š Reading 12.1: Ministry of Reconciliation
š Reading 12.1: Ministry of Reconciliation (2 Corinthians 5:18ā20)
A Biblical Foundation for Chaplains Serving in Public Tension
Hope with Truth ⢠Peacemaking with Boundaries ⢠Public Witness without Grandstanding (WEB Scripture)
Learning Goals
By the end of this reading, you should be able to:
- Explain the biblical meaning of reconciliation and how it applies to chaplaincy in public safety settings.
- Interpret 2 Corinthians 5:18ā20 in a way that is faithful to Scripture and practical for the field.
- Distinguish between reconciliation, conflict management, public relations, and peacekeeping.
- Practice āreconciliation with wisdomāācompassion without naĆÆvetĆ©, truth without hostility.
- Apply chaplain boundaries: lane discipline, confidentiality, policy alignment, and non-political posture.
- Use short Scripture-grounded phrases and actions that build dignity and reduce escalation.
1) Why This Reading Matters in Police Chaplaincy
Topic 12 brings chaplains into a complex space: community tension. Sometimes it is slow-burning distrust. Sometimes it is sudden conflict after a highly public incident. Often it includes:
- grief and trauma in the community,
- fear and moral fatigue within officers and families,
- intense media attention,
- anger that seeks a target,
- pressure to ātake a side,ā
- pressure to speak for the agency.
In those moments, chaplains can become either deeply helpfulāor accidentally harmfulādepending on whether they understand their role.
A police chaplain is not primarily:
- a public relations representative,
- a political voice,
- an investigator,
- a negotiator (unless trained and assigned),
- a policy maker.
A police chaplain is primarily:
- a ministry of presence,
- a caregiver of souls in a high-stress authority setting,
- a bridge-builder who protects dignity, reduces escalation, and points to hope.
Scripture gives a powerful anchor for this work: the ministry of reconciliation.
2) The Text: 2 Corinthians 5:18ā20 (WEB)
Read the passage slowly. In crisis settings, chaplains lead better when they are not rushing.
āBut all things are of God, who reconciled us to himself through Jesus Christ, and gave to us the ministry of reconciliation; namely, that God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, not reckoning to them their trespasses, and having committed to us the word of reconciliation. We are therefore ambassadors on behalf of Christ, as though God were entreating by us: we beg you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.ā (2 Corinthians 5:18ā20, WEB)
This is one of the clearest passages describing:
- the source of reconciliation (God),
- the means of reconciliation (Christ),
- the message of reconciliation (ānot reckoningā trespasses in Christ),
- the calling of reconciliation (ambassadors),
- the ministry of reconciliation (word + presence).
For chaplains, this passage does not create a role of āfixing everything.ā It creates a role of representing Christās reconciling heart with wisdom and integrity.
3) What Reconciliation Is (Biblically)
A. Reconciliation begins vertically: God and people
Paul begins with Godās action: āGod⦠reconciled us to himself through Jesus Christ.ā (v.18)
Biblical reconciliation is not merely conflict reduction. It is not āletās all be nice.ā It is the restoration of relationship where sin, guilt, shame, fear, and hostility have broken peace.
This matters because police chaplaincy exists in a fallen world:
- people are harmed,
- people harm others,
- systems can fail,
- authority can be misused,
- anger can become vengeance,
- fear can become contempt.
Reconciliation does not pretend that sin is not real. It confronts sin by moving toward redemption.
B. Reconciliation has a moral center: God does not ignore wrongdoing
Paul says God reconciles ānot reckoning to them their trespasses.ā (v.19)
This phrase does not mean God pretends sin didnāt happen. It means that in Christ, God does not count sin against the person in the final, condemning way it deservesābecause Christ bears sinās weight.
For chaplains, this creates a critical principle:
Hope is never built on denial.
Hope is built on truth + mercy.
So in community tension, chaplains can:
- honor pain,
- name dignity,
- encourage truth-seeking,
- avoid speculation,
- avoid propaganda,
- avoid scapegoating,
- hold space for repentance and repair where appropriate.
C. Reconciliation is a calling that is both spiritual and practical
Paul says God āgave to us the ministry of reconciliationā and ācommitted to us the word of reconciliation.ā (v.18ā19)
Reconciliation includes:
- presence (being there as an ambassador),
- speech (the word of reconciliation),
- posture (humble entreaty),
- aim (toward God and toward restored relationships).
It does not mean you can reconcile everyone. It means you practice reconciliation as a faithful witness.
