SPIRITUAL CARE INTERVENTIONS FOR KINDLING HOPE
The concept of hope may be as difficult to explain and define as the concept of spirituality. This may be the case because the two are somehow connected.
Hope seems to be a capacity to hold—in a present time of struggle—a sense of wholeness and strength that rests in a transcendent force. For some people, this force may be a sense of the Divine. For others, this force may be a sense of the strength of community. It must be somehow transcendent from the “self.”
Gabriel Marcel described hope this way:
'Hope consists in asserting that there is at the heart of being, beyond all data, beyond all inventories and all calculations, a mysterious principle which is in connivance with me.'
and further:
'There can be no hope that does not constitute itself through a we and for a we. I would be tempted to say that all hope is at the bottom choral.'
Hope is the central capacity that contributes toward personal and communal resilience. It enables individuals, families and communities to endure great hardship with courage. The maintenance of hope during times of struggle is a central priority of spiritual care providers. The loss of hope is despair.
Despair is one of the most crippling human spiritual conditions. It can adversely affect many other areas of physical, mental and spiritual health. Despair can begin to take root when tasks seem insurmountable and conditions seem unsolvable. Therefore, some of the most powerful interventions that can be performed by spiritual care providers are interventions that specifically stimulate a sense and experience of hope in individuals and communities.
Seeking opportunities to appreciate a form of beauty is one powerful intervention. Both natural and created beauty can infuse our spirits with a sense of strength and energy that transcends temporal concerns. Especially when times are hard and burdens are heavy, people must take time to enjoy sunsets and flowers, music and meaningful personal interactions. Here’s another powerful spiritual care intervention. A spiritual care provider can facilitate a guided conversation around specific themes with an individual or a family.
People are encouraged to verbalize tangible examples of successes during other periods of difficulty in several areas, including:
• Personal—One’s personal life history
• Family—The broader history of one’s parents, grandparents and ancestors
• Cultural—The experience of one’s nation, ethnicity and culture
• Spiritual—The history of one’s faith group or spiritual perspective
These arenas represent concentric circles of existence and meaning in life. Remembering examples of success in the face of adversity is powerful. A renewed and bolstered sense of hope emerges that can sustain an individual, family and community throughout the current crisis.
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