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What Hospice Chaplains Understand About Presence That Every Pastor Needs

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The hospice chaplain works in the place where the pretensions that organize most professional helping relationships fall away. There is no treatment to administer, no problem to solve, no therapeutic process to guide toward a resolution. There is only the dying person, the people who love them, and the question of what genuine presence looks like at the edge of life. The hospice chaplain who does this work well has learned something about presence that is among the most important things in pastoral ministry and among the most difficult to teach.

Most pastors come to the bedside of the dying with more tools than they need and less capacity for genuine presence than the moment requires. They bring the Scripture reading, the prayer, the theological framework for understanding death and resurrection. These are not bad things — they are genuinely valuable resources. But the dying person, and the family gathered around them, often need something that precedes all of these tools: the simple, steady, non-anxious presence of another human being who is not afraid of the dying.

What the Dying Teach About Presence

Hospice chaplains consistently report that the dying, in their final weeks and days, become remarkably acute detectors of genuineness. The performance of pastoral presence — the person who is there because they are supposed to be there, who says the right things and prays the right prayers but is visibly uncomfortable with what the dying person is going through — is experienced as a form of abandonment. The genuine presence of someone who is genuinely there — not trying to manage or fix or rush past the reality of the dying — is experienced as one of the most profound gifts available.

"The performance of pastoral presence at the bedside of the dying is experienced as abandonment. Genuine presence — not trying to fix or rush past the dying — is experienced as profound gift."

What This Means for Ordinary Pastoral Care

The dying person often needs to talk about what dying actually feels like — the fear, the unfinished business, the regrets, the things they want to say to the people they love and are not sure they can say. They need a listener who will let this come without redirecting it toward comfort prematurely, without defending God against the anger that sometimes emerges, without needing the dying person to die in a way that is theologically tidy. They need someone who is comfortable enough with the darkness to sit in it without rushing toward the light.

This quality of presence — the capacity to sit with what is genuinely hard without needing to fix it or move past it or reframe it into something more comfortable — is one of the most important pastoral qualities available, and it is cultivated precisely through the willingness to be genuinely present in the most demanding situations rather than relying on tools and frameworks that create professional distance from the human reality in the room. The hospice chaplain who has learned to be fully present at the edge of life has something to teach every pastor about being fully present everywhere else.

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