4) What an āAmbassadorā Means for Chaplains
āWe are therefore ambassadors on behalf of Christā¦ā (v.20)
An ambassador:
- represents a kingdom,
- speaks with dignity and restraint,
- does not freelance their own opinions,
- does not inflame conflict,
- does not confuse their identity with the host nation,
- keeps credibility through consistent conduct.
A. Your āambassador identityā is steady, not loud
Police culture often values restraint. Community crises often amplify volume. An ambassador stays steady. In the chaplain context, that means:
- you speak carefully,
- you do not posture,
- you avoid emotional performance,
- you resist being used by agendas,
- you serve people, not narratives.
B. An ambassador stays in their lane
In a major incident, multiple lanes exist:
- investigation lane,
- command lane,
- legal lane,
- media lane,
- community relations lane,
- chaplain care lane.
The chaplain lane is care and conscience:
- support officers, families, victims, community members,
- offer prayer when welcomed,
- encourage healthy next steps (resources, referrals, constructive dialogue channels),
- promote dignity and de-escalation through presence.
When chaplains step into lanes they were not assigned, they lose trust on all sides.
5) Reconciliation vs. Peacekeeping vs. Public Relations
A. Peacekeeping
Peacekeeping says: āLetās calm things down so we can move on.ā
It often avoids truth, avoids accountability, and avoids hard conversations.
B. Peacemaking
Peacemaking says: āLetās move toward truth, dignity, and repair without violence.ā
Peacemaking requires courage, patience, and self-control.
Jesus blesses peacemakers:
āBlessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God.ā (Matthew 5:9, WEB)
Peacemaking is not naĆÆve. It is wise and clean-hearted.
C. Public relations
Public relations is institutional messaging. Chaplains must be careful not to become PR.
A chaplain can support the agency by:
- strengthening morale,
- caring for families,
- helping with trauma load,
- reducing burnout,
- improving relational climate.
But chaplains should not:
- release statements,
- interpret investigations,
- defend tactics,
- argue facts they do not know,
- carry the departmentās messaging responsibilities.
If you are asked to speak publicly, you must be authorized, trained, and aligned with policy. Even then, chaplain speech should remain pastoral and restrained.
6) A Chaplainās Practical Reconciliation Posture in Community Tension
A chaplainās reconciling posture can be summarized as:
Truthful compassion with calm boundaries
That means you can do all of the following at once:
- acknowledge pain,
- resist false narratives,
- refuse to be used,
- avoid political commentary,
- encourage constructive channels,
- protect confidentiality,
- keep the situation safe.
A. āNot taking sidesā does not mean ānot caringā
In volatile situations, people will push you to declare loyalty.
But chaplain neutrality is not apathy. It is disciplined care:
- you do not become a weapon,
- you do not become a mouthpiece,
- you do not become an enemy.
You remain a servant to human dignity.
B. Reconciliation begins with humanization
Community tension often dehumanizes:
- āAll cops areā¦ā
- āAll protesters areā¦ā
- āThose people areā¦ā
A chaplainās quiet work is to restore human recognition:
- officers are imagebearers,
- community members are imagebearers,
- victims and families are imagebearers,
- even those who oppose are still human.
This does not erase moral responsibility. It prevents hatred from becoming the operating system.
C. Reconciliation uses humble language, not controlling language
Paulās tone matters: āas though God were entreating by us: we beg youā¦ā (v.20)
Ambassador language is not dominating language. It is persuasive without coercion. Chaplains should sound like:
- āIām here to listen.ā
- āI want this to stay safe.ā
- āWhat would help you take a constructive next step?ā
- āI can connect you with the right channel for that request.ā
- āWould a brief prayer be helpful?ā
7) Field Actions: What Reconciliation Looks Like on the Ground
When community tension rises, reconciliation becomes practical. Here are field actions that fit most departments and protect your lane.
A. Coordinate first: āWhere do you want me?ā
Before entering a tense public space, coordinate with command:
- āWhat is my role today?ā
- āWhere do you want me positioned?ā
- āWho is my point of contact?ā
- āIs prayer appropriate here, and in what setting?ā
This is both wisdom and humility.
B. Be visible without being intrusive
Presence often lowers temperature if it is calm and respectful.
- Stand where you are not blocking officersā movement.
- Keep hands visible, posture open, voice low.
- Avoid clustering in ways that look like you are āwith one sideā in a performative way.
C. Practice ālistening for the real needā
Under anger is often fear:
- fear of harm,
- fear of being unheard,
- fear of future injustice,
- fear of being blamed.
Use short listening prompts:
- āWhat are you most worried about right now?ā
- āWhat do you need to feel safe?ā
- āWhat would a constructive next step look like to you?ā
You do not need to solve everything. You need to keep people human and move them toward safer next steps.
