🧪 Case Study 3.3: “Chaplain, Don’t Tell Anyone—But I’m Not Safe”

Scenario Setting

Location: VA outpatient clinic hallway outside mental health offices
Context: You are a chaplain on scheduled rounds. A nurse has quietly told you, “He asked for a chaplain.” You are permitted to meet briefly in a semi-private consult nook, following facility protocol.
Veteran Profile:

  • Name: “Derrick” (pseudonym), early 30s

  • Branch/Service: Marine Corps, separated within the last 18 months

  • Presentation: Agitated, exhausted, eyes red, hands shaking slightly, voice low and urgent

  • Social context: Recently separated from spouse; sleeping in his truck some nights; intermittent alcohol use

  • Spiritual background: “I used to pray… not sure anymore.”

When you sit down, he leans forward and says:

“Chaplain, don’t tell anyone.
But I’m not safe. I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

He adds:

“If you tell staff, I’ll lose everything. They’ll lock me up.
Just promise me you won’t tell.”


What’s Beneath the Surface (Beneath the words)

This moment often includes multiple layers:

1) Fear of consequences and institutional distrust

Many veterans fear being labeled, losing benefits, losing autonomy, or being treated like a problem. Even when help is available, distrust can block access.

2) Crisis narrowing and cognitive overload

When someone says “I’m not safe,” their brain may be in survival mode: thinking narrows, hope shrinks, and the future feels unbearable. This is a whole embodied soul under stress—body, mind, spirit, and relationships all strained.

3) Shame and moral pain

He may feel shame about needing help: “I should be strong.”
He may fear he is failing his family, his identity, or his own values.

4) A test of the chaplain’s integrity

He is asking you to prove you are safe—by asking you to break policy.
This is a crucial integrity test: you must be compassionate and truthful.


Chaplain’s Immediate Goals (First 60–180 seconds)

In the first minutes, your goals are:

  1. Stay calm and present (your steadiness helps regulate the room)

  2. Clarify safety (without interrogation or panic)

  3. Refuse secrecy promises while preserving trust

  4. Engage the required help pathway per policy (warm handoff)

  5. Protect dignity and agency as much as possible within safety limits


What the Chaplain Should Do (Step-by-step)

Step 1: Acknowledge and honor the disclosure

This took courage. Say so without drama.

Say:
“I’m really glad you told me. You shouldn’t have to carry this alone.”

Step 2: State confidentiality with limits—clearly and gently

Do not promise secrecy you cannot keep. But do it in a relational way.

Say:
“I will treat what you share with care and privacy. But I can’t promise to keep safety risk secret. If I believe you’re in danger, we need to involve the right help so you can stay alive.”

Step 3: Move toward collaboration: “with you, not against you”

This lowers fear and preserves dignity.

Say:
“If we involve someone, I want to do it with you. You won’t be alone in that.”

Step 4: Ask a simple safety-clarifying question

You are not doing therapy. You are clarifying immediate risk.

Ask (calmly):
“When you say you’re not safe, are you thinking about hurting yourself today?”

If he says yes, follow up with one more simple clarifier (as policy allows):
“Do you have a plan right now?”

Do not probe for details beyond what is needed to activate the correct pathway.

Step 5: Activate the facility’s safety pathway immediately

Follow your setting policy. Typically this means notifying:

  • your chaplain supervisor or coordinator (if applicable)

  • the mental health team on site

  • nursing staff or the designated crisis responder

If the veteran is at imminent risk, do not leave them alone. Do not “go solo.” Do not delay.

Step 6: Maintain presence during the warm handoff

Stay calm. Keep the veteran oriented.

Say:
“Let’s take the next step together. I’m staying right here while we get support.”

Step 7: If possible, offer brief prayer with consent (not as a substitute for help)

Prayer can be comfort, but never a replacement for safety response.

Say:
“While we wait, would you like a short prayer for strength and protection—or would you rather not?”

If he declines, honor it.


Example Dialogue (How this can sound)

Veteran: “Promise you won’t tell.”
Chaplain: “I hear why you’re asking. And I’m really glad you told me.”
Chaplain: “I will treat what you share with care. But I can’t promise secrecy if safety is at risk.”
Chaplain: “If we need help, we’ll do it together. You won’t be alone.”

Chaplain: “When you say you’re not safe—are you thinking about hurting yourself today?”

Veteran: “Yeah… I’ve been thinking about it all week.”
Chaplain: “Thank you for being honest.”
Chaplain: “Let’s get the right support right now. I’m staying with you while we do that.”

This is integrity with compassion.


Chaplain Do’s and Don’ts

Chaplain Do’s

  • Do stay calm, slow your speech, and reduce stimulation.

