🎥 Video 7B Transcript: What Helps vs. What Harms When Athletes Are Sidelined

Hi, I am Haley, a Christian Leaders Institute presenter…

When athletes are sidelined, they’re often surrounded by noise—opinions, pressure, and expectations.
Your ministry can be a rare gift: calm, non-performing, honest care for the embodied soul.

Let’s talk about what helps—and what harms.

1) What helps: three anchors

Anchor 1: Belonging
Injury can make athletes feel “outside the circle.”
Help them feel seen without making a scene:

  • “You still matter to this team.”

  • “I’m glad you’re here.”

Anchor 2: Worth beyond performance
Sports can train people to feel valuable only when producing.
Remind them with dignity:

  • “You are more than your stat line.”

  • “Your worth isn’t canceled by an injury.”

A simple spiritual anchor—without hype—is:
“There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.” (Romans 8:1, WEB)

Anchor 3: Small next steps
Injury can make the future feel massive. Bring it to today:

  • “What’s one thing you need this week?”

  • “Who is one safe person you can talk to today?”

2) What harms: common chaplain mistakes

Mistake 1: The motivational preacher
Athletes don’t need a sermon in the worst moment. They need presence.

Mistake 2: The theologian of pain
Don’t explain suffering like it’s a lesson plan. Be human first.

Mistake 3: The secret-keeper
Never promise secrecy if safety is involved. Confidentiality is real—but limited.

Mistake 4: The therapist role
You are not a clinician. Don’t diagnose. Listen well, offer spiritual care, refer wisely.

3) Helpful phrases vs. harmful phrases

Helpful phrases to say

  • “I’m here with you.”

  • “Do you want company or quiet?”

  • “What’s the hardest part right now?”

  • “Would you like me to pray—or would you prefer I just sit with you?”

  • “Who else is supporting you through this?”

Harmful phrases NOT to say

  • “God won’t give you more than you can handle.”

  • “Everything happens for a reason.”

  • “You’ll be back soon.”

  • “This is probably teaching you humility.”

  • “If you had more faith, you’d be okay.”

4) A simple follow-up rhythm

Injury care is rarely one conversation. Respect boundaries:

  • brief check-in after a game

  • short encouragement message if policy allows

  • prayer offer if invited

  • connect them to supports without sharing private details

What Not to Do

  • Don’t become a go-between for playing time, status, or roster decisions.

  • Don’t criticize coaches or trainers.

  • Don’t create dependency—connect them to family, church, mentors.

Your goal is steady care: help without control, hope without hype, dignity without pressure.


கடைசியாக மாற்றப்பட்டது: ஞாயிறு, 22 பிப்ரவரி 2026, 2:22 PM