đ Worksheet 12.6: Church Community Chaplaincy Launch and Commissioning Worksheet
đ Worksheet 12.6: Church Community Chaplaincy Launch and Commissioning Worksheet
Purpose
This worksheet helps students and church leaders outline a practical launch plan for Church Community Chaplaincy in a local church, Soul Center, or church-based care ministry.
The goal is to help the ministry begin with clear purpose, pastoral support, elder awareness, deacon partnership, public clarity, role boundaries, accountability, and prayerful commissioning.
Church Community Chaplains serve with delegated trust, not independent authority. They are not pastor replacements, elder substitutes, deacon replacements, private counselors, complaint carriers, crisis experts, or back-channel messengers. They are trained care servants who help the church offer prayer, encouragement, visitation, follow-up, and referral-aware care under proper church oversight.
1. Scripture Reflection
Read the following Scriptures slowly.
âTherefore select from among you, brothers, seven men of good report, full of the Holy Spirit and of wisdom, whom we may appoint over this business.â
â Acts 6:3, WEB
âLet all things be done decently and in order.â
â 1 Corinthians 14:40, WEB
âNow you are the body of Christ, and members individually.â
â 1 Corinthians 12:27, WEB
Reflection Questions
What does Acts 6 teach about spiritually mature, appointed care servants?
Why does church care need both compassion and order?
How can Church Community Chaplaincy help the body of Christ care more faithfully?
2. Launch Purpose Statement
Complete this sentence:
We are exploring or launching Church Community Chaplaincy becauseâŠ
Check the Best Purpose Statements
Which statements reflect a healthy launch purpose?
We want to multiply faithful, trained, consent-based care within the body of Christ.
We need someone to handle complaints so the pastor does not have to.
We want trusted care servants to offer prayer, encouragement, visitation, follow-up, and referral-aware support.
We want chaplains to replace pastoral care.
We want to support pastors, honor elders, partner with deacons, and encourage volunteers.
We want people to have a private way to get messages to leaders.
We want to strengthen care without creating a parallel authority structure.
Our Final Purpose Statement
Write a short purpose statement your church could use:
3. Leadership Alignment Check
Before public launch, the appropriate church leaders should understand and support the ministry.
Who Should Be Included?
Check those who should be involved in your church context:
Lead Pastor
Pastoral team
Elders or overseers
Deacons or mercy ministry leaders
Church board or council
Care ministry director
Small group ministry leader
Prayer ministry leader
Visitation ministry leader
Soul Center leader
Denominational or network oversight, if applicable
Other: ________________________________________
Leadership Questions to Clarify
Write brief answers.
Who appoints Church Community Chaplains?
Who oversees Church Community Chaplains?
Who receives escalation concerns?
Who coordinates care assignments?
How will pastors be supported without being bypassed?
How will elders be honored without creating hidden influence?
How will deacons be supported without creating private benevolence systems?
4. Role Description Draft
Use this section to begin drafting a local role description.
Role Title
Church Community Chaplain
Or local church wording:
Role Purpose
The Church Community Chaplain serves asâŠ
Oversight
This chaplain serves underâŠ
Appointment
Depending on local church polity, complete one of the following:
The Church Community Chaplain serves at the pleasure of the Lead Pastor and under the oversight of the elders.
The Church Community Chaplain serves at the will of the elders and under the care structure established by the church.
The Church Community Chaplain serves by appointment of the recognized church leadership and may be reassigned, paused, or released according to church policy.
Other local polity wording:
5. Core Responsibilities
Check the responsibilities that fit your churchâs chaplaincy role.
A Church Community Chaplain may:
Offer calm, Christ-centered presence.
Pray with people by permission.
Share Scripture with gentleness, consent, and wise timing.
Visit the sick, lonely, grieving, elderly, shut-in, or discouraged as assigned or permitted.
Follow up after grief, illness, crisis, absence, baptism, outreach contact, or ministry transition.
Support pastors, elders, and deacons by noticing care needs.
Help connect people to appropriate care.
Encourage direct, humble, accountable communication.
Protect confidentiality with limits.
Refer concerns beyond the chaplainâs role.
Strengthen congregational unity.
Encourage volunteers and ministry leaders.
Support deacon-led mercy ministry without bypassing deacons.
Other: ________________________________________
Top Five Responsibilities for Our Setting
6. Role Limits
Check the limits that must be stated clearly.
A Church Community Chaplain does not:
Replace the pastor.
Function as an elder unless already serving in that office.
Replace deacon mercy ministry.
