s difficult for them to talk about it but when we jump in with our simplistic response or offer a solution, we often shut them down or give unwise or trite answers to a very painful and complex problem.

Proverbs says, “He who answers before he hears, it is his folly and shame” (Proverbs 18:13).

2.   Validate their experience.  It’s normal to feel afraid to tell a family secret. It’s common to blame oneself for one’s partner’s abusive behaviors. Don’t minimize, trivialize or rationalize things away. Saying things like, “I can’t believe what you’re saying; he or she seems so nice or godly or normal” is hurtful.

Instead say things like, “It was good that you told someone.” Or “I can’t imagine what you’re going through, but telling is the first step to getting help.” Or “No matter how you disappoint your husband (or wife), you don’t deserve to be treated this way.”

3.    Pray.  We often forget how potent prayer is and that even when we don’t know the whole story, God does. Sometimes we feel helpless to really know what to do in these kinds of situations. Prayer is an important reminder that God is in charge and loves both the abused and the abuser. We must bring the situation before God daily, asking Him to intervene in a way that we cannot imagine.

4.    Offer tangible help.  James says, “Suppose you see a brother or sister who needs food or clothing and you say, ‘Well, good-bye and God bless you; stay warm and eat well’ – but then you don’t give that person any food or clothing. What good does that do? So you see, it isn’t enough just to have faith. Faith that doesn’t show itself by good deeds is no faith at all – it is dead and useless”  (James 2:16,17).

Does the person need medical attention? Counseling help? Legal aid? A safe place to live? Sometimes people need concrete support to break free from abusive patterns, and it takes the loving and tangible resources of a community of people to help someone. The Good Samaritan didn’t just pray, he also carted the broken and battered person to the inn and paid for his care.

5.    Advocate and/or report where needed and appropriate.  If you are a mandated reporter and a child discloses that he/she has been a victim of abuse, you must report this disclosure to the proper authorities. However, an adult victim of spousal abuse needs an advocate too. Someone who will come along side of him/her and speak with community agencies, attend legal proceedings and help communicate with church leaders in order to have the best possible hope for repentance, healing, and reconciliation of the family.

I have a framed card in my office that says,

“On the street I saw a small girl cold and shivering in a thin dress, with little hope of a decent meal. I became angry and said to God: why did you permit this?  Why don’t you do something about it?

For a while God said nothing. That night He replied quite suddenly: I certainly did something about it. – I made you.”

Edmund Burke once said, “all that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men (and women) do nothing.”

We may not be able to do everything needed to stem the tide of violence at home, but we certainly can do something.

What can you do today?