3 Mistakes Churches Make When Ministering Without Trauma Awareness
How Churches Can Avoid Harming Trauma Survivors (and Bring Real Healing)
When Church Hurts Instead of Heals
Churches and faith-based recovery programs have incredible potential to bring healing and hope. But sometimes, well-meaning communities unintentionally harm trauma survivors. When that happens, people can feel even more isolated, ashamed, or unsafe in spaces that are meant to offer restoration.

Over-Spiritualizing Pain
When survivors are told to just pray harder, have more faith, or forgive quickly, their pain can feel dismissed. This often silences the survivor’s experience instead of validating their story.
A Better Way…
Offer compassionate listening without rushing to fix. Resist the urge to give advice and just sit with them. Use language that validates their reality of suffering. Focusing on spirits or demons dismisses their experience in the here and now.
Rushing Forgiveness

Forgiveness is a core part of Christian faith, but pressuring someone to forgive before they feel safe can actually retraumatize them. It can feel like their pain is being minimized.
A Better Way…
Do not mention forgiveness. In time, when they feel safe, they will pursue spiritual growth and will desire to learn more about forgiveness on their own, but not if they don’t feel safe first. Then, you can teach that forgiveness is a process of rewiring the brain and support them through the hard work it takes to do that.
Ignoring the Nervous System
Trauma is not only spiritual — it affects the whole body, including the mind. Churches tend to lean in the direction that trauma is purely spiritual and this ignores the physical and emotional effects of trauma. This completely dismisses survivors’ daily struggles.

A Better Way…
Incorporate trauma-informed practices — offer quiet spaces, be mindful of sensory triggers, and encourage gentle regulation techniques so survivors can stay present without feeling overwhelmed.
Why do churches harm trauma survivors? It’s usually unintentional and from ignorance but you don’t know what you don’t know. Churches have a calling to create these safe spaces for the traumatized. This is who Jesus wept over.
The Path Forward
By recognizing these common pitfalls and intentionally creating safer spaces, churches can become places where survivors feel seen, heard, and supported. If survivors feel safe around church members and leaders, chances are they will give Jesus a chance, too. Healing is possible — and your church can be part of the process.
Reflections:
Have you noticed any of these happening in your own church communities? Has this happened to you?
👉 I’d love to hear your thoughts! Scroll down to the comment section below and share your reflections.
Want to take this further? Download this free guide: 3 Mistakes Churches Make Without Trauma Awareness (and a Better Way Forward)
If you’re ready to go even deeper, checkout my master guide 10 Church Pitfalls When Ministering to Trauma Survivors (with Solutions) with a complete break down.


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