đ Reading 6.1: Love of Neighbor and Hospitality (Luke 10:25â37; Romans 15:7)
đ Reading 6.1: Love of Neighbor and Hospitality (Luke 10:25â37; Romans 15:7)
Learning Goals
By the end of this reading, you should be able to:
Apply Luke 10:25â37 and Romans 15:7 (WEB) as biblical foundations for interfaith chaplain care with veterans.
Explain why hospitality, dignity, and religious liberty are central to Christian chaplaincy in diverse veteran-serving settings.
Practice consent-based spiritual care that respects conscience and avoids coercion.
Integrate Organic Humans (whole embodied souls, moral agency, relational design) into interfaith encounters.
Use a Ministry Sciences lens to navigate systems, policies, teamwork, and referral pathways without drifting into debates.
1) Why interfaith care is normal in veteran chaplaincy
Veterans chaplaincy happens inside real institutions and real communities: VA clinics, hospitals, shelters, nonprofits, correctional settings, churches, and support groups. In these places, you will serve veterans who are:
committed Christians
loosely connected to faith
wounded by religion
from other faith traditions
atheist or agnostic
âspiritual but unsureâ
culturally connected to traditional practices
In other words, veterans are peopleâwhole embodied soulsâwith diverse stories. If you assume âeveryone is Christian,â you will unintentionally harm trust and reduce your ability to serve.
Christian chaplaincy in interfaith settings does not mean hiding Christ or compromising Christian conviction. It means ministering in a way that reflects Christ: truth with gentleness, presence without control, compassion without coercion.
A veteran-serving environment is often a high-trust, high-boundary space. Religious liberty matters. Conscience matters. Consent matters. Chaplains who honor these realities become safe.
2) The Good Samaritan: neighbor-love that crosses identity boundaries
Luke 10:25â37 (WEB) begins with a question:
âTeacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?â
Jesus leads the man to the law: love God and love your neighbor. Then comes the question that reveals the human tendency:
âWho is my neighbor?â
Jesus answers with a story where the hero is not the expected âinsider.â The Samaritan is the one who stops, sees, has compassion, and acts with practical care. The priest and Leviteâreligious insidersâpass by.
Jesus is not attacking religious practice. He is exposing a failure of neighbor-love when identity boundaries become excuses to withhold mercy.
For veterans chaplaincy, the lesson is clear:
Mercy is not limited to âmy tribe.â
Compassion is not suspended until someone shares my beliefs.
Love of neighbor is proved through presence, protection, and practical care.
A Christian chaplain can remain thoroughly Christian while serving veterans of different faiths with dignity. In fact, that dignity is part of Christian faithfulness.
3) Romans 15:7: hospitality modeled after Christâs welcome
Romans 15:7 (WEB) says:
âTherefore receive one another, even as Christ also received you, to the glory of God.â
This verse does not say âreceive one another only if they agree with you.â It grounds hospitality in Christâs action toward us.
Christ received sinners with truth and mercy. Christian hospitality means:
you are not afraid of people who differ
you do not treat someone as a project
you do not demand spiritual outcomes to justify your care
you offer welcome that reflects Godâs kindness
In veteran care, hospitality often looks like simple things:
making space for the veteranâs story
using respectful language
asking permission before prayer
offering appropriate spiritual supports in their tradition when requested
coordinating with policy and the care team
refusing to shame someone for their beliefs or doubts
This is not relativism. This is love.
4) Organic Humans integration: whole embodied souls deserve dignity, not pressure
Organic Humans language strengthens interfaith practice by keeping your focus on personhood rather than labels.
Every veteran is a whole embodied soul:
embodied: their nervous system, pain, fatigue, and stress response are real
soulful: conscience, meaning, love, fear, shame, hope are real
relational: trust, belonging, connection, and community shape healing
morally agentive: they must be free to choose faith responses without coercion
This leads to a key principle for interfaith care:
Respect for conscience is not optionalâit is part of dignifying the image-bearer.
Interfaith chaplaincy is not âselling religion.â It is providing spiritual care in a way that honors the veteranâs agency.
A consent-based assessment question fits Organic Humans well:
âAre there any beliefs, practices, or spiritual supports that matter to you right now?â
If they say yes, you explore respectfully.
If they say no, you still offer presence.
5) Ministry Sciences integration: interfaith care inside systems and policies
Ministry Sciences helps you stay both compassionate and professional. Veteran chaplaincy happens inside systems where these realities are always present:
confidentiality rules and limits
documentation expectations (depending on setting)
safeguarding responsibilities
crisis escalation pathways
interdisciplinary teamwork
institutional history and distrust
diverse cultural identities and trauma exposure
Ministry Sciences encourages you to serve across multiple dimensions at once:
Spiritual dimension: faith, doubt, conscience, prayer, Scripture, meaning
Relational dimension: trust-building, family, community, belonging
Emotional dimension: grief, anger, fear, shame, numbness
Ethical dimension: dignity, religious liberty, consent, integrity, non-coercion
Systemic dimension: policy alignment, team communication, referrals, accountability
This multi-dimensional view keeps you from simplistic solutions and keeps you out of trouble.
