đ§Ș Case Study 12.3: The Volunteer Who Took Every Call
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đ§Ș Case Study 12.3: The Volunteer Who Took Every Call
Scenario Overview (Realistic Hospital Setting)
Setting: Mid-size hospital with a volunteer chaplain program connected to several local churches
Volunteer Chaplain: Tom R., 47, faithful, eager, respected, recently ordained as a chaplain through a study-based program
Schedule reality: Tom began as âavailable when neededâ but gradually became the default chaplain for nights, weekends, and crisis calls
Staff perception: âTom always says yes. Tom is dependable.â
Family perception: âTom is the only one who really shows up.â
Church perception: âTom is doing amazing ministry. Heâs always at the hospital.â
Presenting problem: After months of taking nearly every call, Tom begins to unravel:
heâs irritable with staff and family members
he feels numb in rooms that used to move him
he has trouble sleeping and keeps replaying deaths
he starts skipping worship and pulling away from friends
he becomes secretly resentful, but canât say no
he makes a scope mistake: he gives a family medical-sounding reassurance (âHeâll be okay through the nightâ) that later proves untrue
A lead chaplain or volunteer coordinator notices and asks to meet.
Beneath the Surface (Whole Embodied Souls + System Dynamics)
Tom (the volunteer chaplain) â whatâs driving the pattern
Savior drift: identity slowly shifts from âcalledâ to âneededâ
Approval addiction: affirmation becomes fuel
Unprocessed grief load: cumulative sorrow without debriefing
Boundary erosion: no clear âoffâ times
Spiritual depletion: ministry replacing worship and rest
Embodied strain: sleep loss, poor nutrition, chronic stress activation
Organic Humans lens: Tom is a whole embodied soul. His spiritual life is not separate from his body. Sleep loss and repeated trauma exposure affect his emotional regulation, patience, and judgment.
The hospital system â why it rewards the problem
staffing shortages increase reliance on âthe always-yes personâ
staff are grateful and unintentionally reinforce overwork
volunteer programs can lack clear supervision and scheduling boundaries
The church system â why it can unintentionally enable it
admiration without accountability
praise without asking, âAre you sustainable?â
assuming chaplain heroics equals faithfulness
Ministry Sciences insight: systems often âoutsourceâ stress to the most available person. Without structure, the system will consume the volunteer.
The Core Training Question
How does a volunteer chaplain remain faithful without becoming the hospitalâs unofficial on-call chaplain 24/7?
This case study trains:
boundaries as stewardship (not selfishness)
supervision and debriefing as safety
rule of life rhythms to prevent numbness
team-based scheduling and support systems
Warning Signs (What the Chaplain and Team Missed)
Tomâs early warning signs were visible, but normalized:
âIâm just tiredâ becomes constant exhaustion
emotional numbness: âI donât feel anything anymoreâ
irritability: short answers, impatience, cynicism
avoidance: skipping worship, withdrawing from family
intrusive memories: replaying traumatic scenes
boundary drift: always checking phone, always âonâ
spiritual dryness: prayer becomes task-focused
What Not to Do: treat these signs as ânormal ministry.â They are not normal. They are signals of overload.
The Scope Mistake (A Realistic Turning Point)
In a late-night call, a frightened family asks Tom:
âIs he going to die tonight?â
Tom answers:
âI think heâll be okay through the night.â
The patient dies two hours later. The family feels betrayed. The nurse is frustrated. Tom feels deep shame.
Why this happened: sleep deprivation, accumulated stress, and role confusion. Tom moved outside chaplain scopeâmaking a pseudo-prognosis.
What a Healthy Intervention Looks Like (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: The lead chaplain/coordinator meets with Tom (compassion + clarity)
Lead says:
âTom, you are valued. But this pace is not sustainable. We need to protect you and the people you serve.â
Then asks:
âHow many calls are you taking per week? How much are you sleeping? Who are you debriefing with?â
This frames sustainability as stewardship, not failure.
