🎥 Video 5B Transcript: Pitfalls: Leading Questions, Assumptions, and Theological Shortcuts

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

Topic 5 is not only about what to do. It is also about what can quietly harm trust. Spiritual assessment goes wrong when we rush, assume, or try to fix spiritual distress with a theological shortcut.

Let’s talk about the most common pitfalls—and what to do instead.

Pitfall 1: Leading questions that trap people

Leading questions sound polite, but they pressure the person to agree.

Examples to avoid:

  • “You’re at peace with God, right?”

  • “You know you’re going to heaven, don’t you?”

  • “You’ve forgiven everyone, correct?”

Better options:

  • “How is your faith helping you right now—if it is helping at all?”

  • “What feels settled, and what feels unsettled?”

  • “Are there any worries that keep returning?”

These questions allow honesty without embarrassment.

Pitfall 2: Assumptions based on labels

A chart might say “Christian,” “Catholic,” “none,” or “Muslim.” A family might say, “He’s a believer.” Labels can help orientation, but they do not tell you the person’s lived experience.

Instead of assuming, try:

  • “When you think about God these days, what comes to mind?”

  • “Are there spiritual practices you want around you right now?”

  • “Is there anything you do not want?”

This also protects conscience and consent in multi-faith settings.

Pitfall 3: Theological shortcuts that skip the person

Spiritual distress often includes fear, anger at God, guilt, shame, grief, and meaning crisis. The temptation is to answer quickly.

Shortcuts to avoid:

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

  • “Everything happens for a reason.”

  • “God needed another angel.”

  • “Just have faith.”

Even if words are true in some contexts, they can land like dismissal at the bedside.

Better: name the reality and stay present.
Try: “This sounds really heavy.”
Or: “It makes sense you feel angry and exhausted.”
Or: “I’m here with you. We can sit with this.”

Pitfall 4: Turning assessment into therapy or interrogation

Chaplains do not do clinical therapy. We also do not cross-examine people about trauma, guilt, or family conflict.

Avoid:

  • digging for details the person is not offering

  • attempting trauma processing

  • promising outcomes you can’t deliver

Do this instead:

  • keep questions simple

  • follow the patient’s pace

  • refer appropriately to the hospice social worker, RN, or supervisor when needed

Pitfall 5: Ignoring team communication and documentation norms

If distress includes safety concerns—abuse risk, self-harm threats, severe conflict escalating toward harm—you must follow policy and team protocols. Confidentiality is real, but it has limits.

A simple phrase that helps:
“I will honor your privacy. If something involves safety or required reporting, I will involve the team appropriately.”

What Not to Do

  • Do not argue theology or correct beliefs in a vulnerable moment.

  • Do not pressure prayer, confession, or conversion.

  • Do not create secret alliances with one family member against another.

  • Do not promise healing, outcomes, or certainty about why suffering happened.

  • Do not step outside scope: no medical advice, legal advice, prognoses, or medication commentary.

A steady chaplain keeps assessment consent-based, patient-led, and role-clear. When you avoid these pitfalls, your presence becomes a shelter—calm, safe, and dignifying—where spiritual distress can be spoken without fear.



Modifié le: dimanche 1 mars 2026, 18:14