đ Reading: The Rule of Life for the Christmas Chaplain
đ Reading: The Rule of Life for the Christmas Chaplain
đ§ž Case Study: âWe Didnât Plan to Burn Outâ
Jerry and Lisa were three weeks into what had become their busiest December ever as Christmas Chaplains.
- They had led two senior center carol services, both full of emotion, memory, and tears.
- They had manned a mobile Christmas Eve prayer booth at the city marketâblessing strangers, praying with the grieving, and handing out Scripture cards.
- They had spent an afternoon volunteering at the local library Christmas event, quietly supporting overwhelmed parents and offering spiritual presence to anyone who asked.
- They had helped organize a Blue Christmas vigil at the hospice, where silence, candlelight, and grief had settled like snow on every soul in the room.
- In between it all, they were visiting neighbors in their retirement communityâchecking in on widows, listening to stories, and praying at kitchen tables.
They were doing everything âright.â
They were present, faithful, and joyful in their calling.
They loved bringing the hope of Christ into places others might overlook.
But slowlyâquietlyâsomething began to fray.
Lisa noticed she was becoming easily irritated.
She couldn't sleep deeply, and her spirit felt thin.
Jerry, normally energized by ministry, began feeling numb after prayer visits.
They both caught themselves snapping at one another over small things.
And their once-deep devotional rhythm had eroded to rushed prayers over coffee, spoken with sincerity but lacking stillness.
Then came the moment of reckoning.
After an emotionally heavy hospital visit, where theyâd sat with a family saying goodbye to a father, Jerry looked over at Lisa in the car and said:
âI donât think weâve prayed together this whole week.
Iâm giving everyone else peaceâŚ
but I havenât sat in it myself.â
That evening, they chose to stop.
They turned off their phones.
They sat in silence together.
Lisa lit three candles. Jerry opened his Bible to Psalm 23.
They read it aloudâslowly, weeping through the familiar words:
âHe restores my soulâŚâ
They took communion at their dining room table.
They repentedâof busyness, of burnout, of trying to pour from an empty cup.
And they made a decision:
âNext year, we need a rhythm.
A spiritual rule. A structure of rest.â
đď¸ The Rule of Life They Created
Out of that sacred pause, Jerry and Lisa developed their own Rule of Life for Decemberâa spiritual rhythm to protect their soul, their marriage, and their ministry.
Every year since, they have followed this seasonal framework:
- đŻď¸ Morning Stillness â 15 minutes of quiet together before anything else
- đ Scripture Before Service â no ministry without first reading and praying Scripture
- đ Weekly Sabbath â one day or evening where they do nothing for anyone but rest in Christ
- đ Saying No With Peace â they refuse 1â2 good invitations every year to protect margin
- đ Nightly Blessing â they end each evening with candlelight, prayer, and the words:
âThe Light still shines. And God is still with us.â
đĄ What They Learned
Jerry and Lisa learned what every seasoned chaplain eventually must:
- Sustained ministry flows from rooted presence.
- You canât serve the world if your soul is starving.
- You canât bring peace to others if youâve made no room for it in yourself.
- You canât whisper hope if youâve never heard it spoken to you.
Ministry that lasts is ministry that is nourished.
They still serve fully.
They still show up often.
But now, they show up from a place of being filledânot frantically poured out.
They still hear the same praise:
âThank you for bringing such peace.â
But now, they can honestly say:
âItâs not mine. Itâs His. And I made space to receive it.â
đ What Is a Rule of Life?
A Rule of Life is not a list of legalistic expectations or rigid spiritual âto-doâ lists. Rather, it is a grace-filled, intentional framework that helps you stay rooted in God while actively serving others.
It is not meant to restrict your freedom, but to preserve your fruitfulness.
đż A Trellis for the Soul
The word âruleâ comes from the Latin regula, which means trellisâthe wooden or wire framework that supports a growing vine. A trellis doesnât produce the fruit. It simply holds up the vine so that:
- It doesnât collapse under its own weight
- It receives light and airflow
- It grows in the right direction
- Its fruit is accessible and sustainable
In the same way, a Rule of Life provides structure, support, and space for the living presence of Christ to grow in and through you.
Without a rule, your soul may sprawl aimlesslyâor collapse entirely.
With a rule, your soul can stretch toward others without breaking.
âď¸ Not LegalismâLiberation
This kind of spiritual framework is not about performance. Itâs about protection.
- It doesnât demand that you be perfect
- It invites you to be present, prayerful, and paced
- It helps you minister from overflowânot overwork
Many great saints and leaders throughout Christian history have adopted personal or communal Rules of Life to help guide their daily habits, spiritual disciplines, relationships, and ministry rhythms.
The goal is not to do more for Godâbut to remain with God while you serve others.
đ Especially During Christmas
The Christmas season is filled with beautyâbut also burden.
