📖 Reading 12.1: Shepherding Yourself (Mark 6:31; 1 Kings 19) 

Learning Goals

By the end of this reading, you should be able to:

  • Apply Mark 6:31 and 1 Kings 19 (WEB) to chaplain sustainability with biblical realism.

  • Explain why chaplains must care for themselves as whole embodied souls (Organic Humans lens).

  • Recognize early warning signs of burnout, compassion fatigue, and moral distress.

  • Build a simple, ministry-ready Rule of Life that supports long-term faithfulness.

  • Practice healthy boundaries: supervision, debriefing, confidentiality, and scope-of-practice clarity.

  • Strengthen your capacity to serve veterans and teams without saviorism or collapse.


1) The hidden assumption that burns chaplains out

Many chaplains are generous people. They care quickly. They show up. They notice needs. They feel responsible.

That can become a hidden assumption:

“If I do not carry it, no one will.”

But this assumption is not humility. It is often a subtle form of saviorism—being a “necessary person.”

Veterans chaplaincy confronts you with serious burdens:

  • moral injury stories

  • suicide risk moments

  • grief that returns in waves

  • complex needs and system failures

  • trauma exposure, distress, and distrust

If you try to carry all of that as if outcomes depend on you, you will eventually:

  • numb out

  • get cynical

  • overreach your role

  • break policy

  • neglect your family

  • lose joy

  • quit

Sustainability begins with spiritual clarity:

God is God. You are a servant.

That is not small. That is freedom.


2) Mark 6:31 — Jesus commands rest as part of ministry

Mark 6 describes the disciples returning from ministry activity—tired, pressured, interrupted. Jesus responds with a command, not a suggestion:

“Come apart into a deserted place, and rest a while.” (Mark 6:31, WEB)

Jesus does not shame exhaustion. He names it and addresses it.

In chaplaincy, rest is often treated like a luxury. In Scripture, rest is treated like obedience—an act of trust.

Rest says:

  • “God will continue working even when I am not.”

  • “My limits are real, and they are not sins.”

  • “I do not have to be endlessly available to be faithful.”

For chaplains, Mark 6:31 is a corrective:

  • you are not called to be everywhere

  • you are not called to carry every story alone

  • you are called to serve within limits and recover on purpose


3) 1 Kings 19 — Elijah’s collapse and God’s embodied care

In 1 Kings 19, Elijah is depleted, discouraged, and afraid. He wants to die. His soul is exhausted.

And what does God do first?

God does not begin with a lecture.

God begins with embodied care:

  • Elijah sleeps

  • an angel provides food and water

  • Elijah rests again

  • then he is strengthened for the journey

This is profoundly important for chaplains.

God treats Elijah as a whole embodied soul:

  • spiritual exhaustion is connected to physical depletion

  • courage is connected to sleep, nourishment, and recovery

  • the soul cannot be sustained by spiritual talk alone

Organic Humans language fits perfectly here: humans are integrated—body and spirit together. Chaplains who ignore the body will eventually lose spiritual resilience.


4) Organic Humans: you are a whole embodied soul, not a ministry machine

Organic Humans philosophy helps chaplains resist the “machine mindset.”

A chaplain is not:

  • an endless emotional container

  • a spiritual vending machine

  • a moral firefighter with no recovery cycle

A chaplain is a whole embodied soul who needs:

  • sleep

  • food and hydration

  • movement and sunlight

  • relationships and laughter

  • time to grieve

  • time to pray without performing

  • supervision and debrief

If you consistently violate these needs, your body will eventually force limits through illness, emotional collapse, or sin patterns.

Caring for yourself is not self-centered. It is stewardship.


5) Ministry Sciences: five dimensions of chaplain sustainability

Ministry Sciences is not only for caring for others. It is also a map for caring for the chaplain.

Spiritual dimension

  • daily Scripture and prayer rhythms

  • honest lament and confession

  • remembering your calling without performing

Relational dimension

  • healthy marriage/family priorities

  • peer friendships and accountability

  • mentorship or supervision relationships

Emotional dimension

  • naming stress honestly

  • debriefing after heavy encounters

  • not carrying secrets alone

Ethical dimension

  • staying in your lane

  • refusing saviorism and favoritism

  • honoring confidentiality and policy boundaries

Systemic dimension

  • realistic scheduling

  • limits on availability

  • clear chain-of-command and escalation pathways

  • documentation discipline (not over-documenting as emotional processing)

If any dimension collapses, sustainability weakens.


