When an athlete steps onto the starting line of the Olympic Games or the World Championship, behind them are years of training, the titanic efforts of coaches, and the support of fans. However, there is another, invisible to the eye but very important figure, who has been present in the composition of many national delegations for many decades. This is a clergyman — a chaplain, a spiritual advisor, a pastor, who comes to the Games not to compete, but to be there during the most intense moments of sporting life. His mission is not to bring luck or guarantee victory, but to create a space where an athlete can pause, take a breather, and remember that he is not just an athlete, but a person.
The institution of national team chaplains at the Olympic Games gained official recognition relatively recently — in 1988, at the Seoul Games. It was then that the practice of having clergy in the composition of delegations became systematic and received international approval. However, clergy had accompanied athletes unofficially before. For example, the Finnish team included a representative of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in its composition since the 1972 Olympics, and this tradition has lasted for over half a century.
Today, the institution of chaplains is widespread in many countries. Czech priest Oldrich Hocholach has been accompanying his team since the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics. The Russian Orthodox Church also sends spiritual advisors to the national team — Archpriest Andrei Alekseev, rector of a church in Moscow, accompanied the Olympic delegation to the Tokyo Games. In Germany, during the 2026 Winter Games in Milan and Cortina d'Ampezzo, the joint pastoral care of the team was carried out by Catholic and Protestant chaplains. This shows that the tradition is alive and continues to develop, adapting to the realities of the modern multicultural world.
A sports chaplain is not just a priest who came to the Olympics for show. This is a person who has undergone special training and understands the specifics of the sporting environment. He knows what training mode is, what it means to live in the Olympic Village, how difficult it is to cope with pressure and expectations. His task is to be there at any moment when the athlete needs support, regardless of his denomination or his lack thereof.
The chaplain does not impose religion. As Czech priest Oldrich Hocholach emphasizes, his service is \"open to everyone, even to unbelievers. This is a service of presence, prayer, and blessing.\" A similar position is held by Archpriest Andrei Alekseev, who serves the moleben daily but always adjusts to the schedule of the athletes: some come before the competition, some after, some just come in for a few minutes of prayer, and some confess and receive communion.
German Catholic chaplain Elizabeth Kielmann formulates the mission simply and concisely: \"For us, pastoral care means: supporting them, being with them in difficult moments, and reminding them that the value of a person does not depend on their place in the ranking.\" This is the key idea: an athlete is first and foremost a person, not a medal-making machine.
The Olympic Village is a unique space where thousands of athletes from different countries live side by side for several weeks. Here, in this microcosm of world sports, the chaplain finds his place. In every Olympic Village, there is an inter-religious center where representatives of different denominations can pray and participate in divine services. For example, in Tokyo, a separate room was allocated for the Russian team in the headquarters, where a chapel was set up. In Paris-2024, each religion was given 50 square meters in a tented structure where meetings and services could be held.
For many athletes, this becomes an important point of support. Archpriest Andrei Alekseev remembers that in Tokyo, despite strict pandemic restrictions, many wanted to pray. He served molebens several times a day, adjusting to the schedule of the athletes. And in Milan-2026, the Czech chaplain came to the Olympic Village every day and was available to his athletes at any time, even though part of the team was scattered in different Olympic Villages in the Alps.
The Olympic Games are not just competitions, but also a symbol of unity. And the chaplaincy service is increasingly taking an interdenominational character. For example, in Germany, the Catholic and Evangelical churches jointly provide pastoral care for the team. In Paris-2024, a Protestant chaplaincy service, which included Seventh-Day Adventists, operated in the heart of the Olympic Village, providing spiritual support to about 15,000 athletes, including Paralympians.
At the same time, each denomination preserves its identity, but also learns to interact. \"The interdenominational chapel serves as a place of reception where chaplains can listen and discuss the problems of athletes and their teams,\" note the organizers. This spiritual presence meets a variety of needs: from stress management to ethical issues, from pressure from opponents to the simple need for compassionate attention.
However, multiconfessionality also creates new challenges. In 2025, Finland refused for the first time in 60 years to include a representative of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in its Olympic delegation. The argument was such: the church cannot encompass all the diversity of denominations, and there are more and more athletes of different denominations or agnostics in the team. However, pastor Lina Huovinen, who has been serving as a chaplain for over 20 years, was recognized by the athletes as the best among the support staff at the Paris Games. Her resignation sparked a debate on whether it is justified to abandon an institution that has brought benefits for decades, even if it formally represents one denomination.
The chaplain at the Olympics is not just a spiritual guide, but also in many ways a psychologist, a friend, and a trusted confidant. Athletes turn to him with various questions: from requests to \"hold hands\" before the match to serious conversations about life after sports. Oldrich Hocholach says that the talks cover not only sports topics but also everyday problems, joys, and painful moments. \"Sometimes we discuss concerns about continuing a career after the most active period in a athlete's life, when he stops participating in championships and Olympics,\" he shares.
Modern technologies also change the formats of communication. The Czech chaplain admits that today he communicates with athletes not only personally but also through social networks or by phone. All team members have his number, and they can contact him at any time. In conditions of a team scattered in different villages, this is especially relevant.
Being a sports chaplain at the Olympics is a special mission that requires not only spiritual experience but also psychological resilience. The Olympic Games are the peak of the competitive career, a moment of maximum concentration and unimaginable stress. As Hocholach notes, no other competition compares to the intensity of the Olympics. Athletes are at the peak of their abilities, and in such moments, support that does not evaluate, demand, or judge becomes particularly valuable.
That is why the chaplain does not try to \"set\" the athlete for victory. His task is to remind that even the most celebrated athlete is just a person, and his value is not defined by medals. As German Catholic chaplain Elizabeth Kielmann says, it is important to \"remind them that the value of a person does not depend on their place in the ranking.\" This profound, human message resonates especially loudly in a world where victory often becomes the only measure of success.
The question of whether the institution of sports chaplains will endure in the future remains open. The Finnish precedent shows that even a long-standing tradition can be reviewed in the context of growing secularization and multiculturalism. However, the experience of other countries speaks to the contrary. Germany, the Czech Republic, Russia, the United States, and many other countries continue to send clergy to the composition of their delegations, seeing this not as an anachronism, but as an important element of care for athletes.
Perhaps the future lies in interdenominational teams of chaplains who could represent different religions and work with athletes regardless of their faith. Such an approach has already been tested in practice — for example, in Paris-2024, where Protestant chaplaincy included representatives of different denominations. Or in Germany, where Catholics and Protestants have united their efforts. The main thing is that athletes always know that there is a place where they will be listened to, understood, and not judged. A place where they can simply be people.
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