🧪 Case Study 4.3: “Please Don’t Tell Anyone I’m Sleeping There”
🧪 Case Study 4.3: “Please Don’t Tell Anyone I Missed Curfew”
Scenario
Marcus is a 34-year-old returning citizen living in a transitional housing program connected to a local reentry ministry. He has been out of prison for four months. He is working part-time, attending a recovery group, and beginning to reconnect with his mother and two children.
You are serving as a Reentry and Restoration Chaplain through a church-based ministry that partners with the transitional housing program. Your role is spiritual care, encouragement, prayer by permission, Scripture with consent, and referral-aware support. You are not staff, not a case manager, not a counselor, and not a parole or probation officer.
After a group meeting, Marcus waits until most people leave. He looks nervous and says quietly:
“I need to tell you something, but you have to promise you won’t tell anyone.”
You respond carefully:
“I will respect what you share and I won’t gossip about you. But I can’t promise secrecy if someone is in danger or if this involves something I’m required to report or refer. What’s going on?”
Marcus sighs and says:
“I missed curfew last night. I was supposed to be back by 10:00, but I didn’t get in until after midnight. I was with some old friends. Nothing happened. I didn’t use. I didn’t get arrested. But if the house director finds out, I might lose my place. Please don’t tell anyone. I’m trying. I just messed up.”
This case study applies the course’s Topic 4 emphasis on confidentiality with limits, safe escalation, role clarity, reentry accountability, and avoiding unsafe secrecy in legally sensitive ministry settings.
Analysis
This situation is emotionally layered. Marcus is not simply “breaking a rule.” He is under pressure. He may be afraid of losing housing. He may be ashamed. He may be testing whether the chaplain is safe. He may also be asking the chaplain to participate in secrecy.
A missed curfew in transitional housing may be serious. The chaplain should not assume it is harmless. It may connect to housing rules, parole or probation conditions, recovery expectations, program trust, safety concerns, and the person’s long-term stability.
At the same time, the chaplain should not panic, shame Marcus, or act like law enforcement.
The chaplain’s task is to respond with calm truth.
The chaplain should help Marcus move toward honesty, responsibility, and the next faithful step without becoming the keeper of a secret that undermines the program.
Goals
The chaplain’s goals are to:
Protect Marcus’s dignity.
Avoid gossip or public exposure.
Refuse to promise unsafe secrecy.
Clarify the chaplain’s role.
Encourage Marcus to take responsibility.
Respect the transitional housing program’s rules.
Avoid becoming a hidden channel around accountability.
Discern whether there are additional safety concerns.
Connect Marcus to the proper person or process.
Offer prayer and Scripture only with permission.
Preserve hope without minimizing consequences.
Poor Response
A poor response would be:
“Don’t worry, Marcus. I won’t tell anyone. Everybody messes up. Just make sure it doesn’t happen again.”
This response may sound compassionate, but it is unsafe.
It makes the chaplain part of concealment. It weakens trust with the transitional housing program. It may enable Marcus to avoid responsibility. It also prevents the chaplain from learning whether deeper risk is involved.
Another poor response would be:
“Marcus, I can’t believe you did that. You know better. I’m reporting this immediately.”
This response may be technically protective, but it is spiritually careless. It shames Marcus, escalates too quickly without discernment, and treats him as a violation instead of an embodied soul.
The chaplain must avoid both careless secrecy and harsh exposure.
Wise Response
A wise response might begin like this:
“Marcus, thank you for telling me. I can see this is weighing on you. I’m not here to shame you, and I’m not going to gossip about you. But I also can’t help you hide something that may affect your housing agreement or accountability. Let’s slow down and think about the next honest step.”
This response does several important things.
It honors the disclosure.
It protects dignity.
It refuses secrecy.
It does not overreact.
It points Marcus toward responsibility.
It keeps the chaplain within role.
The chaplain may then ask:
“Were you safe last night?”
“Did anything happen that creates danger for you or someone else?”
“Were drugs, alcohol, weapons, threats, or violence involved?”
“Are you required to report a missed curfew yourself?”
“Who is the right person for you to speak with first?”
“What would it look like to tell the truth before someone finds out another way?”
The chaplain is not interrogating Marcus like an officer. The chaplain is helping him discern truth, safety, and responsibility.
Stronger Conversation
Marcus: Please don’t tell anyone I missed curfew.
Chaplain: Marcus, I hear how afraid you are. I won’t gossip about you, and I’m not here to shame you. But I can’t promise to help hide something that may affect your housing or accountability.
Marcus: If they know, I could get kicked out.
Chaplain: That is a serious concern. Let’s slow down. Were you safe last night? Did anything happen involving drugs, alcohol, violence, threats, or danger?
Marcus: No. I didn’t use. I just stayed out too late with old friends. It was stupid.
Chaplain: Thank you for being honest. I’m glad you came back and that you’re talking about it. The next step needs to be truthful. What does your housing agreement say you are supposed to do if you miss curfew?
Marcus: I’m supposed to tell the house director.
Chaplain: Then I want to encourage you to do that. I can sit with you while you think through what to say, but I can’t be part of hiding it.
Marcus: I’m scared.
Chaplain: I understand. Telling the truth can feel costly. But hiding it may cost more. You are more than this mistake. Let’s take the next faithful step.
Marcus: What should I say?
Chaplain: You might say, “I missed curfew last night. I was afraid to tell you, but I know I need to be honest. I did not use, and I want to stay accountable. What is the next step?” Would you like to practice that?
Marcus: Yeah. Maybe.
Chaplain: We can practice. And if you want, I can pray with you before you talk with him.
Boundary Reminders
The chaplain should remember:
Do not promise secrecy.
