Skip to main content

ANXIETY & MENTAL HEALTH — Care Response Library

CRITICAL: SUICIDAL IDEATION PROTOCOL

Always include for ANY suicidal ideation:

  • Call or text 988 — Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (24/7, free, confidential)
  • Text HOME to 741741 — Crisis Text Line
  • Call 911 or nearest ER if in immediate danger

Openers (Passive ideation: "I wish I wasn't here")

  1. "Thank you for trusting me with this. What you just shared is one of the most important things someone can say."
  2. "I hear you. Feeling like you don't want to be here is telling me the pain is overwhelming. I'm not going anywhere."

Openers (Active ideation: "I'm thinking about killing myself")

  1. "I hear you, and I'm taking this very seriously. Are you safe where you are?"

Avoid

  • "Suicide is a sin" — potentially fatal in crisis
  • "How could you do that to your family?" — guilt-tripping increases hopelessness
  • "You have so much to live for" — person cannot access this truth
  • "Just pray and trust God" — people have died after being redirected to prayer instead of crisis intervention
  • "You won't really do it" — minimizing, potentially wrong

ACTIVE PANIC ATTACK TEXT PROTOCOL

When person appears to be panicking RIGHT NOW — send SHORT messages one at a time:

  1. "I'm here. You're safe. This will pass."
  2. "Tell me 5 things you can see right now."
  3. "Good. Now 4 things you can touch or feel."
  4. "Breathe in for 4: 1... 2... 3... 4..."
  5. "Hold for 4: 1... 2... 3... 4..."
  6. "Out for 6: 1... 2... 3... 4... 5... 6..."
  7. Continue grounding until wave passes.

KEY: Never send walls of text during panic. Never ask analytical questions. No theology during active panic.

SUBCATEGORY 1: GENERAL ANXIETY

Openers

  1. "That sounds genuinely exhausting — carrying that level of tension day after day."
  2. "Anxiety has a way of making everything feel urgent and out of control at the same time."
  3. "What you're describing is real. Anxiety doesn't care how faithful someone looks on the outside."

Feeling Articulations

  • "A background hum of dread that won't shut off."
  • "Exhaustion that goes deeper than just being tired — nervous system never gets a break."
  • "Constantly bracing for something bad, even when things are okay."

Avoid

  • "Just pray more and it'll get better" — implies faith deficit caused anxiety
  • "Don't worry — God is in control" — clinically impossible to choose not to worry
  • "Anxiety is a sin. Philippians 4:6" — misapplies Paul to pathologize involuntary responses
  • "Everyone feels anxious sometimes — you'll be fine" — minimizes severity
  • "Worry is just fear with no faith" — theological oversimplification

SUBCATEGORY 2: FINANCIAL STRESS / JOB LOSS

Openers

  1. "Losing a job is so much more than financial — it can shake your sense of who you are."
  2. "That is genuinely scary, and there's no spiritual platitude that makes it less scary."

Avoid: "God will provide — just trust Him" (functionally dismissive) / "Have you thought about what God might be teaching you?" / "You should have had more savings"

SUBCATEGORY 3: PARENTING FEARS

Openers

  1. "Parenting can be one of the most beautiful and most terrifying things."
  2. "The fear that you're getting it wrong is often loudest in people who care the most."

Avoid: "Just trust God with your children" / "Children are a blessing" (unhelpful when drowning)

SUBCATEGORY 4: HEALTH ANXIETY

Openers

  1. "Living with constant fear about your health is genuinely exhausting — especially when people think you should just stop worrying."
  2. "The fear is real, even when tests come back okay."

CRITICAL: Do NOT provide reassurance about symptoms — reassurance feeds health anxiety cycle. Do NOT say "I'm sure it's nothing."

SUBCATEGORY 5: SOCIAL ANXIETY / LONELINESS

Openers

  1. "Feeling alone in a room full of people is one of the most painful kinds of loneliness."
  2. "Loneliness doesn't mean something is wrong with you."

Avoid: "You just need to put yourself out there more" / "Just join a small group!" / "Are you serving enough?"

SUBCATEGORY 6: DEPRESSION (CLINICAL)

Openers

  1. "What you're describing sounds like more than being sad — it sounds like the color has drained out of everything."
  2. "Depression isn't a spiritual failure. It's not a sign that God has left."
  3. "Even when everything looks fine from the outside, depression makes the inside feel like a dark room with no windows."

Avoid

  • "Count your blessings" — comparative shaming
  • "Have you tried reading your Bible more?" — when depressed person tries and feels nothing, concludes spiritually broken
  • "Depression is a spirit of heaviness — we need to pray it off" — delays life-saving treatment
  • "Medication is just numbing you" — dangerously harmful, antidepressants save lives
  • "If you had more faith, you'd have more joy" — most documented cause of shame-based church exit among depressed people

SUBCATEGORY 7: SUICIDAL IDEATION — see CRITICAL section above

SUBCATEGORY 8: PANIC ATTACKS — see PROTOCOL section above

SUBCATEGORY 9: PTSD / TRAUMA

Openers

  1. "Trauma is the wound that doesn't follow a timeline."
  2. "Whatever happened to you, you deserved to be safe. You didn't deserve the wound you're carrying."

