FAQs
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Spiritual care is non-medical, clinically grounded support. Through spiritual assessment and reflective presence, we help you explore meaning, purpose, identity, and the deeper questions of life that arise during illness, grief, or various life transitions.
→ Learn more: “What Is Spiritual Care?”
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Spiritual care is for anyone carrying something heavy—grief, illness, caregiving, big life changes, faith questions, or a sense of being lost or tired in soul. You do not have to be religious to receive spiritual care.
→ Learn more: “Who Is Spiritual Care For?”
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No. We work with people who are religious, spiritual-but-not-religious, questioning, deconstructing, or not religious at all. We honor your story and your beliefs; we don’t push ours.
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Yes. Sessions are private, secure, and confidential within standard ethical guidelines.
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Our team provides in-home spiritual care in the locations where our providers live and serve:
Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
Salt Lake City Metro, Utah
East Bay, California
→ Learn more: Meet Our Team
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No.
Pastors guide and teach within one faith tradition.
Chaplains offer interfaith, non-proselytizing, person-centered support to people of any belief system.→ Learn more: “Chaplains and Pastors”
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We don’t bill insurance at this time.
All care is private pay, which allows our sessions to stay personal, flexible, and shaped entirely around your needs—not paperwork or insurance limitations.
If cost feels difficult right now: We offer a small number of sliding-scale spots for clients experiencing financial hardship. Please reach out if you need support.
We truly never want finances to be the reason someone goes without care during a vulnerable season.
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Spiritual care does not diagnose or treat mental health conditions. Instead, it focuses on meaning, identity, values, grief, and the spiritual/existential side of what you’re going through, while drawing deeply from counseling disciplines. Many people find that spiritual care and counseling work well together.
→ Learn more: “Spiritual Care and Mental Health Counseling”
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Spiritual care is best if you’re seeking meaning, comfort, or grounding during grief, illness, life transitions, or spiritual questions. It focuses on presence, reflection, and the deeper parts of your story—not diagnosis or treatment.
Mental health counseling is best if you’re experiencing anxiety, depression, trauma, or emotional patterns that require clinical support and therapeutic tools.
If you’re unsure, spiritual care can help you discern what type of support would be most helpful.
Many people benefit from both.
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Absolutely. Many people use both therapy and spiritual care because they address different layers of the human experience.
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Some of our team members are currently in the process of completing graduate degrees toward clinical mental health licensure.
Although they are not yet practicing as licensed therapists, this training complements their clinical chaplaincy and informs their depth, sensitivity, and professional skill.
Once licensed, they may offer clinical counseling separately from spiritual care.
78% of patients report that spiritual care helps them discover new meaning and purpose in their lives, especially during critical or end-of-life transitions
American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine