If you might hurt yourself or are not safe right now
Call or text 988 in the U.S. now, contact emergency services, or get near a trusted person. You do not need to settle a spiritual question alone while you are in immediate danger.
Free Resource
Church Mental Health Safety Sheet
A practical safety sheet for pastors, churches, and small groups responding to mental health needs.
Last updated: May 2026
Quick Answer
Church care works best when compassion, boundaries, crisis response, and professional referrals are all allowed to work together.
What this page covers:
- A simple next step
- When to get more help
- A printable companion resource
- Related Still Here resources
Start here
This resource is designed to be small, practical, and low-pressure. It is not therapy, diagnosis, treatment, medical advice, or crisis care.
Use this when
- Know when to use 988 or emergency services.
- Do not promise secrecy if someone is unsafe.
- Avoid shame language and quick-fix theology.
- Keep a list of local counselors, crisis lines, and support groups.
- Train leaders to listen, not diagnose.
A gentle Christian frame
Needing support does not mean your faith is weak. Prayer, Scripture, therapy, medication, pastoral care, medical care, and safe relationships can work together.
One tiny next step
Choose one bullet from this page and stop there. One tiny faithful step is enough for right now.
Trusted next steps
- 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline for immediate crisis support in the U.S.
Helpful sources and starting points
- 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline - 24/7 U.S. crisis support by call, text, or chat.
- SAMHSA Find Help - Treatment and support starting points in the U.S.
- NAMI HelpLine - Mental health education, support, and advocacy resources.
External links are starting points, not endorsements. If you are in immediate danger, call emergency services or call/text 988 in the U.S.
🤝 Find Support
Download the companion resource
Open the Resource Vault for the printable version and related low-capacity tools.