đ§Ș Case Study 10.3: A Multi-Faith Team Wants a Pre-Game Moment
đ§Ș Case Study 10.3: A Multi-Faith Team Wants a Pre-Game Moment
Learning Goals
By the end of this case study, you should be able to:
- Respond to a request for a pre-game spiritual moment in a way that is policy-aligned and non-coercive.
- Offer a faithful Christian presence without becoming the teamâs religious controller or public spokesperson.
- Use scripts that protect voluntary participation and athlete dignity.
- Identify âbeneath the surfaceâ dynamics: belonging pressure, identity, fear, and authority cues.
- Apply boundary reminders: limits, access, pace, authority, safety, safeguarding, confidentiality, and reporting clarity.
- Choose wise follow-up steps that build trust and open future ministry pathways.
1) Scenario: âChaplain, can we do something spiritual before games?â
You serve as a volunteer sports chaplain for a competitive program that includes minors. The team has a visible Christian presenceâsome athletes attend church, a few share faith openly, and one assistant coach is known for leading prayer privately with willing athletes.
But the team is also diverse:
- some athletes come from other faith backgrounds,
- some are not religious,
- several are unsure what they believe,
- a few have had negative experiences with religion and are guarded.
Itâs Friday night. Big rivalry game. The atmosphere is tense. You are walking near the locker room when a team captain approaches. She looks serious, but respectful.
âChaplain, can we do something spiritual before games?
Not everyone prays the same way, but people are stressed.
Can you lead something?â
You have about two minutes before warm-ups move into final routine.
2) Whatâs happening beneath the surface (the real dynamics)
At first glance, this looks like a simple request for prayer. Underneath, a lot is going on.
Pressure + belonging
Sports culture carries a powerful âwe do everything togetherâ norm. So even âoptionalâ moments can feel mandatory.
Some athletes are thinking:
- âIf I donât join, will I look disloyal?â
- âWill the coach notice?â
- âWill my teammates assume something about me?â
Identity tension
The captain wants unity, but unity can easily become forced conformity. A multi-faith moment can become a subtle test of belonging.
Authority cues
If you lead it as âthe chaplain,â it can feel official. It can look like the program endorses a particular practiceâespecially in school settings.
The captainâs heart
Captains often carry the emotional weight of the team. Sheâs not asking for a theological statement. Sheâs asking for steadiness, hope, and courage.
The chaplainâs temptation
You might feel:
- honored (âthey want me to lead!â),
- pressured (âI have to deliver something meaningful!â),
- spiritually excited (âthis is my chance!â),
- anxious (âwhat if I say the wrong thing?â).
This is where humility matters. Your goal is not to take the stage. Your goal is to protect freedom, dignity, and trustâwhile being faithful.
3) The chaplainâs first moves (what to do in the moment)
Step 1: Affirm the request and slow it down
You respond calmly:
Sample phrase to say
- âThank you for trusting me. I hear what youâre sayingâpeople are carrying a lot of stress.â
This validates the captain without committing to a risky plan.
Step 2: Check policy and authority (quickly)
Because this is a team with minors, and likely school-connected rules apply, you do not assume permission.
Sample phrase to say
- âBefore we do anything public, I need to honor your teamâs rules and leadership approval. Has the coach asked for a pre-game spiritual moment, or would we need to check first?â
If the coach is near, you can ask quickly and privately:
- âCoach, the captain asked for an optional pre-game moment. Is that allowed and approved here? If yes, Iâll keep it brief and clearly voluntary.â
Key posture: You are not creating a new team ritual without permission.
Step 3: Offer a non-coercive structure (two-tier option)
If leadership approves some kind of moment, you propose a structure that protects choice.
Option A: Brief moment of silence (unifying, low-pressure)
- âWe can do 15 seconds of silence for anyone who wants to focus, breathe, or pray privately.â
Option B: Optional Christian prayer after (clear, invitational)
- âAfter that, anyone who wants Christian prayer can stay for a short prayer. Anyone who doesnât can keep preparingâno pressure.â
This structure does three things:
- It honors diverse conscience.
- It keeps you clearly Christian without forcing participation.
- It reduces âsoft coercion.â
Step 4: Keep it short (20â60 seconds)
Sports environments respect brevity. Long devotionals increase pressure and risk.
If you lead the optional prayer, it should be:
- pastoral,
- non-performative,
- non-targeting,
- not manipulative,
- not outcome-based (âhelp us winâ).
