🧪 Case Study 5.3: When Carlos Could Not See Grace Anywhere

Carlos had always been the dependable one.

At church, people called him steady. At work, they called him reliable. At home, his wife called him practical. His children knew he would show up for games, oil changes, school forms, and late-night talks when life got complicated.

Carlos did not talk much about feelings. He showed love by fixing things.

If the sink leaked, he fixed it.

If someone needed a ride, he drove.

If the church needed tables moved, he came early.

If his wife, Elena, looked tired, he started dinner without making a speech about it.

For years, that worked.

Then his life began to come apart in ways he could not fix.

First, his company downsized. Carlos was not fired, but his hours were cut. Then Elena’s mother had a stroke and moved in with them. Then their oldest son, Mateo, started skipping college classes and sleeping until noon. Then the transmission went out on Carlos’s truck.

The final blow came on a Thursday morning.

Carlos opened the mail and found a medical bill he thought insurance had already handled.

He stared at the number for a long time.

Then he folded the paper carefully, put it back in the envelope, and placed it in a kitchen drawer.

That was Carlos’s way.

If he could not fix it, he hid it.

Three weeks later, Elena found the bill.

“Carlos, why didn’t you tell me?” she asked.

He shrugged.

“I was going to handle it.”

“How? By hiding it next to the batteries?”

That sentence stung more than Elena intended.

Carlos snapped.

“Maybe if everybody didn’t need something from me every five minutes, I could think straight.”

The kitchen went silent.

Elena’s mother was in the next room. Mateo was halfway down the stairs. Their younger daughter, Lucia, froze with a backpack over one shoulder.

Carlos saw all of them.

Then he walked out.

For two days, he barely spoke.

On Sunday, Carlos came to church but sat in the back row. When the worship team sang about God’s goodness, he stood with his arms crossed. When people greeted him, he smiled with his mouth but not his eyes.

After the service, a church mentor named Anthony found him sitting alone in the fellowship hall.

“Carlos, good to see you,” Anthony said.

Carlos nodded.

Anthony sat across from him.

“You seem heavy today.”

Carlos gave a short laugh.

“Is that the spiritual word for angry?”

Anthony smiled gently.

“It can include angry.”

Carlos looked down at his coffee.

“I’m tired of gratitude,” he said.

Anthony did not answer quickly.

Carlos continued.

“Every sermon, every small group, every devotional. Be thankful. Count your blessings. See what God is doing. I get it. I really do. But right now, when people say that, I want to leave the room.”

Anthony stayed quiet.

Carlos looked up.

“I can’t see grace anywhere. All I see is bills, stress, people needing me, my son drifting, my wife disappointed, and me failing.”

Anthony wanted to encourage him. He wanted to say, “But your family loves you.” He wanted to say, “God has carried you before.” He wanted to remind him of James 1:17, that every good gift comes from above.

But Topic 5 had trained him to slow down.

Gratitude Eyes are not forced open.

Anthony said, “That sounds like a lot to carry.”

Carlos rubbed his forehead.

“It is.”

Anthony asked, “What part feels heaviest?”

Carlos did not answer right away.

Finally, he said, “Everybody thinks I’m strong. I’m not. I’m just quiet.”

Anthony nodded.

“That is an honest sentence.”

Carlos looked surprised.

Anthony said, “I’m not going to tell you to list blessings right now.”

Carlos gave a tired smile.

“Thank you.”

Anthony continued, “Would it be helpful to name what is hard first, and then maybe later ask whether any grace is still present? No pressure.”

Carlos leaned back.

“Maybe.”

Anthony waited.

Carlos said, “I feel trapped. I go to work and feel like I’m one mistake from being replaced. I go home and feel like I’m not enough. I look at Mateo and feel like I failed as a father. I look at Elena and know she needs more from me, but I don’t have more.”

His voice cracked on the last sentence.

Anthony did not interrupt.

After a while, Carlos said, “And then I come here and everyone is smiling, and I feel like a fraud.”

Anthony said softly, “You feel alone in a room full of people.”

Carlos nodded.

“That’s it.”

Anthony asked, “Would it be okay if I ask one grace-noticing question? If it feels wrong, we can stop.”

Carlos shrugged. “Okay.”

Anthony asked, “What helped you get through this week?”

Carlos stared at the table.

“I don’t know.”

“That’s okay,” Anthony said. “We do not have to force it.”

The silence stretched.

Then Carlos said, “Lucia made coffee yesterday.”

Anthony looked up.

“She’s thirteen,” Carlos said. “She made it too strong. Terrible coffee.”

