đ§Ș Case Study 4.3: The Chaplain Who Only Shows Up After Tragedy
đ§Ș Case Study 4.3: The Chaplain Who Only Shows Up After Tragedy
Learning Goals
By the end of this case study, you should be able to:
- Identify why âcrisis-only chaplaincyâ can unintentionally damage trust.
- Discern what is happening beneath the surface for officers, staff, and the chaplain.
- Apply a steady, policy-aligned âpresence rhythmâ that builds credibility before tragedy.
- Use clear doâs and donâts, including sample phrases to say and NOT to say.
- Practice boundary-map reminders: limits, access, pace, authority, safety.
- Link wisely to appropriate supports (peer support/EAP/command pathways) without overstepping.
Scenario Summary
Chaplain Morgan serves a mid-size police department. For months, officers rarely see the chaplain around. Morgan is polite and sincere, but mostly absent from the daily life of the station.
Then a tragic event hits: a violent call results in a child fatality. The department is shaken. Morgan arrives immediately, stays late, prays loudly in a public hallway, and tries to schedule group debriefs for the next day.
Some officers appreciate the intention. Others become guarded, irritated, and sarcastic. A seasoned officer mutters, âWhere was the chaplain the other 200 days of the year?â
Within two weeks, Morgan disappears againâonly to reappear at the next tragedy.
This case study is about repairing trust and building a steady presence model that fits police culture and protects the chaplain from performance, overreach, or burnout.
Whatâs Happening Beneath the Surface
1) Beneath the surface for officers and staff
Even in healthy departments, critical incidents can expose pressures that were already building:
- Accumulated grief: loss stacks over time; child cases can cut especially deep.
- Emotional armor: humor, cynicism, and âkeep movingâ efficiency often protect function.
- Trust economics: many officers only trust people who show up consistently and respect the work.
- Control sensitivity: after tragedy, people are easily triggered by anything that feels performative, intrusive, or agenda-driven.
- Peer loyalty: officers may distrust outsiders who arrive late and suddenly want deep access.
Law enforcement chaplaincy literature consistently notes that chaplains serve best when they are integrated into the agencyâs life and trusted over timeânot only during major incidents.
2) Beneath the surface for the chaplain
Morganâs âcrisis-onlyâ pattern may come from understandable pressures:
- Avoidance of awkwardness: roll call and drop-ins can feel uncomfortable at first (many chaplains report this).
- Uncertainty about role: âWhat am I supposed to do when nothing is happening?â
- Fear of being unnecessary: the chaplain tries to prove value during tragedy because value wasnât built beforehand.
- Performance drift: intense praying, over-talking, or over-scheduling becomes a way to feel useful.
- Boundary confusion: tragedy can trigger rescuer instincts (savior posture) and lead to overreach.
A mature chaplain sees this pattern with honesty and chooses a better way: steady presence, clean boundaries, and policy alignment.
The Moment of Tension
In the hallway after the child fatality, Morgan prays loudly. People stop. A few bow their heads. Several keep walking. One officerâs jaw tightens; another officer stares at the floor. A supervisor later says, âWe appreciate spiritual support, but we need calm and discretion right now.â
Later, Morgan sends an email suggesting a mandatory group debrief led by the chaplain.
This is where the department begins to categorize Morgan:
- âThe chaplain is only here for the dramatic stuff.â
- âThe chaplain makes tragedy into a stage.â
- âThe chaplain doesnât understand how we work.â
The painful irony: Morgan truly cares. But care expressed without cultural literacy and boundaries can still harm trust.
Chaplain Doâs
DO 1: Repair the pattern with humility (without excuses)
A trusted supervisor or peer-support lead pulls Morgan aside:
âChaplain, we appreciate you coming, but some people feel like youâre only here after tragedy.â
A wise response sounds like:
- âThatâs fair. I havenât shown up consistently, and I can see how that feels. I want to change that.â
- âIâm sorry for the gap. Iâd like to build a regular presence rhythm so you donât only see me on the worst days.â
This is not self-shaming. It is integrity. Trust often begins when leaders name reality without defensiveness.
DO 2: Shift from spotlight care to quiet care
During the crisis scene and immediate aftermath, practice the ministry of calm presence:
- Be visible but not central.
- Ask permission: âWhere would you like me?â
- Speak softly, briefly.
- Offer prayer only when invitedâand keep it short.
Many effective chaplain role descriptions emphasize crisis support, but also stress professionalism, discretion, and alignment with agency expectations.
DO 3: Use a field-safe micro-care approach
When emotions are raw, you donât need complicated interventions. You need humane, practical support.
A helpful frame is Psychological First Aid (PFA), which emphasizes humane, supportive help and uses the basic action principles: Look, Listen, Link.
For a chaplain, that often looks like:
- Look: notice who is shaking, withdrawn, or unusually angry.
- Listen: brief, non-invasive check-in: âHow are you holding up?â
- Link: connect them to appropriate supports (peer support, EAP, supervisor, family resources)âwithout forcing it.
DO 4: Coordinate with command and wellness structures
Morgan should ask:
- âWhat is the departmentâs protocol after a child fatality?â
- âWho leads peer support follow-up?â
- âWhatâs appropriate for me to offer today?â
The IACPâs peer support guidance emphasizes that peer support structures should operate within the agencyâs organizational framework and be applied appropriately to the agencyâs situation. Chaplains should not compete with or replace those structuresâthey should support them.
DO 5: Build a sustainable presence rhythm after the crisis
The long-term solution is not âmore intensity.â It is more consistency.
