đ Reading: Strength for the Long Haul â A Chaplainâs Rule of Life
Strength for the Long Haul â A Chaplainâs Rule of Life
Ministry That Endures â Finding Rhythm for the Long Road of Prison Chaplaincy
Prison ministry isnât a sprint.
Itâs not something you run hard for a few weeks and then recover from later.
Itâs a marathonâa long, often grueling journey that requires more than just passion.
Because inside the walls, youâll face crisis, trauma, spiritual warfare, and sorrow.
Youâll sit with pain that doesnât have easy answers.
Youâll carry stories that haunt you.
Youâll walk into moments of chaos where your presence is the only light in the room.
And if youâre not intentional, that weight will start to crush you.
Many chaplains begin well.
Theyâre full of energy.
Fueled by conviction.
Ready to make a difference.
But over timeâŚ
- Some burn outâemotionally and spiritually exhausted, with nothing left to give.
- Others compromiseâcutting corners, letting discipline slip, losing sight of the gospel.
- And many simply quietly quitâstill showing up on the outside, but no longer present on the inside.
Their ministry becomes a routine, not a calling.
Their soul grows dry, even while they speak of Living Water.
But those who last?
The ones who continue year after year with joy, peace, and authenticity?
They all share something in common:
They live by a rule of life.
Not a list of rigid rules.
Not a perfectionist standard.
But a sacred rhythmâa pattern of daily and weekly habits that protect their heart, nourish their spirit, and keep them centered on Christ.
Theyâve learned that if you donât feed your soul, youâll run dry trying to feed others.
They donât just serve inmatesâthey let God serve them in silence, Scripture, and rest.
Their faith isnât flashy.
But itâs anchored.
Itâs sustainable.
And itâs enduring.
So if you want to last in prison ministryâ
If you want to walk with strength through the storms and not just survive but thriveâ
You must live by more than a calling.
You must live by a rule of life.
Because ministry that endures is not powered by adrenalineâ
Itâs grounded in rhythm.
And rooted in grace.
What Is a Rule of Life? â A Spiritual Framework for Healthy Ministry
In the rush of ministry, itâs easy to live in reactive modeâ
Responding to every crisis, need, and responsibilityâŚ
Until your soul is running on empty.
But those who serve long-termâfaithfully, fruitfully, and without burning outâ
Donât just rely on passion or discipline.
They live by something deeper.
They live by a rule of life.
Now donât be misled by the word ârule.â
This isnât legalism.
Itâs not a checklist.
Itâs not about proving your worth through spiritual performance.
A rule of life is a sacred rhythm.
A personalized pattern of spiritual practices that keep your soul rooted in Christ,
especially when the work is heavy and the days are long.
đ Historically rooted in the Benedictine tradition,
a rule of life has been used for centuries to help men and women of faith live with intention, rhythm, and renewal.
And today, itâs being rediscovered as a powerful tool for ministry leaders, chaplains, pastors, and everyday disciples.
Think of a rule of life like a trellisâ
a simple structure that guides and supports the growth of a vine.
Without the trellis, the vine may grow wild or get trampled underfoot.
But with the trellis, the vine grows upwardâstrong, healthy, and fruitful.
In the same way, a rule of life gives your soul something steady to grow on.
A basic rule of life includes rhythms such as:
- Daily time with God â time in the Word and in prayer, not out of duty, but for connection
- Regular rest â including weekly Sabbath, margin, and space to breathe
- Meaningful relationships â intentional connections with spiritual friends, mentors, and community
- Healthy boundaries â saying yes and no with wisdom, protecting what matters most
- Ongoing spiritual reflection â pausing regularly to examine your heart, listen to God, and realign your life
This isnât about adding more pressure.
Itâs about building a structure that creates space for God to sustain you.
Because your soul needs more than inspiration.
It needs intention.
You donât drift into spiritual health.
You build itâstep by step, habit by habit, prayer by prayer.
