đ Reading: Presence in Crisis: Quick Prayers and Compassion Actions
đ Presence in Crisis: Quick Prayers and Compassion Actions
Corrections/Prison Chaplaincy Specialization Course
Christian Leaders Institute
1. Introduction: The Crisis Moments No One Sees Coming
In correctional facilities, crises can erupt without warning.
A fight in the yard.
A suicide attempt.
A staff member collapsing from stress.
A grieving inmate punching a wall after hearing a loved one died.
Chaplains are not first responders in the medical or tactical senseâ
But they are first spiritual responders.
They are called to walk into pain, not away from it.
Not with solutions, but with sacred presence.
This reading explores the chaplainâs role in moments of acute crisis. It offers:
- Theology of presence
- Practical examples of verbal and non-verbal response
- Sample prayers for high-stakes moments
- A Ministry Sciences lens on compassion and clarity
- Self-check protocols for when to refer or report
2. The Theology of Presence in Crisis
Before chaplains speak a word or offer a prayer, they offer presence.
Jesus was a master of showing up in hard places:
- In the storm on the sea (Mark 4)
- In the funeral at Nain (Luke 7)
- In the tomb of Lazarus (John 11)
- In the upper room after resurrection (John 20)
He didnât always speak first. Sometimes, He simply appearedâand stood with them.
Presence precedes proclamation.
That is the chaplainâs model.
đ Psalm 46:1 (WEB):
âGod is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.â
When you walk into a crisis, you carry that very present helpânot in your wisdom, but in your posture.
3. What Presence Looks Like in a Prison Crisis
Presence doesnât mean controlling the room.
It means stabilizing itâoffering a center of peace.
A chaplainâs presence is:
- Calm, not reactive
- Attentive, not invasive
- Grounded, not panicked
- Spirit-led, not self-driven
Body language matters:
- Slow movements
- Soft but steady tone
- Open hands, not crossed arms
- Listening face, not evaluating face
Ministry Sciences Insight:
In trauma environments, the nervous system responds to non-verbal cues before verbal content. A chaplainâs calm body is often more healing than their words.
4. Practical Crisis Scenarios and How to Respond
Letâs look at five common situations a chaplain might faceâand offer quick response ideas rooted in grace, wisdom, and trauma-awareness.
đš 1. Suicide Threat or Attempt
Scenario: An inmate says, âI donât want to live anymore,â or attempts self-harm.
Chaplain's Response:
- Maintain visual contact
- Speak calmly: âIâm here. Youâre not alone. Iâm calling someone who can help.â
- Do not promise secrecy
- Report immediately to security or mental health staff
- Pray aloud if safe:
âLord, bring light into this darkness. Let this soul know they are seen and not alone.â
đ Do: Stay nearby, even silently
đ Donât: Try to handle it alone or dismiss it as a bluff
đą 2. Grief After Death Notification
Scenario: An inmate just received news that a loved one has died.
Chaplain's Response:
- Sit quietly
- Donât rush with words
- Say: âIâm so sorry. Iâm here with you.â
- Offer a hand (if appropriate)
- Ask if theyâd like a moment of prayer
- Read Psalm 23 or Psalm 34:18 slowly
Sample prayer:
âLord, You see this pain. You know this loss. Be near in this grief.â
đ Do: Give them space to cry, rage, or fall silent
đ Donât: Say âtheyâre in a better placeâ or try to minimize the pain
5. More Crisis Response Scenarios and Sample Actions
đ„ 3. Fight or Assault in the Unit
Scenario: A fight breaks out in front of you, or you arrive just after one has ended.
Chaplainâs Response:
- Stay calm and silent unless youâre directly asked to assist
- Let officers regain control
- Do not intervene physically
- If possible, make quiet eye contact with nearby inmatesâyour presence signals peace
- Afterward, ask if any non-aggressive parties want prayer or Scripture
Sample prayer (private):
âGod, bring order and healing to this space. Protect the innocent and calm the enraged.â
đ Do: Offer debriefing moments later when things are safe
đ Donât: Confront or question anyone involved in front of others
đ° 4. Panic Attack or Emotional Collapse
Scenario: An inmate hyperventilates, cries uncontrollably, or dissociates.
Chaplainâs Response:
- Speak softly: âCan you take a deep breath with me?â
- Invite grounding: âName five things you see⊠four things you feelâŠâ
- Offer one verse only if theyâre open: âBe still and know that I am God.â (Psalm 46:10)
- Ask for help if neededâespecially medical
Sample prayer:
âJesus, quiet the storm inside. Let peace settle over this soul.â
đ Do: Stay calm and grounded yourself
đ Donât: Try to fix it fast or quote too much Scriptureâless is more
đ§ 5. Staff Emergency or Death
Scenario: A correctional officer dies suddenly, or a staff member is injured or traumatized.
Chaplainâs Response:
- Offer presence and prayer to staffâbrief, respectful, compassionate
- Visit roll call if permitted
- Say: âIâm here if anyone wants to talk.â
- Donât push religion; offer relationship
Sample prayer:
âLord, comfort those who carry the weight of this loss. Give peace to this team. Hold us together when words are not enough.â
đ Ministry Sciences Insight:
In secondary trauma (witnessing tragedy), staff need quiet reassurance and space for grief. The chaplainâs silent witness can become the seed of later healing.
