PAGE — 🎥 Video 5A Transcript: Calm Presence in Crisis: What to Do When Things Move Fast

Hi, I am Haley, a Christian Leaders Institute presenter…

In hospitals, crisis moments can happen in seconds. In the ER, ICU, or a waiting room, you may be walking into rapid change: alarms, urgent conversations, sudden deterioration, or a family receiving hard news. In those moments, a chaplain’s most powerful gift is not speed or solutions—it is calm, consent-based presence.

Your goal is simple: bring steadiness, dignity, and spiritual care without overreaching.

1) Stabilize the moment: your posture, your pace, your role

Before you speak, take one slow breath. Settle your body. A calm chaplain helps regulate the room.

Then ask yourself:

  • Do I have permission to be here?

  • Who is the point person right now (nurse, physician, social worker)?

  • What is my lane: presence, listening, brief prayer or Scripture if invited, and supportive connection?

When you enter, keep it short and respectful:
“Hi, I’m part of spiritual care. May I stand with you for a moment?”

If they say yes, you stay. If they say no, you honor it:
“Of course. If you want support later, I’m available.”

2) Use a three-step crisis rhythm: Ask, Listen, Offer

Here is a simple field rhythm you can use in crisis.

Ask permission (again, even if you were called):
“Would you like quiet presence, or would you like me to pray?”

Listen for the real need:
In crisis, people often speak in fragments: fear, anger, shock, guilt, confusion. Your job is to reflect and steady:
“This is a lot to take in. You’re not alone right now.”

Offer one small next step:
Not a plan. Not advice. A small support:
“Would it help if I stayed while you make this call?”
“Would you like me to sit with you while you wait?”

3) If prayer is welcome, keep it brief and dignity-centered

In fast-moving settings, short prayers are often best. Avoid long sermons disguised as prayer. Keep it consent-based and simple.

You can ask:
“Would you like a short prayer for peace and strength right now?”

If yes, pray in a way that matches the moment:

  • ask for God’s presence

  • ask for calm and courage

  • ask for wisdom for the medical team

  • bless the family with comfort

Scripture can also be brief when welcomed:
“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.” —Psalm 46:1 (WEB)

What Not to Do

In crisis moments, avoid these common mistakes:

  • Do not give medical opinions, interpret tests, or predict outcomes.

  • Do not step between the family and the care team or challenge staff decisions.

  • Do not pressure prayer, confession, or conversion—especially when emotions are raw.

  • Do not use clichés like “Everything happens for a reason.”

  • Do not dominate the space with long talking; your calm is often louder than your words.

In crisis, you are not the fixer. You are a steady presence—serving whole embodied souls with dignity, consent, and calm clarity.


Остання зміна: неділю 1 березня 2026 18:39 PM