🧪 Case Study 11.3: When a Manager Wants the Chaplain to “Find Out What’s Really Going On”
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🧪 Case Study 11.3: When a Manager Wants the Chaplain to “Find Out What’s Really Going On”
Scenario
Marcus serves as a marketplace chaplain in a midsized manufacturing company. Over time, he has built trust with employees, supervisors, and front-office staff by being calm, approachable, and careful with boundaries. He is known for brief check-ins, respectful presence, and prayer by permission. He does not interrupt workflow unnecessarily, and he is careful not to present himself as part of HR or management.
One afternoon, a department manager named Lisa asks Marcus if he has a minute to talk.
She closes the office door and says:
“I need your help. One of our employees, Darren, has changed a lot over the past few weeks. He’s distracted, short with people, and obviously carrying something. You talk to people in ways they open up to. Can you find out what’s really going on with him?”
Lisa continues:
“I’m not asking you to do anything official. I just need insight. If something is happening at home, or if he’s thinking about leaving, or if he has a problem with someone here, it would really help to know before this gets worse.”
Marcus understands why Lisa is asking. She is under pressure. Darren’s work has slipped. The team feels the effect. She is not trying to be cruel. She is trying to manage a department responsibly.
Still, Marcus immediately feels the tension.
If he agrees carelessly, he may become a spiritual informant.
If he refuses harshly, he may damage coordination with leadership.
If he is unclear, he may create false expectations.
This is not mainly a crisis of compassion.
It is a crisis of role clarity.
Beneath-the-Surface Analysis
This scenario is common in workplace chaplaincy because chaplains often become trusted by multiple parts of the organization at once. Leaders may trust the chaplain’s calm presence. Workers may trust the chaplain’s relational safety. That very trust can tempt others to ask the chaplain to function outside the role.
Several layers are operating here.
Lisa Is Carrying Real Responsibility
She is not simply being nosy. She is responsible for workflow, morale, and team performance. She feels pressure to understand what is affecting Darren before the problem worsens.
Marcus Has Relational Access
Because Marcus is trusted, Lisa sees him as someone who may be able to get beneath the surface. This is exactly why chaplaincy can drift into management-adjacent misuse if boundaries are not clear.
Darren’s Dignity Is at Stake
If Marcus approaches Darren mainly to “find out what’s really going on” for Lisa’s benefit, Darren may feel emotionally accessed rather than cared for. Even if Darren never learns about the manager’s request, the chaplain’s internal posture would already be distorted.
The Organization’s Trust System Is Also at Stake
If workers begin to suspect that conversations with the chaplain function as a soft reporting channel to management, trust in chaplaincy can erode quickly across the workplace.
This is why Marcus must respond with warmth and clarity, not with vague goodwill.
Chaplain Goals
Marcus’s goals in this moment should be:
- Respect Lisa’s concern without accepting a management function
- Protect the integrity of the chaplain role
- Avoid becoming an investigator or informant
- Preserve trust with employees
- Coordinate with leadership in a general, role-safe way
- Respond with calm rather than defensiveness
- Clarify what kind of support the chaplain can and cannot provide
What Is Happening Underneath
Underneath the conversation, several dynamics are active.
Lisa may be anxious and looking for relief.
She may feel alone in carrying team problems.
She may be tempted to use Marcus’s relational trust as an unofficial management tool.
Marcus may also feel internal pressure:
- “I want to help.”
- “I understand why she is asking.”
- “I do not want to seem uncooperative.”
- “I also do not want to misuse trust.”
- “I need to respond carefully.”
This is where Ministry Sciences is especially helpful. Anxious systems often try to hand their tension to the calmest person in the room. The chaplain is often that person. Marcus must stay warm without absorbing a role that does not belong to him.
Poor Response Example
Marcus says:
“Of course. I’ll talk with Darren and see what I can find out. He usually opens up to me. I’ll let you know if it’s something at home or something going on here.”
