🧪 Case Study 9.3: A Meal Line Conflict Turns Personal
🧪 Case Study 9.3: A Meal Line Conflict Turns Personal
Scenario
A church-based meal ministry serves dinner every Thursday evening. The ministry uses a simple line system. Guests enter through the fellowship hall doors, receive a meal tray, choose a table, and may return for seconds if food remains after everyone has been served.
You are serving as a Homeless Community Chaplain. The room is full. Some guests are tired after a cold day outside. A few seem agitated. The volunteers are doing their best, but the line is moving slowly.
A man named Curtis steps out of line and says loudly, “This is ridiculous. You people act like we’re animals waiting to be fed.”
A volunteer replies sharply, “Curtis, get back in line like everyone else. We’re trying to help you.”
Curtis turns toward the volunteer and says, “Help me? You don’t care about me. You just want to feel good about yourselves.”
Another guest mutters, “Here he goes again.”
Curtis hears it and points across the room. “You got something to say to me?”
The room becomes tense. People are watching. A child at a nearby table looks frightened. The meal leader is in the kitchen doorway, trying to understand what is happening.
Curtis looks at you and says, “Chaplain, tell them. They treat us like trash.”
Analysis
This is a conflict moment that could escalate quickly. Curtis feels publicly disrespected. The volunteer feels accused. Other guests are now watching and reacting. The situation has moved beyond a simple complaint about a slow meal line. Shame, exposure, pride, hunger, exhaustion, and past wounds may all be present.
The chaplain must not become the judge, security officer, or public defender of one side. Curtis has asked the chaplain to validate his accusation in front of the room. If the chaplain immediately says, “You’re right, they do treat you badly,” the chaplain may undermine the ministry team and escalate conflict. If the chaplain says, “Curtis, stop being ungrateful,” the chaplain may shame him further and make the conflict worse.
The wise response is to lower the temperature, protect dignity, respect the meal leader’s authority, and move toward a calmer next step.
The chaplain should ask:
Is anyone in immediate danger?
Is Curtis threatening someone?
Is the child nearby becoming unsafe or frightened?
Should the meal leader be involved now?
Can I help Curtis step slightly aside while staying visible and accountable?
Can I avoid taking sides while still acknowledging Curtis’s concern?
This is a moment for restorative presence.
Goals
The chaplain’s goals are to:
Help lower the tension in the room.
Avoid public shaming of Curtis, the volunteer, or the other guest.
Avoid taking sides too quickly.
Respect the meal leader’s authority.
Keep the setting safe for guests, children, and volunteers.
Help Curtis feel heard without rewarding disruptive behavior.
Move the conversation away from the crowd if possible, while staying visible.
Avoid acting like security.
Offer prayer only if welcomed and appropriate.
Debrief with the meal leader after the incident.
Poor Response
A poor response would be:
“Curtis, you need to calm down. These people are giving you free food. You should be grateful.”
This response may be true in one sense—the volunteers are serving freely—but it publicly shames Curtis. It tells him how he should feel instead of addressing the tension wisely. It may also confirm his belief that he is being talked down to.
Another poor response would be:
“You’re right, Curtis. Some volunteers do treat people badly. Everyone needs to apologize to him right now.”
This response may seem compassionate, but it takes sides too quickly, embarrasses the volunteer, and turns the chaplain into a public judge. It may also create confusion about who is responsible for the ministry setting.
A third poor response would be:
“Everyone stop! We’re going to pray right now!”
Prayer is holy, but forced public prayer can become a control tactic. Curtis has not asked for prayer. The room is tense. The first need is safety, dignity, and wise communication.
A fourth poor response would be:
“Curtis, if you don’t stop, I’ll make you leave.”
The chaplain should not act like security or threaten removal unless the chaplain has been specifically assigned that authority within the ministry’s policy. Removal decisions belong to the meal leader or designated safety process.
Wise Response
A wise response begins with a calm voice and non-threatening posture.
The chaplain says:
“Curtis, I hear that you feel disrespected. I want to understand, and I also want everyone to stay safe.”
