Stay in Your Lane: Churches Need Clinicians Audiolibro Por Francine Hernandez arte de portada

Stay in Your Lane: Churches Need Clinicians

Pastoral Care, Psychodynamic Insight, and Why Referral Is Not a Failure of Faith

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Stay in Your Lane: Churches Need Clinicians

De: Francine Hernandez
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Stay in Your Lane: Churches Need Clinicians

By Francine L. Hernandez

The Church was never meant to be a therapy office—and clinicians were never meant to replace pastors.

Yet every day, well-intentioned faith communities are asked to carry wounds that require clinical depth, while suffering congregants are offered spiritual answers to psychological pain. The result is not healing, but confusion, burnout, and unspoken harm.

In Stay in Your Lane: Churches Need Clinicians, Francine L. Hernandez—Certified Clinical Pastoral Educator, Board-Certified Chaplain, and pastor—names what many have sensed but few have said out loud: when spiritual and clinical roles blur, everyone loses. With pastoral wisdom, psychodynamic insight, and decades of experience in ministry and healthcare, Hernandez calls the Church back to its sacred lane—and invites clinicians to walk alongside it, not against it.

Through real encounters, supervisory insight, and her signature Cave Walker framework, readers are invited to move beyond fixing, rescuing, and spiritual bypassing. Instead, they learn how to remain present with suffering, honor limits, and recognize when referral is not a retreat from faith but an extension of care. As Hernandez reminds us, “Your pain deserves more than one set of hands.”

Written for pastors, church leaders, chaplains, caregivers, and congregants, this book offers a compassionate course correction. It affirms the Church as a spiritual anchor while lifting up the essential role of clinicians trained to do deeper excavation. When lanes are honored rather than blurred, people are strengthened—not shamed—and healing becomes both faithful and responsible.

This is not a book about doing less.
It is a call to do what we are called to do—well.

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