🧪 Case Study 2.3: The Guest Who Does Not Want Prayer Yet

Scenario

A church partners with a local shelter to provide a weekly meal and hospitality night. Volunteers serve dinner, offer coffee, set up tables, and provide a calm indoor space during cold weather. The shelter has clear guidelines: volunteers may offer spiritual care, but they must not pressure guests, preach at tables, photograph guests, give money, offer private rides, or ask invasive personal questions.

Ethan is a new Homeless Community Chaplain volunteer. He is sincere, compassionate, and eager to serve well. Before the meal begins, the volunteer coordinator reminds the team:

“Please let guests eat first. Greet people warmly. If someone wants prayer, we welcome that. But ask permission first. If someone says no, honor that. If a guest shares a safety concern, bring it to staff.”

During the meal, Ethan notices a woman named Denise sitting alone. She keeps her coat on, eats slowly, and avoids eye contact. Ethan remembers the training and approaches gently.

He says, “Hi, I’m Ethan. I’m helping with the meal tonight. Is it okay if I sit here for a minute?”

Denise shrugs. “I guess.”

Ethan sits across from her, not too close. “I’m glad you came in tonight. It’s cold out there.”

Denise says, “Yeah.”

After a quiet moment, Ethan says, “I’m a Christian chaplain volunteer. I’m available to listen or pray if that would ever be helpful.”

Denise looks tense and says, “No prayer. I don’t do that.”

Ethan feels disappointed. He came hoping to pray with someone. But he remembers that prayer must be offered without pressure.

He says, “Thank you for telling me. I won’t pressure you.”

Denise looks surprised. “Most church people don’t take no very well.”

Ethan responds, “I’m sorry that has happened. You’re welcome here either way.”

Denise keeps eating. After a few minutes, she says, “My mom used to drag me to church and make me go forward every time I messed up.”

Ethan wants to explain that not all churches are like that, but he pauses. He realizes Denise is sharing pain, not asking for a defense.

He says, “That sounds like it left a mark.”

Denise nods but says nothing else.

Later, she asks, “Are there clean socks tonight?”

Ethan says, “Let me check with the clothing table. I don’t know, but I can ask with you.”

He walks with her to the volunteer who manages supplies. He does not bring up prayer again. He does not shame her. He does not treat her refusal as rejection. He simply remains respectful, calm, and available.

Before leaving, Denise says, “Thanks for not making it weird.”

Ethan replies, “I’m glad you came tonight. Peace to you.”

That evening, no prayer happened out loud. But trust began.


Analysis

This case study highlights one of the most important lessons in Homeless Community Chaplaincy: spiritual care must be offered with consent.

Ethan is clear about being a Christian chaplain volunteer. He does not hide his role. He makes prayer available. But when Denise declines, he honors her answer.

That moment matters.

Many people experiencing homelessness may have complicated histories with churches, religion, authority, family, shame, or spiritual pressure. Some may have experienced prayer as comfort. Others may have experienced prayer as control. Some may associate church with safety. Others may associate church with humiliation, coercion, hypocrisy, or disappointment.

A Homeless Community Chaplain must not assume that a person who comes to a meal ministry is ready for prayer, Scripture, or spiritual conversation.

Ethan’s wise response protects Denise’s dignity. By accepting her “no,” he communicates that the meal is not conditional, her worth is not conditional, and his kindness is not conditional.

This is not a failure of ministry. It is faithful ministry.


Goals

The goals in this situation are to:

  1. Respect Denise’s agency when she declines prayer.

  2. Make spiritual care available without pressure.

  3. Avoid defensiveness when Denise shares a negative church experience.

  4. Protect the ministry setting from coercive spiritual behavior.

  5. Build trust slowly through calm presence.

  6. Let Denise eat without interrogation.

  7. Respond to practical needs appropriately, such as asking about socks.

  8. Stay within the volunteer role and work through the ministry structure.

  9. Model Christ-centered care through patience and respect.

  10. Show that kindness continues even when prayer is declined.


Poor Response

A poor response might sound like this:

Ethan: “Can I pray for you?”

Denise: “No prayer. I don’t do that.”

Ethan: “Well, prayer can’t hurt. You came to a church meal, so you should expect prayer.”

Denise: “I said no.”

Ethan: “I just feel like God wants me to pray. Lord, soften her heart.”