The chaplain does not move too close or block Curtis. The chaplain keeps a low voice and avoids matching Curtis’s intensity.
Then the chaplain adds:
“Let’s step just a little to the side so this does not get bigger in front of everyone. I’m not the person who runs the meal line, but I can help bring the meal leader into this.”
If Curtis refuses to move, the chaplain should not force him. The chaplain may say:
“Okay, we can stay right here for a moment. I still want to keep this calm. I’m going to ask the meal leader to help us.”
The chaplain then signals or speaks to the meal leader:
“Could you join us? Curtis is feeling disrespected, and the room is getting tense. We need your help with the next step.”
The chaplain does not publicly rebuke the volunteer. The chaplain does not publicly affirm Curtis’s accusation. The chaplain helps create a bridge between Curtis and the responsible leader.
If Curtis becomes threatening, staff protocol takes priority. The chaplain steps back and lets the designated leader handle safety.
Stronger Conversation
Curtis: Chaplain, tell them. They treat us like trash.
Chaplain: Curtis, I hear that you feel disrespected. I want to understand what happened, and I also want everyone to stay safe.
Curtis: They always talk down to us.
Chaplain: That sounds painful. Let’s slow this down so it doesn’t get bigger in front of the whole room.
Curtis: Why should I? Everybody already heard them.
Chaplain: I understand that it already feels public. I don’t want to embarrass you or anyone else. Let’s take one step to the side, still right here where people can see us, and ask the meal leader to help.
Curtis: They won’t do anything.
Chaplain: I can’t promise what they will decide, but I can help make sure your concern is heard by the right person.
Curtis: He told me to get back in line like I’m a dog.
Chaplain: I hear that the words landed hard. Let’s bring the meal leader in so this can be handled properly.
Volunteer: I didn’t mean it that way. He was cutting the line.
Chaplain: I hear both of you. Let’s let the meal leader help with the line concern so this stays fair and safe.
Meal Leader: Curtis, come with me over here for a moment. Let’s talk about what happened.
Chaplain: Curtis, I’ll stay nearby while you speak with the meal leader, if that would help.
Boundary Reminders
Do not become the judge.
The chaplain does not know the whole story and should not decide the case publicly.
Do not become security.
If removal or safety action is needed, the designated leader or protocol should handle it.
Do not shame Curtis.
Public correction may intensify humiliation and anger.
Do not shame the volunteer.
The volunteer may have spoken poorly, but public correction by the chaplain may escalate the moment.
Do not force prayer.
Prayer should be offered by permission and timing, not used as a control tactic.
Do not undermine the meal leader.
The chaplain should support the authority structure of the ministry setting.
Do not move into isolation.
If a quieter conversation is needed, keep it visible and accountable.
Do’s
Do stay calm and grounded.
Do acknowledge Curtis’s feeling without validating every accusation.
Do keep your voice low.
Do respect personal space.
Do involve the meal leader early.
Do protect dignity for Curtis, the volunteer, and other guests.
Do help move the conflict away from the crowd if possible.
Do watch for safety concerns.
Do offer prayer only if welcomed and appropriate.
Do debrief after the incident.
Don’ts
Do not say, “You should be grateful.”
Do not say, “You’re always causing trouble.”
Do not say, “The volunteers are wrong and you are right.”
Do not argue about every detail in front of the room.
Do not physically move Curtis.
Do not block his path or crowd him.
Do not threaten consequences outside your role.
Do not publicly correct the volunteer in the heat of the moment.
Do not let other guests turn the conflict into a crowd reaction.
Do not use Scripture as a weapon.
Sample Phrases
When Curtis Appeals to You Publicly
“Curtis, I hear that you feel disrespected. I want to understand, and I also want everyone to stay safe.”
When the Conflict Is Becoming Public
“Let’s slow this down so it does not get bigger in front of everyone.”
When You Need to Involve the Meal Leader
“This is something the meal leader needs to help with. Let’s ask them together.”