Chaplains are often called into emotionally intense, logistically chaotic, and spiritually significant moments:
- Candlelight services
- Hospice visits
- Public vigils
- Grief counseling
- Outreach events
- Blue Christmas ceremonies
- Spontaneous prayer moments in malls or markets
And amidst all this, your own heart might be:
- Tired
- Grieving
- Overwhelmed
- Distracted
- Running on fumes
Thatâs why a Rule of Life is essential during Advent and Christmas.
It becomes your spiritual trellisâholding you up when the fruit of ministry is heavy.
It reminds you that you are a branch, not the vine.
- You donât produce peace. You carry it.
- You donât force joy. You receive it.
- You donât save anyone. You point them to the One who does.
đď¸ Final Thought
A Rule of Life is a gift you give your soul.
Itâs not just for monks in monasteries.
Itâs for ministers in markets.
Itâs for chaplains in retirement homes, hospital rooms, and candlelit circles.
Itâs for anyone who wants to serve faithfully without losing their spiritual footing.
If Jesus needed rhythms of retreat, prayer, and reflectionâso do we.
If your soul matters to Godâit should matter to you.
And if you want your ministry to last beyond December 25th,
let your roots run deep beneath every moment of giving.
The Rule of Life holds you, so you can hold others.
âď¸ Why Christmas Chaplains Need a Rule of Life
The Christmas season is filled with sacred beautyâbut also subtle danger for those in ministry.
It is a time of contrasts and tensions:
- A time of beautyâand the risk of burnout
- A season of joyâbut also one that sharpens grief
- A call to serve generouslyâand a temptation to overextend sacrificially
- A celebration of Christâs comingâbut a very real risk of missing His presence in your own life
As a Christmas Chaplain, you step into some of the most tender spaces of the season:
- You sing hope in the memory care unit
- You offer prayer in the checkout line
- You light candles at a vigil for the grieving
- You lead Scripture services for those who feel forgotten
These moments are holyâbut theyâre also draining. If you are not spiritually grounded, ministry can shift from worship to performance, and from overflow to exhaustion.
đ What Happens Without Rhythm
Even the most faithful, passionate chaplains can find themselves slipping when they donât have a Rule of Life. The symptoms are subtle at first, but they grow:
- Emotionally drained â easily irritable, numb, or weepy after visits
- Spiritually dry â unable to sense Godâs nearness while leading others
- Physically depleted â running on caffeine, adrenaline, or sheer willpower
- Relationally distant â disconnected from spouse, friends, or your own children
- Ministering from memory â quoting Scripture and praying words you no longer feel
You may still âlookâ effectiveâbut youâve become disembodied from the joy of ministry.
Youâre pouring out, but nothing is being poured back in.
A Rule of Life helps you stop the leak before the soul collapses.
đ§Ź Ministry Sciences Insight: Rhythm Prevents Rupture
From a Ministry Sciences perspective, the soul thrives on rhythm. Just as the body needs rest cycles and breathing patterns, the spiritual life needs anchored repetitionâmoments where:
- Emotion is processed
- The nervous system resets
- The Spirit is re-engaged
- Godâs presence is re-centered
In trauma-informed ministry, we learn that constant output without recovery leads to spiritual fragmentation. Chaplains may dissociate from their own needs, mistake adrenaline for anointing, and begin to confuse productivity with presence.
Intentional rhythms reverse this drift.
By embedding predictable pauses, devotional anchors, and spaces of silence into your weekly rhythm, you:
- Reconnect your outer ministry to your inner life
- Let God minister to you before you minister to others
- Re-center your identity in being a beloved childânot in doing spiritual work
đŻď¸ A Rule of Life Is Not About Doing More
Itâs about doing what matters.
Itâs about protecting the vine, not adding branches.
A Rule of Life is how you say to your soul:
âGod is with me, too. And I will not abandon His presence, even in service to His people.â
Itâs how you embody the peace youâre preaching.
Itâs how you practice the presence you proclaim.
Itâs how you finish the season still full of Christânot emptied by Christmas.
đ ď¸ Components of a Chaplainâs Rule of Life
Below are several suggested rhythms you may include in your personal or couple-based Rule of Life. Each chaplainâs rhythm will look different based on lifestyle, health, ministry load, and calling.
1. Morning Stillness (Daily)
Before checking your calendar or replying to texts, spend 5â15 minutes in silence with God.
- Light a candle
- Breathe deeply
- Read one Advent verse
- Pray: âJesus, I welcome You again todayâ
- Sit without rush
You begin with Godânot with your to-do list.
2. Scripture Before Service (Daily or Weekly)
Let the Word shape your heart before you share it with others. Choose a few Scriptures to return to all season long:
- Isaiah 9:2â6
- Luke 1:46â55 (Maryâs song)
- Luke 2:1â20
- John 1:1â5, 14
- Philippians 2:5â11
Ministry isnât your identity. Christ is.
3. Sabbath Rhythm (Weekly or Biweekly)
Choose one dayâor one eveningâeach week when you do no ministry, answer no calls, and serve no one.