Denise becomes embarrassed and angry. She leaves the table and tells another guest, “This is why I don’t trust church people.”

This response is harmful for several reasons.

Ethan ignores Denise’s boundary. He treats her refusal as rebellion instead of agency. He uses spiritual language to pressure her. He makes the ministry setting feel conditional. He increases shame rather than reducing it.

He also damages the credibility of the church and the shelter partnership.

Even if Ethan believes prayer is powerful, he must remember that forced prayer is not pastoral care. It is spiritual pressure.


Wise Response

A wise response honors Denise’s answer.

Ethan: “I’m a Christian chaplain volunteer. I’m available to listen or pray if that would ever be helpful.”

Denise: “No prayer. I don’t do that.”

Ethan: “Thank you for telling me. I won’t pressure you.”

This response is simple, but it is deeply important.

Ethan does not apologize for being Christian. He also does not force his spiritual practice onto Denise. He remains present. He lets her eat. He listens when she chooses to share more.

When Denise mentions her painful church memory, Ethan does not argue. He does not say, “Well, not all churches are like that.” He does not correct her emotions. He simply acknowledges the wound:

“That sounds like it left a mark.”

That phrase keeps the door open.

When Denise later asks for socks, Ethan responds practically and appropriately. He works through the clothing table rather than making promises.

This is wise Homeless Community Chaplaincy: consent, dignity, listening, role clarity, and practical service.


Stronger Conversation

Below is a stronger version of the conversation for training purposes.

Ethan: “Hi, I’m Ethan. I’m helping with the meal tonight. Is it okay if I sit here for a minute?”

Denise: “I guess.”

Ethan: “Thank you. I’m glad you came in. It’s cold tonight.”

Denise: “Yeah.”

Ethan: “I’m a Christian chaplain volunteer. I’m here to listen, encourage, and pray if that would ever be welcome. No pressure.”

Denise: “No prayer. I don’t do that.”

Ethan: “Thank you for being clear. I won’t pressure you.”

Denise: “Most church people don’t take no very well.”

Ethan: “I’m sorry that has been your experience. You’re welcome here either way.”

Denise: “My mom used to drag me to church and make me go forward every time I messed up.”

Ethan: “That sounds like it left a mark.”

Denise: “Yeah. I hated it.”

Ethan: “You don’t have to explain more than you want to.”

Denise: “Are there clean socks tonight?”

Ethan: “Let me check with the clothing table. I don’t know, but I can ask with you.”

Denise: “Okay.”

Ethan: “Let’s go ask.”

This conversation shows that the chaplain can be openly Christian and still non-coercive. It protects Denise’s dignity and leaves room for future trust.


Boundary Reminders

In a homeless community ministry setting, chaplains must remember:

  • A person may accept food and decline prayer.

  • A person may enter a church building and still not want spiritual conversation.

  • A person’s “no” should be honored unless there is a safety issue requiring action.

  • Prayer should never be made a condition for receiving food, clothing, warmth, or respect.

  • Scripture should not be used to override someone’s stated boundary.

  • Public prayer can feel exposing if not requested.

  • Past religious wounds should be heard without defensiveness.

  • Spiritual care should be clear, available, and consent-based.

  • A chaplain may remain Christian without becoming coercive.

  • Trust can grow even when no prayer happens.


Do’s

  • Do identify your role clearly and humbly.

  • Do ask permission before prayer.

  • Do accept “no” without offense.

  • Do continue treating the person with warmth.

  • Do listen when someone shares a painful church memory.

  • Do avoid defending yourself or the church too quickly.

  • Do keep the conversation calm and non-intrusive.

  • Do respond to practical needs through proper channels.

  • Do remember that trust may be the first ministry outcome.

  • Do pray privately later for the person if appropriate.


Don’ts

  • Don’t force prayer after someone says no.

  • Don’t say, “Prayer can’t hurt,” when the person has declined.

  • Don’t imply that food or help is tied to spiritual response.

  • Don’t preach at someone who has asked not to pray.

  • Don’t publicly expose a person’s spiritual pain.

  • Don’t treat refusal as rejection of you personally.

  • Don’t argue about past church wounds.

  • Don’t overpromise practical help to compensate for spiritual disappointment.

  • Don’t use Scripture as pressure.

  • Don’t confuse your desire to pray with permission to pray out loud.