Do not report every detail to unnecessary people.
Do not shame Marcus publicly.
Do not act like the housing director.
Do not give legal or parole advice.
Do not minimize the missed curfew.
Do not become Marcus’s secret protector.
Do not offer a private ride, money, or hidden help to “fix” the situation.
Do encourage honesty.
Do ask about safety.
Do respect program policy.
Do help Marcus prepare for a truthful conversation.
Do consult a supervisor if policy requires it or if the situation becomes unclear.
Do’s
Do say:
“Thank you for telling me.”
“I am not here to shame you.”
“I cannot help you hide this.”
“Let’s think about the next honest step.”
“What does your program require?”
“Who is the right person to talk to?”
“Would it help to practice that conversation?”
“Would you like prayer before you take that step?”
Do protect the person’s dignity.
Do stay calm.
Do ask whether anyone is in danger.
Do encourage responsibility.
Do involve the proper leader if required by policy.
Do remember that restoration includes truth.
Don’ts
Do not say:
“I’ll keep this between us no matter what.”
“That rule is probably not a big deal.”
“I’ll talk to the director for you so you don’t have to.”
“Just say you had car trouble.”
“You are always sabotaging yourself.”
“You clearly are not serious about changing.”
“I can give you money or a ride if you need to cover this up.”
“I won’t tell anyone if you promise to do better.”
Do not become part of deception.
Do not use the disclosure as sermon material.
Do not turn the moment into public correction.
Do not bypass local policies.
Do not confuse compassion with secrecy.
Sample Phrases
When someone asks for secrecy
“I will not gossip about you, but I cannot promise secrecy if this involves safety, accountability, or something beyond my role.”
When someone is afraid of consequences
“I hear that you are scared. Hiding this may make it worse. Let’s think about the next truthful step.”
When someone admits a violation
“Thank you for being honest. What does your program say you are supposed to do now?”
When someone wants the chaplain to intervene
“I can support you, but I should not take responsibility for a conversation that belongs to you.”
When someone feels ashamed
“You are more than this mistake. But because you are made for truth, we should not hide it.”
When prayer is appropriate
“Would you like me to pray with you for courage, humility, and wisdom before you speak with the director?”
Ministry Sciences Reflection
Marcus’s request may be shaped by fear, shame, survival habits, and reentry pressure.
He may fear losing housing. He may fear disappointing the chaplain. He may fear being seen as a failure. He may fear returning to old patterns. He may fear that one mistake will erase four months of progress.
When people feel shame, they often hide. When they feel threatened, they may bargain. When they fear consequences, they may ask others to participate in secrecy.
The chaplain’s calm tone helps reduce panic. A harsh response may deepen shame. A careless response may enable avoidance. A steady response helps Marcus face reality without being crushed by it.
The chaplain does not need to diagnose Marcus. The chaplain needs to listen carefully, speak clearly, protect dignity, and help him move toward the next truthful step.
Organic Humans Reflection
Marcus is an embodied soul. He is not merely a rule-breaker, a former inmate, a housing participant, or a “risk case.” He is a whole person with spiritual hunger, bodily stress, emotional pressure, legal accountability, relational longing, moral agency, and practical needs.
Missing curfew may involve more than poor judgment. It may involve loneliness, old friendships, fatigue, temptation, transportation problems, shame, or fear of isolation.
But whole-person care does not erase responsibility.
The chaplain honors Marcus by seeing the full complexity of his situation while still calling him toward truth.
To treat Marcus with dignity is not to hide his mistake.
To care for Marcus is not to rescue him from every consequence.
To believe in restoration is to help him walk in honesty, one step at a time.
Practical Lessons
Trust is protected by honesty, not secrecy.
The chaplain should explain confidentiality with limits before sensitive disclosures deepen.Fear of consequences is real, but it must not control the chaplain’s response.
Compassion listens to fear without obeying it.Program rules matter.
Transitional housing policies may exist to protect sobriety, safety, accountability, and stability.The chaplain should not replace the responsible leader.
Marcus may need to speak with the house director himself.A calm response can lower shame.
The chaplain’s tone may help Marcus stay engaged rather than shut down.Restoration includes truth.
Hope after incarceration is not built on hiding. It grows through grace-shaped honesty.The chaplain must know local policy.
Before serving, chaplains should understand how missed curfews, relapse concerns, crisis disclosures, and safety issues are handled.The chaplain is not the savior.
The chaplain can support Marcus, but Christ is the one who restores.
Reflection Questions
What made Marcus’s request emotionally complicated?
Why would promising secrecy be unwise in this case?
How can the chaplain protect Marcus’s dignity without helping him hide the missed curfew?
What questions should the chaplain ask before deciding what to do next?
Why is it important to know the transitional housing program’s policy before situations like this arise?
What would be the difference between supporting Marcus and rescuing Marcus?
How might shame affect Marcus’s willingness to tell the truth?
What phrase from this case study would you want to remember for your own ministry practice?
How does this case show the difference between confidentiality and secrecy?
What does “the next faithful step” look like in this scenario?
References
Christian Leaders Institute. Reentry and Restoration Chaplaincy Practice — Final Master Template. Course development document.
The Holy Bible, World English Bible.
Benner, David G. Strategic Pastoral Counseling: A Short-Term Structured Model. Baker Academic.
Doehring, Carrie. The Practice of Pastoral Care: A Postmodern Approach. Westminster John Knox Press.
McMinn, Mark R. Psychology, Theology, and Spirituality in Christian Counseling. Tyndale Academic.
Patton, John. Pastoral Care: An Essential Guide. Abingdon Press.
Stone, Howard W. Crisis Counseling. Fortress Press.