🧪 Case Study 5.3: “God Is Punishing Me”
(Hospice Chaplaincy Practice | Spiritual Assessment + Spiritual Distress | Consent-based care | Policy-aware boundaries)


Scenario (Home Hospice Visit)

You are the hospice chaplain assigned to Mr. D., a 68-year-old man with end-stage liver disease receiving home hospice care. He lives with his adult daughter, Jenna, who is his primary caregiver. The RN case manager noted in the chart: “Patient anxious and irritable. Declines chaplain at times. Family requests spiritual support.”

Today, Jenna calls the hospice office and asks for a chaplain visit. She says, “He’s spiraling. He won’t sleep. He keeps saying he’s being punished. I don’t know what to do.”

You arrive mid-afternoon. The home is quiet, but tense. Mr. D. is in a recliner with a blanket, breathing shallowly. He looks exhausted and avoids eye contact. Jenna stands in the kitchen doorway watching closely.

You introduce yourself calmly. Mr. D. says, “Don’t start preaching. I don’t want church talk.”

You respond with gentle role clarity and permission-based care:
“Understood. I won’t preach. I’m here to support you in whatever way you want—mostly listening. Is it okay if I sit for a few minutes?”

He shrugs and says, “Fine.”

There is silence. After a minute, Mr. D. suddenly blurts out:
“God is punishing me. I’m getting what I deserve.”

Jenna stiffens and says sharply, “Dad, stop saying that. You’re not supposed to think like that.”

Mr. D.’s face tightens. He turns his head away.

The room feels like it just lost oxygen.


Beneath the Surface (Spiritual Distress Map)

This statement—“God is punishing me”—can hold multiple layers. Your job is not to diagnose or correct. Your job is to discern gently and respond with consent-based presence.

Possible layers in Mr. D. (whole embodied soul dynamics)

  • Fear: of dying, of pain, of what comes after death

  • Guilt/shame: regrets, broken relationships, moral injury, unresolved wrongdoing

  • Anger at God: expressed as self-condemnation (“punishment” language)

  • Loss of control: dependence, weakness, bodily decline

  • Meaning crisis: “Was my life wasted?” “Did I ruin everything?”

  • Stress physiology: breathlessness, fatigue, medication effects amplifying agitation

Possible layers in Jenna (family system under strain)

  • Caregiver fatigue and anticipatory grief

  • Need to manage the moment to reduce her own anxiety

  • Fear of “bad spiritual outcomes” or fear of hearing painful truth

  • Old wounds surfacing now that time is short

  • Triangulation risk: pulling you into “correcting” her father or taking sides

Organic Humans lens: both are whole embodied souls—body decline, fear, family dynamics, and spiritual distress are intertwined. Ministry Sciences lens: stress responses and family roles can intensify reactions; your calm presence can lower threat in the room.


Chaplain Goals in This Visit

  1. Protect dignity and consent for Mr. D.

  2. Reduce spiritual pressure in the room

  3. Listen for the “deep water” beneath the punishment statement

  4. Offer one appropriate next step (presence, prayer, Scripture, referral)—only with consent

  5. Maintain role clarity and hospice policy alignment

  6. Avoid triangulation and maintain a steady stance with the family


What to Do (Step-by-Step Chaplain Response)

Step 1: Stabilize the moment with calm and permission

You respond to Mr. D. slowly, without flinching:

“Thank you for telling me that. I won’t argue with you.
Would it be okay if I ask what feels most heavy when you say ‘punishing’?”

This does three things:

  • communicates safety

  • avoids correcting theology too quickly

  • invites depth without interrogation

Step 2: Protect dignity when a family member tries to shut him down

To Jenna, you speak gently—without scolding:

“Jenna, I can see this is painful to hear.
It’s okay for him to speak honestly. We can make space for it.”

This prevents shame escalation and supports a healthier family dynamic without becoming the mediator.

Step 3: Draw out meaning (Proverbs 20:5 posture)

If Mr. D. responds, listen for the core theme:

  • “I hurt people.”

  • “I wasted my life.”

  • “I’m scared.”

  • “I don’t think God wants me.”

  • “I can’t fix what I broke.”

You reflect, not fix:
“That sounds like a lot of weight to carry.”

Then one gentle follow-up:
“Is there one thing you keep thinking about at night?”

Step 4: Offer a consent-based spiritual support (small, not performative)

After listening, you offer options that protect agency:

“Would you want me to just sit quietly with you,
or would it help if I prayed a short prayer for mercy and peace?”

If he says yes to prayer, keep it brief, calm, and mercy-shaped—no preaching, no certainty claims.

Example brief prayer (only if requested):
“God, have mercy on Mr. D. Bring peace to his heart.
Help him feel held, not crushed. Give comfort to this family. Amen.”

