Video Transcript: Ministering After Injury: Spirit and Body Under Stress
🎥 Video 7A Transcript: Ministering After Injury: Spirit and Body Under Stress
Hi, I am Haley, a Christian Leaders Institute presenter…
In sports, injury is never “just physical.”
It hits the whole person—the embodied soul. An injury can shake identity, routines, relationships, and hope.
Your role as a sports chaplain is not to diagnose, rehab, or “pump someone up.”
Your role is presence-based spiritual care—steady, policy-aware, and dignified.
1) What injury really takes from an athlete
An injury can cost more than playing time. It can disrupt:
Embodied confidence (fear of reinjury, fear of pain, fear of limitation)
Routine (practice rhythm, travel, training structure)
Belonging (distance from teammates and staff)
Identity (“If I can’t perform, who am I?”)
Hope (especially with uncertain timelines)
Scripture speaks directly to this kind of crushing season:
“Yahweh is near to those who have a broken heart, and saves those who have a crushed spirit.” (Psalm 34:18, WEB)
2) What to do in the field: the chaplain’s “CALM” approach
When an athlete is injured—on the sideline, in the hallway, after surgery—use a simple pattern:
C — Check permission
“Is it okay if I sit with you for a minute?”
Consent matters—especially in high-pressure environments.
A — Acknowledge the loss
“This is hard. I’m sorry you’re going through it.”
Naming loss is not negativity. It’s honesty.
L — Listen for what hurts most
Often the deepest pain is not the injury itself—it’s fear and meaning:
“What does this mean for my future? For my place here?”
Ask one gentle question: “What’s the hardest part right now?”
M — Move toward hope without clichés
Offer hope that fits reality: “You’re not alone. We can take today one step at a time.”
3) A short, respectful Scripture and prayer option
If the athlete is open, offer a short Scripture like:
“But we have this treasure in clay vessels… that the exceeding greatness of the power may be of God.” (2 Corinthians 4:7, WEB)
Then ask permission to pray:
“Would you like a short prayer—right here—for strength and peace?”
Keep it brief. Keep it quiet. Keep it opt-in.
4) Referral readiness: stay in your lane
Injuries involve medical staff, trainers, and coaches.
You do not give medical advice.
You can say:
“Have you been able to talk with the trainer about next steps?”
“Do you have support at home?”
“Would it help to connect with your pastor or a counselor?”
What Not to Do
Don’t say, “God did this for a reason,” or “Everything happens for a reason.”
Don’t minimize: “At least it’s not worse.”
Don’t promise outcomes: “You’ll be back in no time.”
Don’t step into coaching: “Here’s what you should do with your training.”
Don’t use injury as a pressure moment for a spiritual decision.
You are not the fixer. You are a steady presence—serving the embodied soul with dignity.