6. When You Canât Do AnythingâBut Youâre There
Sometimes you wonât be allowed to speak.
Sometimes the doors are locked and youâre stuck outside.
Sometimes the moment is too raw.
But donât underestimate this:
Presence > performance.
Just standing there and praying in your heartâŠ
Just making eye contactâŠ
Just breathing with someoneâŠ
âŠit matters.
đ Romans 12:15 (WEB):
âRejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep.â
7. Quick Reference: Sample Prayers by Crisis Type
Crisis | Prayer |
Grief after death | âLord, be near in the ache. Wrap this soul in Your presence.â |
Panic attack | âJesus, speak peace. Calm what feels out of control.â |
Suicide threat | âGod, shine light in the darkness. Break the lie of despair.â |
After a fight | âLord, let peace return. Protect the vulnerable. Break the cycle of violence.â |
Officer trauma | âGod, hold those who carry the unseen weight. Give rest and refuge.â |
No words | âHoly Spirit, groan on their behalf. Intercede in silence.â (Romans 8:26) |
Tip: Keep prayers short, sincere, and scripturally rooted.
8. Ministry Self-Check: When to Refer or Report
As a chaplain, you are not a licensed therapist or a first responder.
But you are a spiritual first witnessâand that comes with responsibility.
Hereâs how to self-check your role in any crisis:
â When to Refer (Non-emergency)
- You feel out of your depth emotionally
- Inmate expresses chronic depression, trauma, or mental health history
- Spiritual issues are tied deeply to unprocessed abuse
Refer to:
- Mental health counselor
- Licensed social worker
- Program director or facility chaplain
đš When to Report (Emergency or Risk)
Report immediately if:
- You hear threats of self-harm or suicide
- Someone speaks of harming others
- There is evidence of recent or ongoing abuse
- You suspect trafficking, neglect, or mental breakdown
Say:
âBecause I care, I need to let someone know. Your safety matters.â
Document factually. Follow all facility protocols. Donât investigateâjust report.
đ Ministry Sciences Ethics Insight:
Protection precedes privacy when someoneâs life or safety is at risk.
9. How to Recover Spiritually After Crisis
Crisis ministry doesnât just affect the person sufferingâit affects the minister too.
You may walk away:
- Shaken
- Spiritually heavy
- Anxious
- Unsure if you âdid enoughâ
Hereâs how to heal:
âïž Post-Crisis Recovery Checklist:
- Pray honestly: âGod, hereâs what I saw⊠help me release it.â
- Journal briefly what happened and how you felt
- Talk to a trusted mentor or supervisor
- Take 5â15 minutes in Scripture or silence before resuming ministry
- Restâyour body is a temple, and your nervous system needs release
đ Matthew 11:28 (WEB):
âCome to me, all you who labor and are heavily burdened, and I will give you rest.â
10. Final Reflection
You will never forget the crisis moments.
The whisper of someone on the edge.
The scream that interrupts service.
The look on an officerâs face after tragedy.
The silence after a slammed door.
In these moments, you wonât always have words.
But you will have presence.
And presence becomes a vessel of peace when itâs rooted in Christ.
As a chaplain, your role is not to rescueâit is to reflect Jesus:
- Calm
- Compassionate
- Consistent
- Centered in the Spirit
That is enough.
đ Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus,
You walked into storms and spoke peace.
You wept at death and then called for life.
You touched the untouchable, calmed the frightened, and carried the broken.
Make me a servant of presence.
Teach me to respond with wisdom, not reaction.
To pray with sincerity, not performance.
To love with courage, not fear.
Help me know when to stayâŠ
And when to call for help.
Let my presence reflect Yours,
In crisis and in calm.
Amen.
đ Academic Reference Page
Reading Title: Presence in Crisis: Quick Prayers and Compassion Actions
Corrections/Prison Chaplaincy Specialization â Christian Leaders Institute
đ Biblical References (WEB)
- Psalm 46:1 â âA very present help in troubleâ
- John 11 â Jesus weeps with Mary and Martha
- Romans 12:15 â âWeep with those who weepâ
- Isaiah 42:3 â âA bruised reed He will not breakâ
- Psalm 34:18 â âThe Lord is near to the brokenheartedâ
- Matthew 11:28 â âCome to me, all who are wearyâŠâ
- Romans 8:26 â âThe Spirit intercedes with groaningsâŠâ
- Matthew 5:4 â âBlessed are those who mournâŠâ
- Galatians 6:2 â âBear one anotherâs burdensâ
- 1 Thessalonians 5:14 â âEncourage the faintheartedâŠâ
đ Ministry Sciences and Academic Sources
- Christian Leaders Institute. Ministry Sciences Curriculum Research Notes, 2024
- Van der Kolk, Bessel. The Body Keeps the Score. Penguin Books, 2014
- Clouser, Roy A. The Myth of Religious Neutrality. University of Notre Dame Press, 2005
- Nouwen, Henri. The Wounded Healer. Image, 1979
- Felitti, Vincent J., et al. ACE Study. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 1998