  • Do affirm the courage it took to speak.

  • Do use clear confidentiality language with limits.

  • Do clarify immediate safety risk with simple questions.

  • Do activate the required safety pathway immediately.

  • Do keep the veteran accompanied if imminent risk appears.

  • Do communicate “minimum necessary” information to staff.

  • Do document only if your role requires it, and only what is appropriate.

Chaplain Don’ts

  • Don’t promise total confidentiality or secrecy.

  • Don’t minimize (“You’ll be fine”) or moralize (“Don’t you know suicide is sin?”).

  • Don’t leave the veteran alone if risk appears imminent (follow policy).

  • Don’t attempt therapy, trauma processing, or long clinical assessment.

  • Don’t argue about consequences (“They won’t lock you up”). You don’t control that.

  • Don’t take the situation into your own hands without the team.

  • Don’t share extra details with staff that are not needed for safety.


What Not to Do (Common Chaplain Mistakes in Safety Moments)

  1. Promising secrecy to keep rapport
    This becomes betrayal later and may increase risk.

  2. Going solo
    Driving the veteran yourself, trying to manage crisis alone, or avoiding staff involvement “to protect them.”

  3. Preaching or lecturing
    Using shame, fear, or theological pressure in a crisis moment.

  4. Over-questioning
    Turning the moment into interrogation rather than calm safety action.

  5. Panicking
    Your panic increases their panic. Calm is ministry.


Sample Phrases to SAY

  • “I’m really glad you told me.”

  • “You shouldn’t have to carry this alone.”

  • “I can’t promise secrecy if safety is at risk.”

  • “We’ll get help together. I’ll stay with you.”

  • “Are you thinking about hurting yourself today?”

  • “Thank you for being honest.”

  • “Let’s take the next step right now.”

  • “Would you like a short prayer for strength, or would you rather not?”


Sample Phrases NOT to Say

  • “I promise I won’t tell anyone.”

  • “You’re not serious. You don’t mean that.”

  • “If you do that, you’ll go to hell.”

  • “Just have more faith.”

  • “Tell me every detail of what happened in your life.”

  • “Let’s keep this between us.”

  • “I’ll handle it myself—don’t worry.”


Boundary Map Reminders (Limits, Consent, Documentation, Team, Safety)

Limits: Your love does not remove policy. Scope protects life.
Consent: You honor agency, but safety overrides privacy when risk is credible.
Documentation: Only as required. Use minimum necessary facts.
Team communication: Notify the right people through the right channel—no gossip, no extra detail.
Safety escalation: Follow the crisis pathway immediately. You do not carry this alone.
Pace: Calm voice, clear steps, short sentences.


Reflection + Application Questions

  1. What made this scenario an integrity test for the chaplain?

  2. Write the exact words you would use to explain confidentiality limits without shaming the veteran.

  3. What is the difference between honoring consent and promising secrecy?

  4. What are two simple questions that help clarify immediate risk without becoming therapy?

  5. In your setting, who is the appropriate person/team to contact when a veteran says, “I’m not safe”?

  6. What does a “warm handoff” look like in your context? Describe it in 3–5 steps.

  7. How does seeing the veteran as a whole embodied soul affect your tone, pace, and posture in this moment?

  8. What is one phrase you must avoid that could increase shame or shut down disclosure? Replace it with a better phrase.


References

American Psychological Association. (2017). Clinical practice guideline for the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in adults. American Psychological Association.

Koenig, H. G. (2012). Spirituality in Patient Care: Why, How, When, and What (3rd ed.). Templeton Press.

Litz, B. T., Stein, N., Delaney, E., Lebowitz, L., Nash, W. P., Silva, C., & Maguen, S. (2009). Moral injury and moral repair in war veterans: A preliminary model and intervention strategy. Clinical Psychology Review, 29(8), 695–706.

Pargament, K. I. (1997). The Psychology of Religion and Coping: Theory, Research, Practice. Guilford Press.

Ramsay, N. J. (2018). Pastoral Diagnosis: A Resource for Ministries of Care and Counseling (rev. ed.). Fortress Press.

Reyenga, H. (n.d.). Organic Humans. Christian Leaders Press.

VandeCreek, L., & Burton, L. (Eds.). (2001). Professional Chaplaincy: Its Role and Importance in Healthcare.Association of Professional Chaplains.

World English Bible (WEB). (n.d.). Public domain translation. (Supportive texts for chaplain use: Proverbs 22:1; Proverbs 11:13; 1 Peter 5:2–3; Psalm 34:18; Matthew 11:28–30.)


Остання зміна: середу 25 лютого 2026 05:04 AM