Video Transcript: Pitfalls: Saviorism, Enabling, or Giving Legal/Benefits Advice
🎥 Video 11B Transcript: Pitfalls: Saviorism, Enabling, or Giving Legal/Benefits Advice
Hi, I am Haley, a Christian Leaders Institute presenter.
When veterans face complex needs, chaplains often feel an emotional pull:
“I have to do something.”
That desire can come from love—but it can also drift into saviorism, enabling, or dangerous overreach.
So this video is about common pitfalls—and what helps instead.
Pitfall 1: Saviorism (becoming the rescuer)
Saviorism sounds spiritual, but it is often pride wearing compassion.
Signs you’re drifting:
you feel responsible for outcomes you can’t control
you start breaking policy “for the good cause”
you become the only person they call
you neglect your family and health
you begin to resent the veteran
A better posture:
“I care about you, and I’m going to connect you to the right supports. I will not do this alone.”
Pitfall 2: Enabling (help that keeps someone stuck)
Chaplains sometimes remove consequences in ways that delay growth:
giving money repeatedly with no plan
constantly calling agencies while the veteran refuses to engage
excusing behavior that harms others
letting manipulation set the agenda
A better approach:
“I’m willing to support you as you take the next step. Are you willing to do your part?”
That respects moral agency.
Pitfall 3: Legal and benefits advice
Veterans may ask:
“What should I say to get approved?”
“Can you help me win my claim?”
“Should I sue?”
Do not step into this lane. It can harm the veteran and create liability.
A safer phrase:
“I can’t give legal or benefits advice. But I can help you connect to a VSO, case manager, or accredited representative.”
Pitfall 4: Side-taking and triangulation
Complex needs often come with conflict: spouse, family, landlord, church leaders, probation officers.
Do not become the messenger or the judge.
Say:
“I can support you, but I won’t take sides. Let’s bring the right people into the conversation.”
Pitfall 5: Breaking confidentiality or bypassing policy
Under stress, chaplains sometimes share too much to “get help fast.”
Instead:
ask consent
share the minimum necessary
follow your chain-of-command
document appropriately if required
What Not to Do
Do not:
promise outcomes
violate policy to be “nice”
become a transportation service unless authorized
accept gifts or money that creates a conflict
shame the veteran when they don’t change fast
Wise chaplaincy is not dramatic. It is steady, bounded, and collaborative.