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Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Part 12: Ethics, Boundaries, and Referral



Case Title:What If I Can’t Help This Person?”

A counselor may quietly ask:
“What if I cannot help this person? What if the problem is beyond my capacity?”

In Orthodox Christian counseling, this is not a sign of failure but an expression of responsible discernment. It reflects awareness that healing does not originate from the counselor, but from Christ, the true Physician of souls. Recognizing limits is therefore not a weakness—it is spiritual maturity.

 

ከእርሱ ጋር አብረን የምንሠራ ነንና። (1 Corinthians 3:9)


1. Limits of Counseling

1.1 The Counselor is Not the Savior

Orthodox counseling rests on a foundational theological conviction:

Christ alone is the Healer of the human soul.

Therefore, the counselor:

• does not “fix” people

• does not control outcomes

• does not substitute divine grace

The counselor participates in healing but never replaces its source.


1.2 Human Limitation is Part of Reality

Even experienced and spiritually mature counselors encounter situations beyond their competence, such as:
• complex psychological trauma
• severe psychiatric conditions
• deep spiritual struggles requiring specialized guidance

Acknowledging this is not a fault in practice—it is part of responsible ministry.


1.3 Patristic Insight

St. John Chrysostom (347 - 407 AD) emphasizes this essential humility:

“The work is God’s; we are only servants.”

This re-centers counseling away from human ego and toward humble obedience to the healing work of God.


1.4 Therapeutic Principle

Healthy counseling practice requires:
• humility before God and the human condition
• clear awareness of personal limits
• willingness to pause or step back when needed

Without these boundaries, counseling can become a source of harm rather than a means of healing and restoration.


2. When to Refer

2.1 What is a Referral?

Referral is the responsible transfer of a case to a more appropriate level of care or specialized expertise.

It is not abandonment (መተው).
It is discernment expressed in action.


2.2 When Referral Becomes Necessary

Referral is ethically required when there is:
• severe mental illness (e.g., psychosis, major depressive episodes)
• suicidal ideation or self-harm risk
• complex trauma requiring clinical intervention
• lack of progress despite sustained pastoral care
• conditions clearly beyond the counselor’s competence


2.3 Biblical Principle

ምክር ከሌለች ዘንድ የታሰበው ሳይሳካ ይቀራል፤ መካሮች በበዙበት ዘንድ ግን ይጸናል። (Proverbs 15:22)

Healing in Scripture is often communal and multi-dimensional, involving more than one source of wisdom.


2.4 Patristic Wisdom

St. Basil the Great (329 - 379 AD) warns with pastoral clarity:

“Do not attempt what is beyond your strength, so as not to harm both yourself and others.”

This reflects a theology of measured responsibility, recognizing the limits of one's capacity and vocation.


2.5 Therapeutic Insight

Proper referral serves three essential purposes:
• protection of the person receiving care
• protection of the counselor’s professional responsibility
• preservation of the quality and appropriateness of treatment

Referral is therefore an act of love, not an admission of defeat.


3. Confidentiality

3.1 What is Confidentiality?

Confidentiality is the ethical duty to protect personal information shared within the counseling relationship.

It establishes:
• a sense of emotional safety
• trust within the therapeutic relationship
• openness and honesty in expressing personal concern


3.2 Spiritual Dimension

Confidentiality reflects:
• respect for the dignity of the human person
• reverence for the sacredness of inner repentance
• protection of the healing process from exposure or harm


3.3 Limits of Confidentiality

Confidentiality is not absolute. It may be ethically reversed when:
• there is a credible risk of harm to self or others
• legal or moral obligations require the sharing of information
• preservation of life requires intervention


3.4 Patristic Perspective

St. Isaac the Syrian ( 613  - 700 AD) teaches:

“A merciful heart is one that covers and heals, not exposes and wounds.”

Mercy is not avoidance of truth but the wise and compassionate protection of those who are vulnerable.


4. Responsibility Before God

4.1 Counseling as Spiritual Accountability

Counseling is not merely a professional activity—it is a spiritual responsibility before God.

Every word spoken, every silence kept, and every decision made carries moral and spiritual weight.


4.2 Biblical Foundation

እንግዲያስ እያንዳንዳችን ስለ ራሳችን ለእግዚአብሔር መልስ እንሰጣለን። (Romans 14:12)

Counseling is a sacred responsibility before God, rooted in accountability for every word and action.


4.3 The Counselor’s Conduct

A faithful counselor must consistently:

• pray before offering guidance

• act with humility rather than certainty of self

• avoid pride or emotional dominance

• seek wisdom and consultation when uncertain


4.4 Patristic Insight

St. Gregory the Theologian (329 - 390 AD) states with seriousness:

“It is a great thing to heal souls; it is a greater thing to do so with fear of God.”


5. Applying the Case: “What If I Can’t Help?”

5.1 Orthodox Diagnosis

This question often emerges from:

• fear of failure
• excessive sense of responsibility
• unclear boundaries of pastoral role

Orthodox understanding reframes it:

The counselor is not the source of healing, but a vessel through which Christ works.


5.2 Therapeutic Response

Acknowledge Limits
Clear awareness of one’s own limitations is the first ethical step.

Discern the Nature of the Case
Determine whether the need is pastoral, psychological, or clinical.

Refer When Appropriate
Redirect the person with dignity, clarity, and care.

Maintain Appropriate Support
Continue prayerful and moral support where appropriate and healthy.

Trust the Work of Christ
Healing is never dependent on one individual’s capacity.

Conclusion

Orthodox Christian counseling affirms a clear and balanced vision:

• Christ alone is the true Healer
• The counselor is a responsible but limited servant
• Referral is wisdom, not failure
• Confidentiality protects dignity and trust
• All counseling is ultimately accountable before God

Thus, the question “What if I can’t help this person?” is answered with clarity:

• You are not the source of healing
• You are a servant within Christ’s healing work
• Recognizing limits is part of spiritual maturity
• The final outcome belongs to God

As St. Paul the Apostle writes:
እኔ ተከልሁ አጵሎስም አጠጣ ነገር ግን እግዚአብሔር ያሳድግ ነበር። (1 Corinthians 3:6)


 


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