Sample Phrases

A Homeless Community Chaplain can use phrases like:

“Would prayer be welcome, or would listening be better today?”

“Thank you for telling me. I won’t pressure you.”

“You’re welcome here either way.”

“I am a Christian chaplain, and I’m available if spiritual care would ever be helpful.”

“You do not have to explain more than you want to.”

“That sounds like it was painful.”

“I’m sorry that happened.”

“I can ask with you.”

“I don’t know the answer, but I can help you find the right person.”

“Peace to you.”

These phrases are simple, but they carry dignity, honesty, and spiritual gentleness.


Ministry Sciences Reflection

This case includes several Ministry Sciences layers.

Denise’s refusal of prayer is not merely a theological statement. It may be connected to past religious pressure, family control, shame, public embarrassment, or distrust of church people. Her body language—coat on, limited eye contact, guarded answers—may indicate fear, exhaustion, discomfort, or a desire to stay protected.

Ethan does not diagnose Denise. He simply notices that her “no” deserves respect.

His calm response helps lower emotional threat. When he says, “I won’t pressure you,” Denise experiences a different kind of church interaction. Her nervous system may register, “This person is not forcing me.” That creates room for a small amount of trust.

Her later request for socks is also important. Practical needs often become the first place where trust is tested. Ethan does not turn the sock request into a spiritual transaction. He simply helps her ask the right person.

Ministry Sciences helps the chaplain understand how tone, consent, memory, shame, and safety shape spiritual care.


Organic Humans Reflection

Denise is an embodied soul.

She is not merely a guest who refused prayer. She is a whole person with a body that may be cold, tired, and in need of clean socks. She has memories, wounds, agency, spiritual questions, and a history that affects how she receives care.

A chaplain who reduces Denise to “someone who rejected prayer” misses the person.

A chaplain who sees Denise as an embodied soul understands that her refusal may be part of a larger story. Her body needs warmth. Her dignity needs protection. Her agency needs respect. Her spiritual life may need time before trust can grow.

Jesus did not treat people as spiritual projects. He saw persons.

Ethan’s response honors Denise’s personhood. He does not force a spiritual moment. He does not ignore practical need. He does not withdraw kindness when she says no.

That is embodied-soul care.


Practical Lessons

  1. Consent matters. Prayer is holy, but it should not be forced.

  2. A “no” can be a trust-building moment. How the chaplain responds may shape future openness.

  3. Spiritual care must never be a condition for practical care. Food, clothing, warmth, and dignity should not depend on prayer.

  4. Past church wounds require listening, not quick defense. A person’s story should not be dismissed because it is uncomfortable.

  5. The chaplain can remain openly Christian without pressure. Clear identity and gentleness can coexist.

  6. Practical service can become spiritual witness. Helping someone ask about socks may communicate care more powerfully than forced words.

  7. Trust often grows slowly. The goal of one conversation may simply be safety and respect.

  8. Role clarity protects everyone. Ethan helps through the clothing table rather than promising supplies.

  9. Kindness after refusal reveals maturity. The chaplain’s love should not depend on the person’s response.

  10. Quiet ministry is still ministry. No visible prayer happened, but Christlike presence was displayed.


Reflection Questions

  1. What did Ethan do well when Denise declined prayer?

  2. Why is “Prayer can’t hurt” not a good response when someone has already said no?

  3. How did Denise’s past church experience shape the conversation?

  4. Why was it wise for Ethan not to defend all churches immediately?

  5. How can a chaplain remain openly Christian without pressuring someone?

  6. What practical need did Denise reveal, and how did Ethan handle it appropriately?

  7. How does this case show that trust can grow even when prayer does not happen?

  8. What Ministry Sciences layers may be present when someone refuses prayer?

  9. How does the Organic Humans framework help us see Denise more fully?

  10. What phrase from this case study would be helpful for you to practice using?


References

Christian Leaders Institute. Homeless Community Chaplaincy Practice — Final Comprehensive Master Template.

The Holy Bible, World English Bible.

Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Life Together. HarperOne, 2009.

Nouwen, Henri J. M. The Wounded Healer: Ministry in Contemporary Society. Image, 1979.

Swinton, John. Raging with Compassion: Pastoral Responses to the Problem of Evil. Eerdmans, 2007.

Vanier, Jean. Community and Growth. Paulist Press, 1989.

Last modified: Wednesday, May 6, 2026, 5:42 AM