For the first time, his face softened.

“She put it in my travel mug and said, ‘Dad, don’t forget lunch.’”

Anthony smiled.

“That sounds like grace.”

Carlos looked down again.

“I guess.”

Anthony said, “Not a solution. Not everything fixed. Just grace.”

Carlos nodded slowly.

“Yeah. That was grace.”

Anthony asked, “Any other small mercy?”

Carlos thought.

“Elena didn’t yell after I walked out. She could have. She just texted, ‘Come home safe.’”

Anthony said, “That sounds like mercy too.”

Carlos swallowed.

“I didn’t deserve that.”

Anthony waited.

Carlos whispered, “I need to apologize to her.”

“That may be a faithful step,” Anthony said. “But before we move there, can I reflect something?”

Carlos nodded.

“You are under real pressure. And you are also not completely abandoned. Both are true.”

Carlos closed his eyes.

“I need that to be true.”

Anthony said, “It is true.”

Carlos looked toward the sanctuary doors.

“I still don’t feel thankful.”

“That’s okay,” Anthony said. “Maybe today gratitude is not a big feeling. Maybe it is simply naming two graces without pretending the pain is gone.”

Carlos breathed out.

“Lucia’s bad coffee and Elena’s text.”

Anthony smiled.

“Those count.”

Carlos laughed once.

Then he wiped his eyes.

“I’ve been so angry I almost missed them.”

Anthony asked, “Would it be helpful to think about one faithful next step?”

Carlos nodded.

“I need to tell Elena about the bill. And apologize for hiding it.”

“That sounds wise,” Anthony said.

“And I need to talk to Mateo without making him feel like my whole life depends on him getting himself together.”

Anthony said, “That is a lot for one week. What is the first step?”

Carlos thought.

“Elena. Tonight.”

Anthony asked, “Would prayer be helpful, or would you rather just sit with this?”

Carlos said, “Prayer. But don’t pray like I’m fixed.”

Anthony nodded.

“I won’t.”

He prayed quietly.

“Lord Jesus, you see Carlos. You see the bills, the pressure, the anger, the hidden drawer, the family he loves, and the strength he does not feel. Thank you for Lucia’s coffee and Elena’s mercy. Help Carlos name grace without pretending life is easy. Give him courage for one faithful step tonight. Amen.”

Carlos sat still.

Then he said, “I can see two graces.”

Anthony answered, “That is a good beginning.”

Nothing changed all at once.

The bill was still there.

The truck still needed repair.

Mateo still needed direction.

Elena still deserved an honest conversation.

But Carlos walked out of church with two small graces in his hands.

And for that day, two small graces were enough to begin.


Leader Tension

Anthony faced a common ministry tension:

How can a leader help someone notice grace when the person honestly cannot see grace anywhere?

Carlos was not rejecting God. He was overwhelmed. His attention had narrowed around pressure, failure, shame, and resentment.

Anthony had to avoid two errors.

First, he had to avoid forcing gratitude.

Second, he had to avoid leaving Carlos alone in despair.

The wise path was gentle grace-noticing after honest listening.


What Anthony Did Well

He noticed heaviness without judging it.

Anthony did not accuse Carlos of having a bad attitude. He simply observed that Carlos seemed heavy.

He listened before asking gratitude questions.

Carlos needed to name pressure, anger, shame, and loneliness before he could notice grace.

He did not force an answer.

When Carlos first said, “I don’t know,” Anthony did not push. He said, “We do not have to force it.”

He helped Carlos see small grace.

Anthony did not demand a dramatic spiritual insight. He helped Carlos notice Lucia’s coffee and Elena’s text.

He named grace without exaggerating it.

He did not say, “See, everything is fine.” He said, “Not a solution. Not everything fixed. Just grace.”

He helped Carlos move toward one faithful step.

Carlos identified a concrete step: tell Elena about the bill and apologize for hiding it.

He prayed with truth and tenderness.

Anthony thanked God for real grace while still naming real pressure.


What Anthony Needed to Avoid

He needed to avoid saying, “Count your blessings.”

That would have sounded like pressure to Carlos.

He needed to avoid comparing Carlos’s pain.

Saying, “Others have it worse,” would have deepened shame.

He needed to avoid rushing to James 1:17 too quickly.

Scripture is precious, but timing matters. Anthony allowed Carlos to be heard before connecting the moment to God’s grace.

He needed to avoid making gratitude a feeling test.

Carlos did not feel thankful yet. But he could name two graces.

