đ Reading 5.1: Listening as Love
đ Reading 5.1: Discernment and Care of Hearts
(Proverbs 20:5; Psalm 139:23â24 â WEB)
Learning Goals
By the end of this reading, you should be able to:
Explain why spiritual discernment in hospice is humble listening, not spiritual âdiagnosing.â
Apply Proverbs 20:5 and Psalm 139:23â24 (WEB) to bedside spiritual assessment.
Describe hospice spiritual care as ministry to whole embodied souls with moral agency and consent.
Recognize patterns of spiritual distress (fear, guilt, anger, shame, meaning crisis) while staying within hospice scope-of-practice.
Use a simple, policy-aware discernment process that supports interdisciplinary teamwork and appropriate documentation.
1) Discernment in hospice is not âfiguring people outâ
Hospice chaplaincy places you close to sacred ground. You enter rooms where time feels thin, where the body is weakening, where family roles are stretched, where regrets and gratitude rise together, and where spiritual questions can suddenly become urgent.
In that setting, spiritual discernment is not a technique to âsolveâ a person. It is a posture of faithful attention. The chaplainâs work is to listen in a way that helps a person feel seen, safe, and dignifiedâso that spiritual care can fit the actual moment rather than the chaplainâs assumptions.
Scripture gives a simple image for this kind of listening:
âA manâs counsel is like deep water; but a man of understanding will draw it out.â
âProverbs 20:5 (WEB)
The proverb does not describe a person as shallow. It assumes depth. In hospice, that depth may include:
fear of pain or the unknown
grief over what is ending
shame about what was done or left undone
anger at God, the church, or oneself
longing to be forgiven or reconciled
desire to bless family or leave a legacy
exhaustion that makes words hard
Discernment is the skill of âdrawing it outâ with patience and permissionâwithout pulling too hard, without rushing, and without treating the bedside like a stage.
Discernment serves dignity
Hospice care is built around dignity, comfort, and support. Chaplaincy supports that mission by caring for the spiritual and relational dimensions of a personâs suffering and hope. A chaplain is not there to impress anyone, win an argument, or force a religious outcome. A chaplain is there to serve the person as a living human being who matters to God and to othersâright to the end.
2) Organic Humans: Whole embodied souls to the end
A core commitment in this course is the Organic Humans philosophy: humans are whole embodied soulsânot souls trapped in bodies, and not merely bodies with symptoms. In hospice, this matters immediately.
When a body declines, it changes everything:
sleep patterns, appetite, energy, cognition
emotional regulation and vulnerability
social connection and stamina
spiritual openness or irritability
shame, dependence, loss of role
fear as physical sensations intensify
Spiritual distress may not show up as âreligious talk.â It may show up as restlessness, refusal of visitors, anger, withdrawal, controlling behavior, or hopelessness. Because the human person is an integrated whole, the chaplainâs discernment must also be integrated: spiritual care is not detached from the body, family system, and care environment.
Moral agency and consent are not optional
Organic Humans also emphasizes moral agencyâpeople remain persons who can choose, consent, refuse, and set pace. Hospice chaplaincy must treat consent as a form of dignity.
Consent-based spiritual care includes:
asking permission to enter spiritual topics
allowing the patient to say ânoâ without punishment
respecting a family memberâs different needs without taking sides
offering prayer or Scripture only as invited
pacing conversation to the patientâs capacity
A chaplain may feel pressure to âsay something spiritual.â But spiritual care that violates moral agency often harms trust. In hospice, trust is not a bonusâit is the doorway to any meaningful support.
3) Ministry Sciences: Discernment as wise care under stress
Ministry Sciences, as used in this course, helps chaplains recognize spiritual care as happening within real human systems: stress responses, meaning-making, grief processes, family dynamics, ethical boundaries, and institutional expectations.
In hospice, people often function under layered stress:
anticipatory grief
caregiver fatigue
financial and logistical strain
unresolved relational conflict
trauma history resurfacing
fear of dying, fear of abandonment
spiritual questions intensified by suffering
Ministry Sciences helps you discern not only âwhat someone believes,â but what they are experiencing and how your words may land under pressure.