So if you want to serve well and last longâŚ
Donât just have a schedule.
Donât just have a goal.
Have a rule of life.
Let it guide you.
Let it keep you.
Let it grow you upwardâtoward Christ, in grace, and with peace.
Daily Time With God â The Foundation for Sustainable Ministry
If you want to last in ministryâespecially in the high-pressure world of prison chaplaincyâ
you need more than passion.
You need more than knowledge.
You need daily time with God.
Not just occasionally.
Not just when you feel inspired.
But every single day.
Because you cannot pour into others if youâre empty.
You cannot offer peace if your own soul is in turmoil.
You cannot guide others into truth if youâre not sitting under it yourself.
It starts here: Scripture and prayer. Every day.
This isnât about earning Godâs approval.
Itâs about staying connected to your Source.
Even 10 focused minutes in the Word and in prayer
can completely recalibrate your spirit for the day ahead.
It can:
- Re-center your perspective
- Calm your heart before the chaos begins
- Remind you who you are and whose you are
- Strengthen your courage and your compassion
- Ground your responses in grace instead of emotion
đ Psalm 1:2 (WEB):
âHis delight is in Yahwehâs law⌠he meditates on it day and night.â
Daily meditation on Godâs Word isnât just a disciplineâitâs a delight.
It becomes a quiet place of meeting,
A steady whisper of truth in a noisy world.
Youâve heard the phrase:
âNo Bibleâno breakfast.â
Itâs a simple way of saying:
âBefore I feed my body, I need to feed my soul.â
When you begin your day in Godâs presence,
you donât just check a boxâyou build a foundation.
You step into the day with your eyes fixed on Jesus.
You make yourself availableânot just to inmates or staff,
but to the Holy Spirit.
And that changes everything.
So donât overcomplicate it.
You donât need the perfect devotional setup.
You donât need hours of silence.
Start with:
- A few verses
- A simple prayer
- A moment of listening
Let the Word anchor you.
Let prayer soften and shape your heart.
Because the strength you need for ministryâŚ
The peace you long to carryâŚ
The wisdom for hard conversationsâŚ
It all begins in the secret place.
Weekly Sabbath and Rest â Embracing the Rhythm That Renews
In the demands of ministryâespecially in a high-pressure environment like prison chaplaincyâitâs easy to believe the lie that rest is a luxury.
That thereâs always one more need to meet.
One more crisis to walk into.
One more person who needs encouragement.
But hereâs the truth:
You are not a machine.
You are not limitless.
You are not called to run on adrenaline and obligation.
Even God rested.
And if the Creator of the universe paused after creation,
how much more must we?
Sabbath is not optional.
Itâs not indulgent.
Itâs not laziness.
Sabbath is obedience.
It is a sacred rhythm God built into creation itselfâ
A weekly pause that reminds us:
- We are not what we produce
- We are loved even when weâre not âusefulâ
- God is still Godâeven when we stop working
Take one day each week to:
đ Unplug
Turn off the phone.
Step away from screens.
Stop responding to emails.
Silence the noise so your soul can rest.
đł Enjoy creation
Take a walk.
Sit in the sun.
Listen to the wind in the trees.
Let the beauty of God's world restore your perspective.
đ Worship
Not just in a serviceâbut with your heart.
Sing.
Read a psalm.
Pray slowly.
Let worship become your reset button.
đ¨ Let your soul breathe again
Do something that brings joy without pressure.
Rest is not just about stoppingâitâs about renewing.
And remember:
If you donât rest by choice,
your body will eventually force you to restâ
through burnout, fatigue, or illness.
Rest now, so you can lead well later.
đ Exodus 20:8â10:
âRemember the Sabbath day, to keep it holyâŚ
On it you shall not do any workâŚâ
God didnât give the Sabbath as a burdenâ
He gave it as a gift.
When you honor Sabbath, youâre saying:
âGod, I trust You to run the world while I rest.â
Itâs an act of humility.