D. Offer brief prayer only when welcomed (and keep it short)
Public prayer should be:
- brief,
- non-performative,
- free of political messaging,
- focused on peace, safety, wisdom, healing, and dignity.
Example (short and safe):
- āGod, give peace, wisdom, and safety to everyone here. Comfort those who grieve. Strengthen those who serve. Help us act with dignity and restraint. Amen.ā
E. Connect, donāt capture
When someone asks for action beyond your lane, connect them:
- community meeting processes,
- victim services,
- department community liaison,
- complaint procedures,
- mental health resources,
- local clergy partnerships (when appropriate).
This is reconciliation as bridge-building, not control.
8) What āReconciliation Without NaĆÆvetĆ©ā Requires
Reconciliation is holyāand complicated. Chaplains must be wise about manipulation.
A. Not all āpeace languageā is good faith
Sometimes a person uses religious or moral language to control:
- āIf you cared, youād condemn them.ā
- āIf you were a real Christian, youād take our side.ā
- āGod told me you must say this publicly.ā
A chaplain can respond with calm clarity:
- āIām here to care and listen. Iām not here to endorse agendas.ā
- āI can support you as a person, but I wonāt be used as a weapon.ā
B. Reconciliation does not mean instant trust
Trust is earned through consistent truth and safety. In tense community moments:
- do not promise what you cannot deliver,
- do not declare outcomes,
- do not claim knowledge you do not have.
C. Reconciliation does not erase justice
Christian reconciliation is not the opposite of justice. It is Godās pathway to real justiceājustice that moves toward repair, truth, and restored dignity.
Chaplains can honor both:
- āI hear your pain.ā
- āI want truth and safety.ā
- āLetās take the next constructive step through the right channels.ā
9) āWord of Reconciliationā: Scripture that Comforts Without Weaponizing
In public grief and tension, choose Scripture that:
- strengthens hope,
- honors suffering,
- calls for peace and self-control,
- avoids being used as a club.
Helpful passages (WEB):
- āIf possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all men.ā (Romans 12:18)
- āBlessed are the peacemakersā¦ā (Matthew 5:9)
- āGod is our refuge and strengthā¦ā (Psalm 46:1)
- āLet every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, and slow to anger.ā (James 1:19)
- āAll things are of God⦠ministry of reconciliationā¦ā (2 Corinthians 5:18ā20)
Avoid using Scripture to:
- silence lament,
- dismiss grief,
- shame emotion,
- āprove a pointā in a volatile crowd.
10) A Simple Chaplain Reconciliation Framework
Use this as a field-ready guide:
Step 1: Regulate yourself
Slow voice. Calm posture. No performance.
If you are escalated, you will escalate others.
Step 2: Humanize the room
āEveryone here is human. Letās keep this safe.ā
Step 3: Listen for the need under the anger
āWhat are you most worried about?ā
Step 4: Offer dignity + direction
āI hear you. Hereās the next constructive channel.ā
Step 5: Stay in your lane
Care, prayer when welcomed, connection, calm presence.
Step 6: Close with a stabilizing word
Short prayer or short Scriptureāif appropriate and welcomed.
Reflection + Application Questions
- In your own words, define āministry of reconciliationā from 2 Corinthians 5:18ā20.
- What is the difference between peacemaking and peacekeeping in a community crisis?
- List three ways chaplains can unintentionally become PR, political, or investigativeāand how to avoid each.
- Write three ābridge phrasesā you can use when emotions are high (listening + dignity + direction).
- What boundaries protect you from being used by an agenda while still caring well for people?
- Identify two Scriptures (WEB) you could use in a public prayer that would comfort without grandstanding.
- Where do you personally drift under pressure: overexplaining, taking sides, fixing, or withdrawing? What will you do instead?
Academic References (for further study)
- Barnett, P. (1997). The Second Epistle to the Corinthians (NICNT). Eerdmans.
- Garland, D. E. (1999). 2 Corinthians (NAC). B&H Publishing.
- Harris, M. J. (2005). The Second Epistle to the Corinthians: A Commentary on the Greek Text. Eerdmans.
- Wright, N. T. (2013). Paul and the Faithfulness of God. Fortress Press. (For Pauline theology and reconciliation themes)
- International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP). (various). Resources on community policing, crisis communication, and officer wellness.
- Violanti, J. M., & Aron, F. (1995). Police stressors: Variations in perception among police personnel. Journal of Criminal Justice, 23(3), 287ā294.
- Regehr, C., Goldberg, G., & Hughes, J. (2002). Exposure to human tragedy and secondary traumatic stress in helping professionals/first responders. Professional Psychology: Research and Practice (related literature).