If he declines prayer, you honor that without offense:
“Okay. I’m still here with you.”

Step 5: If the patient expresses confession or desire for forgiveness

If Mr. D. begins to share regret or wrongdoing, you do not demand details. You keep it safe:

“Thank you for trusting me with that.
Would you like to talk more, or would you prefer a simple prayer asking God for mercy?”

If he wants explicitly Christian assurance, you can offer a single, brief Scripture—only with consent:
“Would you like a short Scripture about mercy?”

If yes, keep it short and gentle (no sermon, no pressure).

Step 6: Referral and safety pathways (if needed)

If Mr. D. expresses:

  • suicidal thoughts

  • threats of self-harm

  • abuse disclosure

  • safety risks in the home

  • severe distress affecting care coordination

Then you follow hospice policy and involve the RN/SW immediately.

You can say:
“I care about your safety. Because of what you shared, I need to involve our nurse/social worker so we can support you well.”


Sample Phrases to SAY (Hospice Field Script)

  • “I won’t argue with you. I want to understand.”

  • “When you say ‘punishing,’ what feels most heavy?”

  • “That sounds like a lot to carry.”

  • “Would you like me to listen, pray, or sit quietly?”

  • “It’s okay to be honest here.”

  • “Thank you for trusting me with that.”

  • “Would it help to take this one moment at a time—just for today?”

  • “I can’t promise total confidentiality—here’s what I can promise…” (policy/safety clarity)


Sample Phrases NOT to Say

  • “That’s not true—God isn’t punishing you.” (too fast; feels like correction)

  • “Everything happens for a reason.” (shortcut; dismissive)

  • “God needed another angel.” (false, harmful cliché)

  • “You just need to accept Jesus right now.” (coercive, high-pressure)

  • “At least you’re not suffering as much as others.” (minimizes)

  • “If you really had faith, you’d have peace.” (shaming)

  • “Tell me everything you did.” (interrogation; unsafe)


What Not to Do (Required Case Study Safeguards)

  • Do not debate doctrine or argue the patient out of distress.

  • Do not pressure conversion, confession, or prayer.

  • Do not override hospice policy or the plan of care.

  • Do not become a family mediator or carry secret messages.

  • Do not promise confidentiality without limits.

  • Do not document private confessions unnecessarily or inappropriately.

  • Do not give medical, legal, or medication guidance (including opioid fears or dosing opinions).


Boundary Map Reminders (Hospice Chaplaincy)

  • Limits: Presence-based spiritual care—not clinical decision-making.

  • Consent: Patient sets pace, depth, and spiritual content.

  • Scope: No medical/legal advice; no therapy role.

  • Confidentiality with limits: Follow policy, safety requirements, and reporting rules.

  • Documentation: Minimal, respectful, policy-aligned; avoid sensitive confession details.

  • Team communication: Refer to RN/MD/SW for clinical, safety, and complex family conflict.

  • Pace: Slow presence often lowers distress more than words.


Suggested Documentation Example (Policy-Aware and Minimal)

(Adjust to your hospice documentation standards.)
“Patient expressed significant spiritual distress with guilt/punishment themes; chaplain provided calm presence and supportive listening; patient declined/accepted brief prayer; caregiver tension observed; chaplain reinforced emotional safety and consent; follow-up visit planned; RN/SW notified as appropriate per policy.”


(A) Reflection + Application Questions

  1. What is the first sentence you would say after, “God is punishing me”? Why?

  2. How would you respond when Jenna tries to shut down her father’s honesty?

  3. What are two theological shortcuts you must avoid in this scenario?

  4. What are three consent-based options you can offer that keep you in your role?

  5. What would indicate a need to involve the RN or social worker immediately?

  6. Write a two-sentence chart note that is respectful, minimal, and policy-aligned.


(B) References

  • The Holy Bible, World English Bible (WEB): Proverbs 20:5; Psalm 139:23–24; Romans 12:15; James 1:19.

  • Puchalski, C. M., et al. “Improving the Quality of Spiritual Care as a Dimension of Palliative Care.” Journal of Palliative Medicine (standards for spiritual care and interdisciplinary collaboration).

  • Fitchett, G. Spiritual Assessment in Pastoral Care (core assessment principles adapted in chaplaincy).

  • Nolan, S. Spiritual Care at the End of Life (presence-based care, distress, and dignity in end-of-life contexts).

  • Koenig, H. G. Religion, Spirituality, and Health (spiritual struggle in serious illness; applied within chaplain scope).

  • Reyenga, Henry. Organic Humans (whole embodied souls, dignity, moral agency, consent; integrated approach to personhood and care).


Última modificación: lunes, 23 de febrero de 2026, 18:54