6) Christian witness in interfaith settings: how to be faithful without coercion
Many Christian chaplains wonder, âIf I donât share the gospel directly, am I compromising?â
A wise answer is: Christian witness has multiple faithful forms, and your setting determines what is appropriate.
In many veteran environments, your witness is first expressed through:
steady compassion
truthfulness
humility
respect
patience
self-control
honoring agency and conscience
And when spiritual conversations open naturallyâespecially when a veteran asksâyou can respond honestly and briefly.
A chaplain-safe response:
âIâm a Christian chaplain. Iâm here to support you with respect, and I wonât pressure you. If you ever want Christian prayer or Scripture, Iâm glad to offer it.â
That statement is clear, non-manipulative, and consent-based.
When a veteran asks for Christian care
If a veteran says, âChaplain, will you pray in Jesusâ name?â or âCan you read Scripture with me?â you can provide explicit Christian care. You are not violating interfaith norms. You are responding to consent.
When a veteran does not want Christian care
If a veteran says, âI donât want Christian prayer,â you honor that without offense:
âThank you for telling me. I respect that. How can I support you today?â
This is humility, not fear.
7) Practical hospitality skills that build trust quickly
Interfaith trust is built through small practices repeated consistently.
1) Ask, donât assume
âDo you have a faith tradition or worldview that matters to you?â
âAre there any spiritual practices that help when life feels heavy?â
2) Offer choices every time
âWould you like prayer, silence, or just conversation?â
âIf prayer would help, would you want it from your tradition, mine, or more general?â
3) Use curiosity that honors dignity
Curiosity is not a quiz. It is service.
âWhat would respectful support look like for you today?â
âIs there someone from your tradition youâd like me to help you contact?â
4) Warm handoff without abandonment
âWould you like help connecting with a faith leader or spiritual advisor you trust?â
âI can stay with you while we connect youâyour choice.â
5) Keep your posture steady under difference
If a veteran challenges faith or criticizes Christianity, do not become defensive. Stay calm:
âI hear that. Thank you for being honest.â
A steady chaplain becomes safe.
8) Common interfaith failure points (and how to avoid them)
Failure point A: Debate mode
Trying to âwinâ spiritually often ends your access. It also violates chaplain professionalism.
Better:
listen, clarify needs, offer choices, provide referral support
Failure point B: Tokenizing
Tokenizing turns the veteran into an exhibit.
Instead:
focus on what they want and need today, not your curiosity
Failure point C: Avoiding faith entirely
Avoidance can also harm veteransâespecially those who want prayer but feel the chaplain is ânot allowed.â
Instead:
offer options. Let them choose.
Failure point D: Hidden conversion strategies
Using vulnerability to pressure spiritual decisions breaks trust and dishonors agency.
Instead:
be clear: âI wonât pressure you.â
What Not to Do (Topic 6.1)
To protect trust and honor policy, do not:
assume all veterans are Christian
argue doctrine or attack another faith tradition
use spiritual vulnerability as a conversion pressure moment
pray aloud or âin Jesusâ nameâ over someone who did not consent
stereotype, mock, or minimize a veteranâs beliefs
pretend expertise in traditions you do not understand
break policy regarding safety escalation, confidentiality limits, or documentation norms
make the veteran responsible for your comfort with difference
Reflection + Application Questions
In Luke 10, what does the Samaritan do that you can imitate as a veterans chaplain in a diverse setting?
Write two consent-based questions that honor religious liberty in a VA clinic or community setting.
What is the difference between hospitality and coercion in chaplain ministry? Give one example of each.
How can you be visibly Christian in character and clarity without pressuring words?
Describe a moment when a warm handoff to another faith leader would be the most respectful care.
What is one phrase you can use when a veteran says, âI donât want Christian prayer,â that communicates respect and continued support?
References
The Holy Bible, World English Bible (WEB): Luke 10:25â37; Romans 15:7; Colossians 4:5â6; 1 Peter 3:15â16.
Koenig, H. G. (2012). Spirituality & Health Research: Methods, Measurement, Statistics, and Resources. Templeton Press.
Puchalski, C. M., Ferrell, B., Virani, R., et al. (2009). Improving the quality of spiritual care as a dimension of palliative care: The report of the Consensus Conference. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 12(10), 885â904.
Fitchett, G., & Nolan, S. (2015). Spiritual Care in Practice: Case Studies in Healthcare Chaplaincy. Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
Cadge, W. (2012). Paging God: Religion in the Halls of Medicine. University of Chicago Press.
Reyenga, H. (2025). Organic Humans. Christian Leaders Press.