How stress changes communication
Under stress, people may:
become concrete and short (less able to process big concepts)
interpret uncertainty as threat
react strongly to tone, facial expression, pace
struggle with memory, focus, or follow-through
swing between emotion and numbness
This is why hospice chaplaincy often works best with:
short sentences
gentle questions
reflective listening
calm presence
simple offers (listen, pray, sit, return)
Discernment is not only about content (âWhat do they believe?â). It is also about capacity (âWhat can they receive right now?â).
4) Psalm 139: Discernment begins with the chaplainâs humility
âSearch me, God, and know my heart. Try me, and know my thoughts. See if there is any wicked way in me, and lead me in the everlasting way.â
âPsalm 139:23â24 (WEB)
This passage is often applied to personal holiness, and it should be. But in hospice chaplaincy, it also functions as a prayer that keeps the chaplain from doing harm.
Psalm 139 trains you to remember:
You are not the Holy Spirit.
You do not âread hearts.â
You do not know what God is doing in another personâs story.
You can bring love and truth without acting like the judge, the fixer, or the answer-person.
This humility matters because hospice environments can tempt chaplains in subtle ways:
Performance temptation: trying to say the perfect line to feel âuseful.â
Control temptation: pushing toward closure or reconciliation on your timeline.
Outcome temptation: treating prayer or conversion as a metric of success.
Rescuer temptation: carrying emotional burdens you cannot carry sustainably.
Psalm 139 reminds the chaplain: start with your own heart. Ask God to cleanse your motives, slow your pace, and make you safe.
5) What spiritual assessment is (in plain language)
Spiritual assessment in hospice is a relational process that helps you understand:
what gives meaning and strength
what is breaking someoneâs peace
what relationships matter most
what beliefs, practices, or community support them
what fears, guilt, shame, anger, or unfinished business are present
what kind of support they want from you today
It is not a checklist to complete. It is a way to serve the care plan by supporting spiritual well-being with consent.
A helpful distinction: âspiritual historyâ vs. âspiritual momentâ
Spiritual history includes: background, tradition, community, core beliefs, previous church experiences, past wounds, and long-term patterns.
Spiritual moment includes: what is happening nowâtodayâs distress, todayâs hope, todayâs readiness for prayer, todayâs fears, todayâs fatigue.
Hospice chaplaincy often prioritizes the spiritual moment, because energy and time are limited. You can learn history gradually if trust grows.
6) A simple discernment framework you can actually use
The best field tools are memorable. Here is a simple discernment flow designed for hospice settings.
Step 1: Introduce yourself with role clarity
Keep it simple and non-threatening:
âIâm Haley, one of the hospice chaplains. Iâm here to support you and your familyâspiritually and emotionallyâonly in ways you want.â
Role clarity reduces anxiety and prevents false expectations.
Step 2: Ask permission
âWould it be okay if I asked a couple gentle questions to understand what matters most to you right now?â
âWould you prefer quiet presence today, or conversation?â
Permission honors moral agency and immediately builds trust.
Step 3: Start with meaning and strengths
These questions often open the âdeep waterâ without forcing pain:
âWhat has helped you through hard seasons before?â
âWho are your people?â
âWhat gives you peace, even a little?â
âWhat matters most to you right now?â
Meaning-first questions prevent the conversation from becoming an interrogation.
Step 4: Listen for spiritual distress signals
As they speak, listen for themes like:
fear (death, pain, separation, uncertainty)
guilt/shame (regrets, conscience, moral injury)
anger (at God, family, self, healthcare system)
isolation (feeling unseen, abandoned, burdensome)
meaning crisis (âMy life meant nothingâ)
unfinished business (relationships, blessing, apologies)
Your task is not to label or fixâyour task is to notice, reflect, and offer appropriate support.
Step 5: Offer one next stepâwith consent
Offer only what fits hospice scope and the personâs wishes:
âWould it help if I sat with you quietly for a bit?â
âWould you like a short prayer for peace?â
âWould you like a brief Scripture of comfort?â
âWould you like me to help you connect with your pastor or faith leader?â
One good next step is often better than many.
Step 6: Collaborate with the team appropriately
Hospice is interdisciplinary. Your discernment supports the whole plan of care.