6) A simple Rule of Life for veterans chaplains (practical and realistic)

A Rule of Life is a trellis for long-term faithfulness. It is not about rigid rules. It is about reliable rhythms.

Below is a simple model chaplains can adapt.

A) Daily rhythms (10–30 minutes total)

  • 10 minutes Scripture + prayer (small, steady)

  • one gratitude practice

  • one body practice (walk, stretch, breath, hydration)

  • a short “release prayer” after ministry:
    “Lord, I release what I cannot carry. Keep them in your care.”

B) Weekly rhythms

  • one Sabbath-like block (half-day or full day) with reduced ministry contact

  • worship and community (church, small group)

  • peer debrief or supervision check-in

C) Monthly rhythms

  • one extended recovery practice (retreat morning, hike, quiet time)

  • review your boundaries: what is slipping?

  • check your warning signs (see next section)

D) Annual rhythms

  • at least one meaningful break (vacation, rest week)

  • training refresh and skill renewal

  • review your role and load with leadership

This kind of rule of life protects the chaplain and protects the veterans you serve.


7) Warning signs: when your soul is leaking

Chaplains often miss their own symptoms because they are trained to focus outward.

Common warning signs include:

  • irritability and impatience

  • emotional numbness or shutdown

  • insomnia or nightmares

  • cynicism and sarcasm replacing compassion

  • secretive coping (alcohol, porn, overeating, doom-scrolling)

  • “rescuer high” followed by resentment

  • increasing boundary violations (“I’ll just bend policy this once”)

  • withdrawal from prayer, church, and relationships

  • thinking: “I hate people” or “I can’t care anymore”

These signs are not a reason for shame. They are a reason for wise action:

  • talk to your supervisor

  • reduce load

  • reestablish rest

  • seek pastoral counsel or professional support as appropriate


8) Boundaries that keep you faithful (and keep veterans safe)

Sustainability is not only internal. It is also structural.

Healthy chaplain boundaries include:

  • availability boundaries: you are not 24/7 unless officially on-call

  • contact boundaries: avoid becoming the veteran’s private, exclusive lifeline

  • money boundaries: no private cash support or financial entanglement

  • transport boundaries: no personal vehicle transport unless explicitly authorized

  • confidentiality boundaries: confidentiality with limits; do not carry dangerous secrets alone

  • scope boundaries: chaplain ≠ therapist, chaplain ≠ lawyer, chaplain ≠ benefits representative

Boundaries are not “lack of love.” Boundaries are how love stays clean and sustainable.


9) A short biblical theology of rest for chaplains

Rest is an act of faith. It says:

  • “God is the Shepherd, not me.”

  • “I can be faithful and still be limited.”

  • “My identity is in Christ, not in constant usefulness.”

Mark 6:31 shows that Jesus invites rest as part of ministry.
1 Kings 19 shows that God restores depleted servants through embodied care.

Together, they form a chaplain’s foundation:

You can only pour out what you have received.


10) Conclusion: shepherd yourself to shepherd others

Veterans need chaplains who are steady—not burned out, not heroic, not chaotic.

A sustainable chaplain:

  • rests without guilt

  • debriefs without shame

  • follows policy without resentment

  • prays without performing

  • loves without carrying

  • serves for decades, not just for a season

Shepherding yourself is not optional. It is part of your calling.


Reflection + Application Questions

  1. What does Mark 6:31 teach you about rest as obedience, not luxury?

  2. What parts of 1 Kings 19 show God’s concern for the body as part of spiritual restoration?

  3. Write a simple daily rule of life you can realistically keep (10–30 minutes).

  4. List your top five warning signs that you are slipping toward burnout or numbness.

  5. What boundaries are hardest for you: availability, money, transport, overhelping, or policy pressure?

  6. Who is your supervision/debrief person, and how often will you check in?


References

  • The Holy Bible, World English Bible (WEB): Mark 6:31; 1 Kings 19.

  • Reyenga, Henry. Organic Humans. Christian Leaders Press, 2025.

  • Maslach, Christina, & Leiter, Michael P. The Truth About Burnout. Jossey-Bass, 1997.

  • Figley, Charles R. (Ed.). Compassion Fatigue: Coping With Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder in Those Who Treat the Traumatized. Brunner/Mazel, 1995.

  • Pargament, Kenneth I. Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy: Understanding and Addressing the Sacred. Guilford Press, 2011. (Referenced for spiritual stress and meaning; chaplains do not provide psychotherapy.)

  • Koenig, Harold G. Handbook of Religion and Health. Oxford University Press, 2012.


Последнее изменение: среда, 25 февраля 2026, 15:26