Later that day, Marcus approaches Darren with an internal agenda shaped by Lisa’s request. He says:
“Hey, Darren, you haven’t seemed yourself lately. What’s going on?”
Darren hesitates, then eventually shares that his marriage is strained and he is overwhelmed financially. Marcus listens, then later tells Lisa:
“He’s dealing with a lot at home. Marriage stress. Money issues too. That’s probably why he’s off.”
Why This Is a Poor Response
This response is unsafe for several reasons:
- Marcus accepts a management-like fact-finding role.
- He approaches Darren not simply as a chaplain, but as a quiet information-gatherer.
- He shares personal details that Darren gave in a care context.
- He turns relational trust into organizational intelligence.
- He trains leadership to expect inappropriate access from chaplaincy.
- He undermines long-term trust in the chaplain role.
Even if Marcus thinks he is helping, he has crossed a line.
Wise Response Example
Marcus responds to Lisa calmly:
“I understand why you’re concerned, and I’m glad you said something. My role, though, is support and care, not finding out private details for management. I want to stay clear about that.”
Lisa looks disappointed and says:
“I’m not asking you to spy. I just need help.”
Marcus replies:
“I understand. What I can do is remain available as a chaplain, continue being a steady presence, and encourage support if Darren wants it. I can also share general care concerns if there’s a broad pattern affecting the workplace, but I should not relay personal disclosures.”
Lisa nods slowly.
Marcus adds:
“If there are performance or workplace issues that need direct management attention, those are best handled through your role. My role is different, and I want to keep it trustworthy.”
Why This Is a Wise Response
This response works because:
- Marcus respects Lisa’s concern.
- He does not shame her for asking.
- He clearly names the limit.
- He distinguishes general care coordination from personal disclosure.
- He protects Darren’s dignity before any conversation even happens.
- He strengthens long-term trust in chaplaincy.
This is role clarity with warmth.
Stronger Conversation Example
A few days later, Marcus sees Darren in a break room and offers a simple check-in without any hidden agenda:
“Hi, Darren. Good to see you. I just wanted to check in. You seem like you’ve been carrying a lot.”
Darren shrugs and says:
“Yeah. It’s been heavy.”
Marcus replies:
“I’m sorry. If talking would help at some point, I’m around.”
Darren says:
“Thanks. I may take you up on that.”
Later, Darren does approach Marcus privately and shares some of what he is facing. Marcus listens, offers prayer by permission, and encourages Darren to consider what supports he may need. Marcus does not relay Darren’s private disclosures to Lisa.
At a later point, Marcus may appropriately tell Lisa something general and role-safe, such as:
“I’m continuing to be available as a supportive presence. I’m aware this season feels heavy for a number of people, so steady leadership and clarity probably matter a lot right now.”
That communicates care without betrayal.
Boundary Reminders
This case highlights several key boundaries in marketplace chaplaincy.
Access Is Not Authorization
Just because the chaplain can get people talking does not mean the chaplain should use that access for management purposes.
Support Is Different from Investigation
The chaplain can support a struggling worker. The chaplain should not become the person who uncovers private information for leadership.
Leadership Coordination Must Stay General
General care observations may sometimes be appropriate. Personal disclosures usually are not.
Hidden Agendas Corrupt Care
If the chaplain enters a conversation trying to “get information,” the care moment has already been compromised.
Long-Term Trust Is More Important Than Short-Term Insight
A workplace may gain a small amount of information through blurred chaplaincy, but it can lose the deeper trust that makes chaplaincy effective at all.
Chaplain Do’s
- Do take leadership concerns seriously
- Do respond with warmth and clarity
- Do explain the limits of the chaplain role
- Do remain available as a supportive presence
- Do distinguish general care coordination from personal disclosure
- Do protect the dignity of the employee
- Do encourage leaders to handle management matters through proper channels
- Do preserve long-term trust
Chaplain Don’ts
- Do not become a spiritual informant
- Do not gather private information for management
- Do not approach employees with a hidden agenda
- Do not share personal disclosures casually
- Do not let leadership pressure redefine the chaplain role
- Do not confuse access with authority
- Do not act like relational trust is yours to leverage
Sample Phrases to Say
- “I understand why you’re concerned.”