CRITICAL: Church itself can be a PTSD trigger (worship music, pastoral authority, physical touch, crowds, vulnerable settings).

Avoid

  • "God allowed this for a reason" — devastating to trauma survivors
  • "You need to forgive [perpetrator]" — premature forgiveness demands retraumatize
  • "That was a long time ago — why can't you move on?" — PTSD is not timeline-based
  • "The enemy is using this against you" — treats PTSD as demonic, delays treatment
  • Asking for details of the trauma — can retraumatize

SUBCATEGORY 10: BURNOUT / MINISTRY BURNOUT

Openers (General)

  1. "Burnout isn't laziness — it's what happens when you've given more than your system can sustain."

Openers (Ministry/Pastor)

  1. "You spend your life caring for everyone else's soul — right now, I want to care for yours."
  2. "There's a particular isolation in leading a church — where vulnerability feels risky."

Avoid: "You need to remember your calling" / "The congregation needs you" (centering the cause of burnout) / "You signed up for this"

SUBCATEGORY 11: SEASONAL DEPRESSION / HOLIDAY LONELINESS

Openers

  1. "The holidays have a way of making loneliness hurt more, not less."
  2. "Grief at Christmas can feel isolating — you're supposed to be celebrating but you're mourning."

Bridge: Blue Christmas service (if church offers one)

SUBCATEGORY 12: POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION

Context: 1 in 5 women. Most common complication of childbirth. Massive shame because motherhood is idealized.

Openers

  1. "Postpartum depression is real, medical, and treatable. You are not a bad mother."
  2. "The gap between what you expected to feel and what you actually feel is one of the most painful parts."

MUST ASK: "Are you having thoughts of harming yourself or your baby?"

Avoid: "Children are a blessing — enjoy every moment" / "You were made for this" / "Maybe you need more prayer"

SUBCATEGORY 13: ELDER LONELINESS

Openers

  1. "Losing a spouse is profound — and the loneliness after isn't something that heals with time."
  2. "You've given so much. You are not a burden for needing care now."

Bridge: Stephen Ministry, pastoral visits, transportation help

Avoid: "Your children must be such a comfort" (assumes intact relationships)

SUBCATEGORY 14: FEAR OF DEATH

Openers

  1. "Fear of death is one of the most human experiences — even deeply faithful people experience it."
  2. "Jesus himself asked God to take the cup from him in Gethsemane."

Avoid: "You believe in heaven — you shouldn't be afraid" / "If you had true faith, death wouldn't scare you"

SUBCATEGORY 15: SCRUPULOSITY (RELIGIOUS OCD)

Context: Intrusive, unwanted, terrifying thoughts targeting deepest faith commitments. Exhausting mental/behavioral rituals. CRITICALLY under-recognized in churches. Pastors mistake it for theological struggle.

Openers

  1. "The fact that these thoughts horrify you is evidence that they aren't who you are."
  2. "Religious OCD is real, recognized, and treatable. The doubts attacking your faith are not your faith."

CRITICAL RULE: Do NOT provide theological reassurance. Reassurance is the OCD compulsion — it provides 5 minutes of relief and significantly WORSENS the long-term pattern. This is the opposite of every other subcategory.

Avoid

  • "Yes, you are saved — don't worry about it" — feeds OCD cycle
  • "Your faith is strong — God knows your heart" — same, feeds compulsion
  • "Maybe you should confess that just to be sure" — encourages compulsion
  • "These thoughts could be demonic attack" — adds terror
  • Exploring the content of intrusive thoughts theologically — validates them as meaningful (what OCD wants)

WHY CHURCHES FAIL AT MENTAL HEALTH (7 documented patterns)

  1. Spiritualization Error — treating biological conditions as spiritual problems
  2. Sin Attribution — telling people anxiety/depression is caused by sin
  3. Toxic Positivity — cheerful theological statements in response to crisis
  4. Expertise Assumption — pastors counseling on clinical conditions
  5. Medication Stigma — discouraging psychiatric medication as lack of faith
  6. Comparison Error — citing biblical figures to motivate someone in crisis
  7. Forgiveness Pressure — demanding forgiveness before survivor is ready

MASTER AVOID LIST (All Mental Health)

  1. "Just pray more" 2. "Have more faith" 3. "God won't give you more than you can handle" 4. "Everything happens for a reason" 5. "Don't worry — God is in control" 6. "Just give it to God" 7. "Anxiety/depression is a sin" 8. "Count your blessings" 9. "Suicide is a sin" 10. "You need to forgive" 11. "The enemy is using this" 12. "Just calm down" 13. "That was a long time ago — move on" 14. "Medication is a crutch" 15. "You seem fine to me" 16. "You have so much to live for" 17. "Are you sure it's that bad?"