An act of faith.
An act of worship.
So, chaplain, leader, caregiverâ
Honor the Sabbath.
Build it into your rhythm.
Defend it fiercely.
Receive it joyfully.
Because you donât just rest from your workâ
You rest for your calling.
Relational Support â The People Who Carry You When Ministry Gets Heavy
Correctional ministry is holy workâ
But itâs also hard work.
You carry trauma.
You hold space for pain.
You walk into tension that few understand.
And while itâs easy to appear strong on the outside,
you were never meant to carry this alone.
You were created for connection.
Because ministry is relational.
And so is soul care.
You need more than prayer.
You need people.
Not just those you serveâ
But those who serve you.
You need:
đ¤ A spiritual friend
Someone you can be real with.
Who knows your heart and doesnât need a title to love you.
Someone who checks inânot because youâre in trouble, but because you matter.
This is the person who reminds you that youâre more than your ministry.
đ§ A mentor or supervisor
You need wise voices ahead of you on the path.
Someone who can say,
âIâve been there.â
âHereâs what I learned.â
âLetâs pray through this together.â
Supervision isnât just accountabilityâitâs a gift of perspective and protection.
đŹ A safe space to process
You canât process everything with inmates.
You canât unload on staff.
You need a space where you can speak freelyâ
Without judgment,
Without fixing,
With room to cry, grieve, confess, or just be quiet.
Your pain needs a place to land.
Let it land somewhere safe.
đ Encouragement from fellow leaders
You need others who âget it.â
Other chaplains. Other spiritual leaders. Other caregivers who understand the weight.
Lean into community.
Share prayer requests.
Celebrate small victories.
Be a shoulderâand let others be yours.
When you walk with others, you walk stronger.
Why it matters:
Isolation drains.
Connection sustains.
Too many faithful ministers burn out quietly because they try to be self-sufficient.
But strength doesnât come from hiding weakness.
It comes from honest fellowship.
đ Ecclesiastes 4:9â10:
âTwo are better than oneâŚ
For if one falls, the other will lift up his companion.â
Let others lift you.
And donât wait until youâre in crisis to reach out.
Build your support before you need it.
Because the more connected you areâ
The more consistent, joyful, and healthy your ministry will be.
Healthy Boundaries for Sustainability
Saying âyesâ to everything will exhaust you.
Saying ânoâ with wisdom will preserve your calling.
Examples:
- Set and protect office hours
- Donât respond to every text or request immediately
- Guard your time with family
- Leave margin for joy
Physical Self-Care
Your body isnât separate from your callingâ
Itâs part of your ministry.
Honor God with how you care for it:
- Get enough sleep
- Stay hydrated
- Move your body regularly
- Manage stress wisely
- Avoid harmful substances
đ 1 Corinthians 6:19â20 (WEB):
âYour body is a temple of the Holy SpiritâŚâ
Take care of the vessel God uses.
Emotional and Mental Resilience â Leading with Strength That Feels
In correctional chaplaincy, your ears will become a sanctuary for suffering.
Youâll hear things others never hear.
Youâll witness pain few can imagine.
Youâll sit in silence with someone who has lost everythingâ
And be expected to stay strong.
You carry the trauma of others,
the weight of confessions, the echoes of loss,
the burden of brokenness.
And while you may be trained to stay calm and composed,
youâre not made to be emotionally numb.
If you donât care for your own emotional and mental health,
you will eventually collapse under the weight of theirs.
This is why resilience matters.
Not just the ability to keep goingâ
But the ability to feel deeply without falling apart.
Because strong chaplains donât feel less.
They just learn to feel in healthy, Spirit-led ways.
Build resilience by creating sacred practices for your emotional life:
đ Journaling
Let your thoughts land somewhere outside your head.
Write out what you heard, what you felt, what you prayed.
Journaling clears mental clutter and reveals patterns in your heart.
Itâs not just for ventingâitâs for processing with God.