Provide professional counseling unless separately qualified and authorized.
Handle church discipline.
Make benevolence decisions independently.
Become a private complaint collector.
Promise absolute secrecy.
Build a personal following.
Speak for the church on doctrine, policy, discipline, membership, or leadership decisions unless specifically authorized.
Function as a private route to the pastor.
Carry anonymous complaints to leaders.
Become a hidden advocate in church conflict.
Use private conversations to gather influence.
Other: ________________________________________
Role Limit Most Important to Repeat Publicly
7. No Back-Channel Practice
The congregation must clearly understand that members cannot talk to the pastor, elders, deacons, staff, or ministry leaders through the Church Community Chaplain.
Practice Responses
Complete each response.
âCan you tell the pastor Iâm upset, but donât use my name?â
âI care about what you are saying, but I cannotâŠâ
âThe elders listen to you. Can you get them to understand?â
âThis sounds important enoughâŠâ
âCan you ask the deacons for help without telling them I asked?â
âI want to protect your dignity, butâŠâ
âCan you tell the ministry leader Iâm quitting?â
âI should not speak for you in a way that creates confusion, but I canâŠâ
âI donât want to talk to them. You handle it.â
âI care about you, and I can support you, butâŠâ
8. Confidentiality with Limits
A Church Community Chaplain protects dignity and privacy. However, confidentiality has limits.
Situations That Require Escalation
Check all that must not be kept secret:
Suicidal intent or self-harm concern
Abuse disclosure
Exploitation
Danger to a minor
Danger to a vulnerable adult
Danger to another person
Violence risk
Domestic violence concern
Trafficking concern
Predatory behavior
Medical emergency
Serious intoxication or overdose concern
Threats against church members, leaders, or gatherings
Serious misconduct requiring church action
Matters required by church policy
Matters required by law
Confidentiality Statement Practice
Complete this statement:
âI will protect your dignity and privacy as much as I can, but I cannot promise absolute secrecy ifâŠâ
9. Candidate Discernment
Not everyone with a caring heart is ready for Church Community Chaplaincy.
Qualities to Look For
Check the qualities needed in your church context:
Spiritual maturity
Humility
Teachability
Discretion
Emotional steadiness
Respect for pastors, elders, and deacons
Willingness to follow process
Ability to keep confidence with proper limits
Comfort asking permission before prayer
Wisdom with Scripture
Sensitivity to grief and suffering
Non-anxious presence
No appetite for gossip
No need to be central
Ability to say, âThat is beyond my roleâ
Commitment to direct, humble communication
Willingness to receive correction
Commitment to the churchâs doctrine and polity
Other: ________________________________________
Candidate Reflection
Name the qualities that are most important in your setting:
What qualities may require further training before someone is appointed?
10. Training Before Recognition
Before public recognition, chaplains should receive training.
Training Topics Needed
Check the training areas your church should include:
Ministry of presence
Consent-based prayer
Scripture with gentleness and timing
Listening without fixing
Confidentiality with limits
No back-channel communication
Gossip and triangulation awareness
Proper escalation
Crisis signal awareness
Referral wisdom
Pastor support
Elder respect
Deacon partnership
Grief and illness care
Family and vulnerable-person boundaries
Care for volunteers and leaders
Chaplain self-awareness
Sustainable care rhythms
Local church policies
Other: ________________________________________
Our Required Training Before Recognition
11. Debriefing and Team Support Plan
A sustainable chaplaincy ministry needs a care plan for the caregivers.
Debriefing Rhythm
How often will chaplains meet for debriefing, prayer, and support?
Weekly
Monthly
Quarterly
After difficult care situations
Other: ________________________________________
Debriefing Leader
Who leads the debriefing process?
Debriefing Guardrails
During debriefing, chaplains should:
Share only minimum necessary information.
Avoid gossip and dramatic storytelling.
Ask for guidance when unsure.
Review role boundaries.
Identify follow-up needs.
Identify escalation needs.
Pray for care needs without unnecessary details.
Notice chaplain fatigue.
Encourage rest and support.
Other: ________________________________________
Care for Chaplains
How will the church care for chaplains who become weary?
12. Congregation-Facing Explanation
Draft a short public explanation.
What Chaplains Do
Church Community Chaplains help our church byâŠ
What Chaplains Do Not Do
Church Community Chaplains do notâŠ
No Back-Channel Sentence
Write one clear sentence your church could say publicly:
Confidentiality Sentence
Write one clear sentence your church could say publicly:
13. Public Recognition Plan
How will your church recognize Church Community Chaplains?