4) Two versions of what the chaplain could lead (examples)
Version 1: Moment of silence + optional prayer
You address the team briefly:
What to say (group)
- âQuick optional moment. If youâd like, letâs take 15 seconds of silence to breathe, focus, or pray privately. If you want Christian prayer after, youâre welcome to stay. No pressure either way.â
(15 seconds silence)
Then you add:
- âIf youâd like to stay for a short prayer, youâre welcome.â
Short prayer (optional group)
- âLord, give these athletes courage, self-control, and respect. Protect them from injury. Help them compete with integrity and unity. Let their words and actions honor you. Amen.â
Version 2: Optional devotion line + prayer
If a devotion is allowed and desired, keep it one sentence.
One Scripture line (WEB)
- âLet your speech always be with grace.â (Colossians 4:6, WEB)
Short prayer
- âGod, help us compete with grace and respect. Protect our bodies. Strengthen our hearts. Amen.â
5) What Not to Do (common ways this goes wrong)
Mistake 1: Making it mandatory
Do not say:
- âEverybody circle upâweâre praying.â
That instantly creates coercion.
Mistake 2: Using belonging pressure
Do not say:
- âReal teammates pray together.â
That shames non-participants.
Mistake 3: Praying âatâ specific people
Do not pray like:
- âLord, fix his anger⊠help her stop complainingâŠâ
Public prayer is not a public correction tool.
Mistake 4: Using superstition or outcome manipulation
Do not say:
- âIf we do this, God will give us the win.â
This trains magical thinking and harms faith.
Mistake 5: Turning it into a sermon
A pre-game moment is not the time for a five-minute message. That becomes performance and pressure.
Mistake 6: Violating the authority structure
Do not create a new ritual without coach/AD approval. It can create backlash and harm the chaplaincy program.
Mistake 7: Making it a public evangelism push
A rivalry game is not the place to put people on the spot spiritually.
Invitational ministry means you are ready when asked, and gentle with all.
6) Boundary map reminders (keep your lane clear)
Limits
You can offer spiritual care. You cannot control the teamâs spiritual culture or identity.
Access
You donât get to demand participation. Your presence is invitation-based.
Pace
Keep it brief. Donât hijack pre-game routines.
Authority
Honor coach/AD approval, league rules, and school policy.
Safety + safeguarding (minors)
Avoid isolated one-on-one settings. Follow observable/two-deep norms where required. Communication boundaries matter.
Confidentiality (limited)
Do not promise secrecy when safety is involved. Be honest about reporting boundaries.
Role clarity
You are not the PR spokesperson. You do not represent the program publicly unless formally authorized.
7) After the game: wise follow-up that builds trust
A public moment should lead to private pathwaysâbut only by invitation.
A good follow-up move
You quietly tell the captain:
- âThanks for raising that. If people want prayer or to talk, Iâm available afterâno pressure.â
Then you position yourself in a neutral, accessible place:
- visible, not intrusive,
- present, not controlling.
If someone approaches, you return to consent-based care:
- âDo you want me to listen, pray, or help you connect to someone?â
8) A âsuccessfulâ outcome (what success looks like here)
Success is not âeveryone prayed.â
Success is:
- the moment was permitted and policy-aligned,
- participation was genuinely voluntary,
- no one was shamed for abstaining,
- your Christian identity was clear but gentle,
- the team felt supported rather than pressured,
- trust increased for future ministry conversations.
This is how chaplains protect both public witness and public trust.
Reflection + Application Questions
- In your sports setting, who must approve public prayer/devotion moments (coach, athletic director, event director, league policy)?
- Write your exact two-sentence opt-in script for a pluralistic pre-game moment.
- Where might âsoft coercionâ show up even when you say âoptionalâ? How will you reduce it?
- What safeguarding rules apply in your context (minors, two-deep/observable norms, communication boundaries, reporting requirements)?
- How does 1 Peter 3:15â16 shape your tone in public faith momentsâespecially when you feel pressure to âmake it countâ?
Academic References (expanded case-study credibility)
- Davids, P. H. (1990). The First Epistle of Peter (NICNT). Eerdmans.
- Jobes, K. H. (2005). 1 Peter (BECNT). Baker Academic.
- Cadge, W. (2012). Paging God: Religion in the Halls of Medicine. University of Chicago Press. (Pluralism, role clarity, institutional dynamicsâtransferable chaplaincy principles.)
- Fitchett, G., & Nolan, S. (Eds.). (2015). Spiritual Care in Practice: Case Studies in Healthcare Chaplaincy. Jessica Kingsley. (Case-based boundaries, consent, ethical spiritual care.)
- Weinberg, R. S., & Gould, D. (2019). Foundations of Sport and Exercise Psychology (7th ed.). Human Kinetics. (Performance environments, stress, group dynamics.)
- Finkelhor, D. (2009). The prevention of childhood sexual abuse. The Future of Children, 19(2), 169â194. (Safeguarding principles applicable to youth-serving programs.)