Step 2: Restore scope clarity and repair the trust breach
Lead coaches Tom on a better response for future questions:
âI canât predict timing, but I can stay with you and help you ask the nurse or physician what theyâre seeing.â
âWe can take this moment by moment. You are not alone.â
If appropriate, Tom can offer a simple apology to the family (per policy and supervisor guidance):
âIâm sorry I spoke too certainly. I wanted to comfort you, and I should have stayed in my lane.â
Step 3: Reset the schedule with firm boundaries
A written schedule is created:
specific on-call blocks
maximum number of calls per week
mandatory days off
rotation with other volunteers
clear escalation pathways for after-hours needs
Key policy:
âNo volunteer is allowed to be the default chaplain.â
Step 4: Build Tomâs rule of life (small and realistic)
Tom commits to:
weekly worship attendance
daily prayer and Scripture minimums
sleep protection
10-minute debrief after heavy calls
one supervisor meeting every two weeks for 2 months
peer support (another chaplain buddy)
Step 5: Debriefing and supervision become non-optional
Tom begins using a structured debrief:
What happened?
What did I feel?
What did I do well?
What will I do differently?
What do I need now?
Release prayer
This prevents accumulation.
Step 6: The church adjusts its language (praise with accountability)
Instead of only saying, âTom is amazing,â church leaders begin asking:
âAre you sustainable?â
âWhat is your day off?â
âWho is supervising you?â
âHow can we support your family and your rest?â
The church becomes a support system, not an applause system.
Sample Phrases to SAY (Healthy Boundaries and Scope)
To staff who want âthe always yes chaplainâ
âIâm scheduled for certain hours. If this is urgent, please follow the on-call protocol.â
âIâm not available tonight, but I can ensure the proper channel is notified.â
To families asking for timing/prognosis
âI canât predict timing, but I can be present with you.â
âLetâs ask the nurse what theyâre seeing, and Iâll stay with you.â
To yourself (internal boundary)
âI can be fully present, and I donât have to carry this home.â
âFaithfulness includes rest.â
Sample Phrases NOT to Say (What Not to Do)
âIâll come anytimeâjust call me.â
âYou can always reach me.â
âDonât worry, heâll make it through the night.â
âIâm the only one who can handle these calls.â
âGod is testing youâbe strong.â
âI donât need help. Iâm fine.â
These phrases create unsustainable expectations and invite scope drift.
Boundary Map Reminders (Limits, Consent, Documentation, Team)
Limits
No medical predictions
No therapy role
No âalways onâ identity
Consent and dignity
Always ask permission for prayer and Scripture
Keep visits brief and non-performative
Documentation (if required)
Chart minimally and objectively
Document referrals and support offered
Avoid medical interpretations and judgment language
Team-based care
Use scheduling protocols
Share responsibility
Debrief and escalate concerns appropriately
Beneath the Surface Ministry Sciences Analysis (What Changed)
The system stopped rewarding overwork and started rewarding sustainability.
Tomâs identity shifted from âneededâ back to âcalled.â
Debriefing reduced emotional stacking and cynicism.
Boundaries restored compassion and improved judgment.
Team rotation protected the whole program and increased reliability.
(A) Reflection + Application Questions
What is the difference between being âneededâ and being âcalledâ?
List three early warning signs that a chaplain is taking too many calls.
Write your best boundary sentence for staff who request off-schedule coverage.
How should a chaplain respond when a family asks for prognosis or timing? Write a sample response.
What rule-of-life practice would most protect you: sleep, debriefing, worship, supervision, or scheduling boundaries? Why?
What should the church do to support volunteer chaplains without enabling burnout?
If you made a scope mistake, what would repentance and repair look like in a hospital-appropriate way?
(B) References
The Holy Bible, World English Bible (WEB): Mark 6:31; 1 Kings 19:1â18; Galatians 6:2, 5; Proverbs 15:1; James 1:19; 1 Corinthians 14:40; Colossians 3:12â14.
Figley, C. R. (1995). Compassion Fatigue: Coping with Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder in Those Who Treat the Traumatized. Brunner/Mazel.
Maslach, C., & Leiter, M. P. (2016). Burnout. In Stress: Concepts, Cognition, Emotion, and Behavior (Elsevier).
Puchalski, C. M., et al. (2014). Improving the spiritual dimension of whole person care: Reaching national and international consensus. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 17(6), 642â656.
Fitchett, G., & Nolan, S. (Eds.). (2015). Spiritual Care in Practice: Case Studies in Healthcare Chaplaincy. Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care. (2018). Clinical Practice Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care (4th ed.).
Reyenga, H. (n.d.). Organic Humans (manuscript/book project). Christian Leaders Institute.
Ăltima modificaciĂłn: lunes, 2 de marzo de 2026, 06:25