Commissioning
Installation
Consecration
Licensing
Blessing
Appointment
Ordination to a specific chaplaincy role
Other: ________________________________________
Recognition Setting
Sunday worship service
Leadership meeting
Prayer service
Care ministry gathering
Soul Center gathering
Other: ________________________________________
Who Will Lead the Recognition?
Who Will Pray?
Will Laying on of Hands Be Used?
Yes
No
Maybe / according to local church practice
14. Commissioning Questions Draft
Use or adapt these questions.
To the Chaplain Candidate
Leader:
Do you commit to serve Christ and his church as a Church Community Chaplain with humility, compassion, discretion, and faithfulness?
Candidate:
I do, with Godâs help.
Leader:
Do you understand that this role is entrusted to you by this local church and may be revised, paused, or ended by the proper church leadership?
Candidate:
I do, with Godâs help.
Leader:
Do you commit to serve under the oversight of the Lead Pastor, elders, deacons, or appointed church leaders, according to the polity and care structure of this church?
Candidate:
I do, with Godâs help.
Leader:
Do you commit not to become a private back-channel, complaint carrier, faction builder, or substitute voice for people who need to speak directly with pastors, elders, deacons, staff, or ministry leaders?
Candidate:
I do, with Godâs help.
Leader:
Do you commit to help people move toward wise, direct, humble, and accountable communication?
Candidate:
I do, with Godâs help.
Leader:
Do you commit to protect the dignity of those you serve, avoid gossip and triangulation, and handle confidential matters with wisdom and proper limits?
Candidate:
I do, with Godâs help.
Leader:
Do you commit to pray by permission, speak Scripture with gentleness, care without control, refer when needs exceed your role, and seek the unity and health of Christâs body?
Candidate:
I do, with Godâs help.
To the Congregation
Leader:
Church family, will you receive these Church Community Chaplains as recognized care servants among us, pray for them, honor their role, respect their boundaries, and support the ministry of care they are being commissioned to provide?
Congregation:
We will, with Godâs help.
Local Adaptations Needed
15. Launch Timeline
Create a simple launch timeline.
Step 1: Leadership Discernment
Target date: ________________________
Who is responsible?
Step 2: Role Description and Covenant
Target date: ________________________
Who is responsible?
Step 3: Candidate Discernment
Target date: ________________________
Who is responsible?
Step 4: Training
Target date: ________________________
Who is responsible?
Step 5: Public Explanation and Commissioning Preparation
Target date: ________________________
Who is responsible?
Step 6: Public Launch or Commissioning
Target date: ________________________
Who is responsible?
Step 7: First Debriefing and Evaluation
Target date: ________________________
Who is responsible?
16. Final Readiness Check
Before launching, check each item.
The purpose is clear.
Pastoral support is clear.
Elder oversight or equivalent governance is clear.
Deacon partnership is clear.
A written role description is prepared.
A role covenant is prepared.
Appointment language is clear.
Accountability is clear.
Confidentiality with limits is explained.
Escalation pathways are known.
No back-channel language is included.
Candidate discernment has happened.
Training has happened.
Public recognition language is prepared.
The congregation will understand what chaplains do and do not do.
Debriefing and team support rhythms are planned.
Chaplains know how to step back if overwhelmed.
The ministry is designed to strengthen the church, not create a parallel care system.
Items Still Needing Work
17. Next Faithful Step
What is the next faithful step for your church or ministry?
Begin leadership conversation.
Draft a role description.
Draft a role covenant.
Identify potential chaplain candidates.
Review church policies.
Clarify escalation process.
Plan training.
Prepare public explanation.
Plan commissioning.
Start debriefing rhythm.
Other: ________________________________________
Write your next faithful step:
Who needs to be involved?
When will this step happen?
18. Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus Christ, Shepherd and Head of the Church, thank you for calling your people to care for one another in love.
Give our church wisdom as we discern, train, recognize, and support Church Community Chaplains. Help us build this ministry with humility, clarity, accountability, and prayer.
Protect us from confusion, gossip, hidden influence, overreach, burnout, and back-channel communication.
Help our chaplains serve with delegated trust, not independent authority. Help them pray by permission, speak Scripture with gentleness, protect dignity, honor proper leadership, refer wisely, and strengthen direct, humble communication.
Bless our pastors, elders, deacons, volunteers, and care servants. Make this ministry a faithful expression of the body of Christ.
May Church Community Chaplaincy strengthen your church, care for your people, and point all of us back to your grace.
Amen.