đŁď¸ Talking to someone you trust
Donât carry the hardest stories alone.
Talk to a mentor, a counselor, or a spiritual friend who can help you process, not perform.
You need a place where you donât have to be âthe chaplain.â
You just get to be you.
đ¨ Recognizing your triggers
Know what affects you more deeply.
Maybe itâs stories of abuse.
Maybe itâs violence.
Maybe itâs feeling helpless.
Identify the signsâshort temper, numbness, withdrawal, fatigueâ
And address them early.
Self-awareness is soul protection.
đ§ Giving yourself permission to grieve
Ministry will break your heart at times.
That doesnât make you weak.
It makes you compassionate.
Grieve when you need to.
Cry when the story hits too hard.
Donât stuff the sorrowâbring it to Jesus.
Even He wept.
Why this matters:
If you pretend youâre unaffected,
youâll slowly become disconnected.
If you donât make space to heal,
youâll eventually lose your ability to help others do the same.
But when you care for your own soul with honesty, grace, and wisdom,
you become a safe place for others to heal, too.
đ Psalm 34:18 (WEB):
âYahweh is near to those who have a broken heart,
and saves those who have a crushed spirit.â
Let Him be near to your heart, too.
Because healthy chaplains arenât superhumanâ
They are surrendered humans, strengthened by the presence of God.
Spiritual Retreat and Silence
Once a quarterâor at least once a yearâstep away.
Schedule time for:
- A silent morning
- A personal retreat
- A walk with Scripture and no agenda
Jesus did it often.
đ Luke 5:16:
âJesus withdrew to lonely places and prayed.â
This isnât selfish.
Itâs soul stewardship.
When You Feel Like Quitting â Finding Strength in the Middle of Ministry Fatigue
No matter how passionate your callingâŚ
No matter how prepared you feelâŚ
No matter how much fruit you seeâŚ
There will come a time when you feel like quitting.
Youâll hit a wall.
It may be slow and silentâlike a spiritual numbness that creeps in quietly.
Or it may hit hardâafter a conflict, a crisis, or a crushing disappointment.
You may feel:
- Burned out â mentally, emotionally, and physically drained
- Discouraged â wondering if youâre making any difference at all
- Underappreciated â like no one sees how hard youâre working or how much you carry
- Spiritually dry â leading others while feeling empty yourself
And in those moments, the temptation is real:
- To fake your way through it
- To isolate and shut down
- To runâemotionally, mentally, spiritually
- To give up and walk away
But the key to endurance isnât pretending youâre fine.
Itâs getting honestâand returning to the One who called you in the first place.
When you feel like quitting, do this instead:
đŁď¸ Talk to someone
Donât suffer in silence.
Reach out to a mentor, a counselor, or a trusted spiritual friend.
Say what youâre really feeling.
You are not weak for needing supportâyouâre wise.
đ Return to the Scriptures
Go back to the promises.
Go back to the stories of weary leadersâMoses, Elijah, Paul.
Let the Word remind you:
- Youâre not the first to feel tired.
- Youâre not alone.
- Youâre not finished.
đĽ Revisit your original calling
Go back to the beginning.
Why did you say yes?
What did God show you?
What has He done in you since?
Remember that you were called by grace,
and what He startedâHe will sustain.
đď¸ Restâand pray
Sometimes what your soul needs is not more effortâŚ
But more surrender.
Take time to breathe.
To weep.
To sleep.
To walk away from the noise and sit in Godâs presence without an agenda.
đ Galatians 6:9 (WEB):
âLet us not be weary in doing good,
for we will reap in due season,
if we donât give up.â
You may feel tired.
You may feel invisible.
You may feel like your ministry is small and your strength is spent.
But God sees you.
And He is not asking you to carry it alone.
So if you're near the edgeâ
Donât jump.
Lean.
Lean on others.
Lean on grace.
Lean into the arms of Jesus, who never tires of holding you up.