He needed to avoid solving everything.

Carlos’s life was complicated. The goal of the conversation was not to repair every problem. The goal was to notice grace and take one faithful step.


Scripture Reflection

James writes:

Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom can be no variation, nor turning shadow.
James 1:17, WEB

Lucia’s coffee was not perfect coffee.

But it was a good gift.

Elena’s text did not solve the marriage tension.

But it was mercy.

Christian Gratitude Discernment helps people recognize gifts from the Father even when those gifts are small, ordinary, or imperfect.

Psalm 103 says:

Praise Yahweh, my soul,
and don’t forget all his benefits.
Psalm 103:2, WEB

Carlos had not become unspiritual because he forgot grace. He had become overwhelmed.

Anthony helped him remember.

Not by scolding.

Not by correcting.

But by gently asking one question:

“What helped you get through this week?”

That question became a doorway.


Ministry Sciences Reflection

Gratitude research suggests that specific gratitude is often more formative than vague gratitude. People are helped when they can name concrete gifts, persons, and moments.

Pastoral care also recognizes that people under stress often experience narrowed attention. When pressure is high, a person may see only threat, failure, loss, or resentment. Trauma-informed and emotionally aware ministry avoids shaming someone for that narrowed attention.

Carlos did not need a lecture on thankfulness.

He needed help noticing one or two graces that pressure had hidden.

This reflects a Ministry Sciences observation:

Attention shapes perception.

But Christian ministry adds the deeper Gospel frame:

Grace is not merely a positive moment. Grace is gift from God.

Anthony helped Carlos move from:

“I can’t see grace anywhere”

to:

“Lucia’s bad coffee and Elena’s text.”

That may seem small.

But small grace can loosen despair.

Small grace can open prayer.

Small grace can lead to repentance.

Small grace can make one faithful step possible.


Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map Application

This case study highlights several prompts from the Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map.

Pain Named

Carlos needed to name pressure, anger, shame, and loneliness.

A helpful question:

“What part feels heaviest right now?”

Grace Noticed

Carlos eventually noticed Lucia’s coffee and Elena’s text.

A helpful question:

“What helped you get through this week?”

Grace Missed

The graces were present, but Carlos had almost missed them because of anger and exhaustion.

A helpful question:

“Is there any small mercy you may have nearly overlooked?”

Embodied Reality Honored

Carlos was tired, tense, and carrying stress in his body.

A helpful question:

“How is your body carrying all this pressure?”

Gift Received

Carlos needed to receive his daughter’s care and his wife’s mercy with humility.

A helpful question:

“What gift can you receive without dismissing it?”

Next Faithful Step

Carlos identified one concrete step: speak honestly with Elena.

A helpful question:

“What is one faithful, concrete, wise step you can take tonight?”


Discussion Questions

  1. Why did Carlos struggle to see grace?

  2. What would have been harmful about telling Carlos, “Just count your blessings”?

  3. How did Anthony listen before guiding?

  4. Why did Anthony ask permission before asking a grace-noticing question?

  5. Why did Lucia’s bad coffee matter in the story?

  6. How did Elena’s text become a sign of mercy?

  7. What did Anthony mean by, “Not a solution. Not everything fixed. Just grace”?

  8. How did noticing grace lead Carlos toward repentance and honesty?

  9. Which Grace-and-Truth Discernment Map prompts were most important in this case?

  10. What can chaplains, Life Coaching Ministers, pastors, small group leaders, and Soul Center leaders learn from Anthony’s approach?


Personal Reflection Exercise

Think of someone you know who may be struggling to see grace.

Do not write private details that would violate confidentiality.

1. The Situation

What kind of pressure, grief, shame, or exhaustion may be narrowing this person’s vision?



2. The Risk

What would be harmful to say too quickly?



3. The Listening Response

Write one sentence that would help this person feel heard.



4. The Grace-Noticing Question

Write one gentle, consent-based question that could help the person notice grace without pressure.



5. The Faithful Step

What might be one small, wise next step if the person is ready?




Closing Thought

Carlos did not need someone to manufacture gratitude.

He needed someone to sit with him long enough for grace to become visible again.

The grace was not dramatic.

It was a daughter’s bad coffee.

It was a wife’s merciful text.

It was a mentor who did not rush.

It was courage to tell the truth.

That is often how Gratitude Eyes begin to open.

Not through pressure.

Not through comparison.

Not through forced positivity.

But through one honest question, one small mercy, one remembered gift, and one faithful next step before God.


Остання зміна: понеділок 25 травня 2026 07:59 AM