- “My role is support and care, not finding out private details for management.”
- “I want to stay clear and trustworthy in that.”
- “I can remain available as a chaplain, but I should not relay personal disclosures.”
- “If there are performance concerns, those are best addressed through your role.”
- “I can share general care patterns, but not private personal details.”
Sample Phrases Not to Say
- “I’ll see what I can get out of him.”
- “Leave it with me. People tell me things.”
- “I’ll let you know what’s happening at home.”
- “He trusts me, so I can find out.”
- “I know more than I can say, but yes, there’s definitely something going on.”
- “Let me help you manage him.”
Ministry Sciences Reflection
Ministry Sciences helps explain why this request emerged. Lisa is carrying organizational anxiety. Darren’s change in behavior affects the team, and Lisa wants insight that might reduce uncertainty. In anxious systems, the calm relational person is often asked to absorb pressure and convert it into answers. The chaplain is particularly vulnerable to this pull because trust and care create access.
But this framework also shows why Marcus must resist over-functioning. When the chaplain becomes a private interpreter of employees for leadership, the chaplain starts carrying responsibility that belongs elsewhere. That may reduce anxiety briefly, but it destabilizes the system long-term by weakening trust, increasing dependence on blurred roles, and confusing what chaplaincy is for.
Organic Humans Reflection
Organic Humans reminds us that Darren is an embodied soul, not a productivity problem to decode. His struggles, whatever they are, run through body, mind, family, emotions, and spirit. If the chaplain approaches him mainly as a source of insight for management, Darren’s dignity is reduced.
This framework also reminds us that Lisa is an embodied soul. She is feeling pressure too. Her request may come from stress, responsibility, and a real desire to help the team. She does not need contempt from the chaplain. She needs clarity and care.
Marcus too is an embodied soul. He must regulate the pull to be especially useful, insightful, or central. Whole-person ministry includes self-awareness in the chaplain.
Practical Lessons
- Leadership pressure can tempt chaplains into management-adjacent roles
- Warmth and boundaries must stay together
- General care coordination is different from personal disclosure
- Trust is damaged when chaplains become informants
- A chaplain can support both leaders and workers without betraying either
- Hidden agendas distort care
- Role clarity protects long-term ministry
- Not every request for help should be accepted in the form it is asked
Reflection + Application Questions
- Why was Lisa’s request understandable, even though it was not role-safe?
- What made the poor response harmful?
- What did Marcus do well in the wise response?
- Why is the difference between general care coordination and personal disclosure so important?
- How can a chaplain care for a manager without becoming management?
- How does Ministry Sciences help explain the pressure Marcus felt?
- How does the Organic Humans framework deepen your understanding of Darren, Lisa, and Marcus?
- In your own style, would you be more tempted to say yes too quickly or no too sharply?
- What boundary phrase in this case would be most useful for you to remember?
- What does this case teach about protecting trust in organizational settings?
References
The Holy Bible, World English Bible (WEB): James 1:19; Colossians 4:6; Romans 12:3; Galatians 6:2, 5; 1 Corinthians 14:40.
Benner, David G. Care of Souls: Revisioning Christian Nurture and Counsel. Baker Books, 1998.
Doehring, Carrie. The Practice of Pastoral Care: A Postmodern Approach. Westminster John Knox Press, 2015.
Friedman, Edwin H. A Failure of Nerve: Leadership in the Age of the Quick Fix. Church Publishing.
Pargament, Kenneth I. Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy: Understanding and Addressing the Sacred. Guilford Press.
Swinton, John. Practical Theology and Qualitative Research. SCM Press.
Last modified: Thursday, April 2, 2026, 7:18 AM