Morgan proposes (and follows through) on a simple rhythm:
- Roll call presence twice a month (brief, respectful, predictable).
- Drop-in presence weekly for 10â20 minutes (multiple 3â7 minute micro-moments).
- Ride-alongs monthly (with clear expectations, low profile).
This aligns with the way many chaplaincy programs describe effective integration: regular station involvement, ride-alongs, and relational credibility.
Chaplain Donâts
DONâT 1: Donât use tragedy as your introduction
Avoid âNow I will show you my valueâ energy. Officers can feel it.
DONâT 2: Donât pray loudly or publicly without invitation
Public prayer may be meaningful in the right setting (memorials, ceremonies, requested moments), but in a hallway immediately after trauma, loud prayer can feel like pressure or spectacle.
DONâT 3: Donât force group processing
Do not schedule debriefs or âmandatory healingâ outside policy. If the department uses CISD/CISM or other protocols, you support those leaders; you do not freelance.
DONâT 4: Donât interrogate or extract
Avoid questions that sound investigative:
- âWhat happened exactly?â
- âWho made the call?â
- âWere you justified?â
DONâT 5: Donât disappear again
Nothing undermines trust like a brief burst of intensity followed by absence.
Sample Phrases to Say
These phrases fit police culture: calm, brief, respectful.
In the immediate aftermath
- âIâm here. I can stay quiet with you.â
- âThat was a lot. How are you holding up right now?â
- âWould you like prayer, or would you rather I just be present?â
- âYou donât have to talk. Iâm nearby if you want me.â
When trust has been damaged
- âYouâre rightâI havenât been around consistently. Iâm changing that.â
- âI donât want to be a crisis-only chaplain. I want to serve this department steadily.â
- âIâd like to earn trust the slow wayâshowing up, listening, respecting the work.â
Linking to supports (without overstepping)
- âIf you want peer support or EAP, I can help you find the right door.â
- âYou deserve more support than carrying this alone.â
- âIf sleep or home life starts taking a hit, it may be time to add more support.â
Sample Phrases NOT to Say
These sound spiritual, but often land as minimizing, controlling, or performative:
- âEverything happens for a reason.â
- âGod needed another angel.â
- âAt least you did your job.â
- âYou should talk about your feelings right now.â
- âLetâs gatherâthis department needs spiritual healing today.â (too big, too fast)
- âTell me everything that happened.â (extractive; can feel investigative)
Boundary Map Reminders
Use this as your âstay-in-your-laneâ compass:
Limits
You cannot build trust through crisis intensity alone. Choose a schedule you can sustain for years, not weeks.
Access
Tragedy does not grant automatic access to private details. Let officers decide what they share.
Pace
After trauma, do not rush intimacy or processing. Trust and healing often come in stages.
Authority
You are not command, not investigation, not therapy. You are chaplain presenceâpolicy-aligned support and spiritual care by invitation.
Safety
Follow policy. Respect scenes and chain of command. If someone signals harm to self/others, follow required reporting and department pathways.
A Better Ending: What Morgan Does Next
Morgan meets with the chief (or chaplain coordinator) and says:
- âI want to serve this department with steady presence. I need clarity on expectations, boundaries, and how to align with peer support and wellness.â
Together they create a simple plan:
- Show up predictably (roll call, drop-ins, ride-alongs).
- Stay low-profile (calm, brief, respectful).
- Practice micro-care (LookâListenâLink).
- Coordinate with wellness systems (peer support/EAP).
- Serve ceremonies professionally when requested and appropriate.
Over several months, an officer says, âYouâre around. You donât push. Youâre steady.â
That sentence is a trust breakthrough.
âWhat Not to Doâ Quick Check (for chaplains)
Before you step into the station after a tragedy, check your heart:
- Am I here to serve, or to feel needed?
- Am I about to perform, or to be present?
- Am I aligned with policy and command, or freelancing?
- Am I respecting pace, or pushing closeness?
- Can I leave clean, or am I clinging?
A steady chaplain can answer those questions honestlyâand choose wisdom.
Reflection + Application Questions
- Why do officers often distrust âcrisis-onlyâ chaplaincy, even when the chaplainâs intentions are good?
- In this scenario, what did Morgan do that felt performative or intrusive? What would have been better?
- Write a sustainable monthly presence rhythm (roll call, drop-ins, ride-alongs) that you can maintain for a year.
- Which boundary area is most important in this case: limits, access, pace, authority, or safety? Why?
- Write two phrases you would say after a tragedy that are calm, respectful, and non-invasive.
- Write two phrases you will never say in the hallway after traumaâand explain why.
- Where would LookâListenâLink help you stay grounded in a crisis moment?
Academic and Professional References (Suggested)
- Braswell, R. (and colleagues). Law Enforcement Chaplains: Defining Their Roles. FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. (Describes chaplain roles including crisis intervention, officer well-being, and departmental functioning.)
- FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. Officer Wellness Spotlight: Police ChaplainsâAn Integral Part of Law Enforcement. (Discusses police chaplainsâ growth, training, and integration, including ride-alongs in some programs.)
- International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP). Peer Support Guidelines. (Guidance for forming and maintaining peer support structures within law enforcement agencies.)
- World Health Organization (WHO), War Trauma Foundation, & World Vision International. Psychological First Aid: Guide for Field Workers (2011). (Defines PFA and emphasizes humane, supportive help; includes LookâListenâLink.)
- Police Chief Magazine. A Misunderstood Asset. (Discusses practical chaplain contributions such as brief roll-call trainings, encouragement, and appropriate support roles.)