If family conflict is disrupting care, consult social work or the RN case manager.
If the patient expresses despair with safety implications, follow policy immediately.
If spiritual distress is severe, communicate appropriately through charting and team meetings, without over-sharing private confessions.
7) Discernment without overreach: what you are not doing
In hospice, the chaplainâs role must remain clear. Discernment is not:
medical guidance, prognosis, or medication counsel
legal counsel about documents, inheritance, or consent law
therapy, trauma processing, or mental health treatment
family mediation outside your assigned scope
spiritual pressure to confess, convert, or âget right with Godâ
certainty claims about why suffering is happening
A chaplain can bring Scripture-rooted hope without becoming preachy, and can invite prayer without coercion. The boundary is consent, dignity, and role clarity.
8) Discernment language that builds safety
Here are phrases that tend to build trust in hospice spiritual assessment:
âI donât want to assumeâwhatâs your faith or spiritual background, if any?â
âWould you like spiritual support from me, or would you prefer I just be present?â
âWhat feels heaviest today?â
âWhat are you hoping for in these days?â
âThank you for trusting me with that.â
âI can pray if you want; I wonât push.â
These statements communicate:
respect for moral agency
humility rather than control
emotional safety
willingness to follow the personâs pace
9) Documentation: ethical, minimal, policy-aligned
Some hospice agencies require chaplain notes; others have different expectations. Always follow policy. A few guiding principles:
Document what supports care coordination, not private spiritual confession details.
Use respectful, non-judgmental language.
Avoid diagnosing (mental health or spiritual âlabelsâ).
Communicate themes and needs: spiritual distress present, requested prayer, desires for clergy visit, family conflict affecting peace, coping strengths, and follow-up plans.
If safety issues arise, follow reporting requirements.
A safe example might look like:
âPatient expressed significant spiritual distress and fear; requested quiet presence and brief prayer; follow-up visit planned.â
âFamily experiencing tension at bedside; encouraged respectful communication; referred to social worker for support.â
10) The deeper purpose: discernment as ministry of presence
Hospice chaplaincy is not âwinning a moment.â It is serving a personâs dignity near the end of life. Discernment helps you deliver spiritual care that fits like a warm blanketânot like a heavy demand.
In CreationâFallâRedemption terms:
Creation: the person has dignity as Godâs image-bearerâworthy of gentleness, truth, and respect.
Fall: suffering, fear, conflict, guilt, and death are realâno clichĂ©s, no denial.
Redemption: God meets people in their sufferingâoften through quiet presence, honest lament, forgiveness, reconciliation, and hope rooted in Christ, offered with consent.
Discernment is how you stay faithful inside that story without forcing the outcome.
(A) Reflection + Application Questions
What is the difference between spiritual discernment and spiritual pressure? Give one real example of each.
Write three consent-based questions you can use within the first two minutes of a hospice visit.
Which temptation is most likely for you in hospice settings: performance, control, outcome-focus, or rescuing? What safeguards will you practice?
How does the phrase âwhole embodied soulsâ reshape what you notice at the bedside?
What are three spiritual distress themes you expect to hear, and what is one safe ânext stepâ offer for each?
What is your plan for documentation and team communication that protects dignity and follows policy?
(B) References
The Holy Bible, World English Bible (WEB): Proverbs 20:5; Psalm 139:23â24; Romans 12:15; James 1:19.
Puchalski, C. M., Vitillo, R., Hull, S. K., & Reller, N. âImproving the Quality of Spiritual Care as a Dimension of Palliative Care: The Report of the Consensus Conference.â Journal of Palliative Medicine.
Fitchett, G. & Nolan, S. (eds.). Spiritual Care in Practice (chaplaincy assessment concepts and presence-based care principles).
Koenig, H. G. Religion and Spirituality in Medicine: Research and Education (overview of spiritual needs in serious illness; applied within chaplain scope).
Saunders, C. The Philosophy of Palliative Care (foundational hospice/palliative principles emphasizing whole-person care).
Reyenga, Henry. Organic Humans (Organic Human anthropology: whole embodied souls, dignity, moral agency, consent; integration across ministry practice).