When Curtis Refuses to Move Aside
“Okay, we can stay right here for a moment. I still want to keep this calm.”
When the Volunteer Tries to Defend Himself
“I hear both of you. Let’s let the meal leader help with the line concern.”
When Curtis Feels Humiliated
“I can hear that the words landed hard. I do not want to embarrass you.”
When Prayer Might Be Welcome Later
“Would a short prayer for peace and wisdom be welcome before you go?”
Ministry Sciences Reflection
Curtis may be reacting to more than the line. He may be hungry, tired, ashamed, and sensitive to being treated as less than human. The volunteer’s phrase, “get back in line like everyone else,” may have been meant as a simple instruction, but in Curtis’s state, it may have landed as public humiliation.
This does not excuse Curtis pointing at another guest or escalating the room. It does help the chaplain understand why a small moment became large.
When people are under stress, they may hear tone more loudly than content. They may react to public correction as a threat to dignity. They may interpret delay as disrespect. They may feel trapped when others are watching.
The chaplain’s low voice, slower pace, and dignity-protecting language can help reduce perceived threat. The chaplain is not doing therapy. The chaplain is using wise ministry communication to avoid making harm worse.
Organic Humans Reflection
Curtis is an embodied soul. He is not merely an angry guest. His body may be hungry and cold. His mind may be tired. His emotions may be raw. His relationships may be strained. His dignity may feel thin. His spirit may long to be seen by God and others.
The volunteer is also an embodied soul. He may be tired from serving, overwhelmed by the crowded room, and unsure how to respond. Other guests are embodied souls too, including the frightened child nearby.
Whole-person ministry does not choose one person’s dignity against everyone else’s dignity. It seeks a response that protects as many people as possible. Curtis deserves respect. The volunteer deserves fairness. The child deserves safety. The meal leader deserves support. The ministry setting deserves order.
Seeing everyone as embodied souls helps the chaplain avoid becoming reactive, partial, or dismissive.
Practical Lessons
Conflict often grows from public shame.
What seems like a small correction may feel humiliating to someone already exposed.The chaplain should not take sides too fast.
The first version of the story is rarely the whole story.Staff partnership matters.
The meal leader has authority for the setting. The chaplain should not bypass that structure.Dignity and safety belong together.
Curtis should not be shamed, but the room also must remain safe.Prayer must not be used as a control tool.
Prayer should be offered only with consent and appropriate timing.A calm tone can lower tension.
The chaplain’s voice, posture, and words may help prevent escalation.Volunteers need training too.
A sharp volunteer response can intensify conflict, even when the rule is valid.Debriefing helps the ministry grow.
Afterward, the team should discuss what helped, what harmed, and what needs clearer policy.
Reflection Questions
What made this conflict escalate from a meal-line issue into a personal confrontation?
How did public exposure and shame shape Curtis’s reaction?
What did the volunteer say that may have made the situation worse?
Why should the chaplain avoid publicly declaring who is right or wrong?
When should the meal leader be involved?
What phrase could the chaplain use to acknowledge Curtis without validating every accusation?
Why would forced public prayer be unwise in this moment?
How can a chaplain support volunteers while still protecting guest dignity?
What should the team debrief after this incident?
How does the Organic Humans framework help the chaplain see Curtis, the volunteer, and the other guests more fully?
References
Christian Leaders Institute. Homeless Community Chaplaincy Practice: Final Master Template.
The Holy Bible, World English Bible: Proverbs 15:1; Proverbs 18:13; Matthew 5:9; Romans 12:18; James 1:19; Ephesians 4:29.
Fitchett, George. Assessing Spiritual Needs: A Guide for Caregivers. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
Nolan, Steve. Spiritual Care at the End of Life. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
Pargament, Kenneth I. Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy: Understanding and Addressing the Sacred. New York, NY: Guilford Press, 2007.
Puchalski, Christina M., et al. “Improving the Quality of Spiritual Care as a Dimension of Palliative Care.” Journal of Palliative Medicine.
Reyenga, Henry. Organic Humans. Christian Leaders Press.