- Take a nap
- Watch Christmas lights
- Laugh with family
- Read a novel
- Listen to worship music by candlelight
Sabbath is resistance against spiritual exhaustion. Itâs the gift of stopping.
4. Prayer of Relinquishment (As Needed)
Say no when necessary. Let go of expectations. Surrender whatâs not yours to carry.
A simple prayer:
âJesus, this invitation is goodâbut itâs not mine. I trust that You will send someone else. I release this opportunity, and I remain at peace.â
Youâre not the Light of the World. You carry itâbut you are not it.
5. Closing the Day (Nightly)
Before bed, take 3â5 minutes to settle your soul.
- Light a small candle or sit by the tree
- Pray with a spouse or silently reflect
- Whisper a Scripture of peace
- Offer thanks for one name, one moment, one miracle
Jerry and Lisa close each night by saying to each other:
âThe light still shines, and God is still with us.â
đ§Ź Ministry Sciences Integration: The Rule of Life and the Seven Connections
At Christian Leaders Institute, we teach a holistic and Spirit-led model of soul and leadership development through Ministry Sciences. One of the central tools in that approach is the Seven Connections, which emphasize aligning every part of life with God's presence and purpose. These connectionsâto God, yourself, others, your calling, your resources, your community, and your worldâwork much like a Rule of Life.
In fact, the Rule of Life can be thought of as the daily or seasonal structure that gives those seven connections a practical, lived rhythmâespecially during high-stress times like the Christmas season.
Hereâs how a Rule of Life aligns with key insights from Ministry Sciences and supports the Seven Connections:
1. Spiritual Formation Requires Structure and Surrender
You donât drift into transformation. You walk into it with intention.
- A Rule of Life helps you schedule sacred spaceâlike stillness, prayer, Scripture, and Sabbath.
- These spiritual habits help you stay connected to Godâthe first and foundational connection.
- But itâs not just structure. Itâs also surrender.
The goal is not control but yielding space to the Spirit so you are shaped, not just scheduled.
Without that structure, the noise of December often drowns out the still, small voice of God.
2. Emotional Intelligence Begins with Self-Awareness and Renewal
You cannot serve people well if you are emotionally overwhelmed, reactive, or numbing out.
- A Rule of Life builds in time for self-reflection, emotional regulation, and mental rest.
- This is essential for staying connected to yourself, another core of the Seven Connections.
- The chaplain who listens to others must first listen to their own soul.
If youâre irritable, exhausted, or apathetic and donât know whyâa Rule of Life gives you a way to pause, process, and return to emotional clarity.
3. Trauma-Informed Presence Includes Caring for Your Own Nervous System
So much of chaplaincy involves sitting with people in trauma, grief, confusion, and loss.
- Thatâs holy workâbut itâs also physiologically demanding.
- Your nervous system, brain chemistry, and emotional capacity are all impacted.
- You cannot offer calm presence if your own internal world is flooded.
A Rule of Life helps chaplains stay trauma-informed by building in:
- Regulated breathing
- Rhythms of rest
- Emotional debriefing
- Non-ministry time
- Safe spaces for your own healing
This is how you stay connected to your body and your boundariesâso you donât silently collapse while others are being helped.
4. Incarnational Ministry Must Begin With Incarnation in Your Own Heart
You represent the love and presence of Jesus. But if you have not been with Himâhow can you represent Him?
- Incarnational ministry isnât just about going into the world.
- Itâs about becoming Christâs presenceâgentle, surrendered, rooted.
- The Rule of Life gives your soul room to experience the ongoing incarnation of Christ in you.
It keeps your ministry from being performative and makes it personalâSpirit-filled, not scripted.
đ Ministry Sciences Bottom Line
You cannot walk into heavy rooms with peace if your soul is frayed.
You cannot whisper hope to others if youâve not heard it for yourself.
- Soul care is not selfish. Itâs strategic.
- It protects your ability to lead, love, and listen.
- It transforms you into someone who doesnât just talk about Godâbut embodies Him.
A Rule of Life is the operating system of sustainable chaplaincy.
Itâs how you stay connected to God, self, and others when the demands are high and the month is long.
It is your living response to the truth that:
âThe Word became flesh and dwelt among usâŚâ âJohn 1:14
âď¸ Final Reflection for Chaplains
Jesus had a rhythm.
He withdrew. He rested. He prayed. He said no to good things.
He disappeared to be with the Fatherâeven when crowds needed Him.
If the Son of God required rhythm, how much more do we?
As a Christmas Chaplain, your presence may be the only spiritual encouragement someone experiences this season. You are the portable sanctuary.
But you canât give what you donât have.
Create your Rule of Lifeânot as a burden, but as a blessing.
Let it hold you as you hold others.
Let it root you so you can rise.
Let it keep Christ at the center of all your giving.
Because this is the heart of chaplaincy:
Not giving more.
But giving what flows from being fully present with Jesus.