A pastor (minister, priest, rabbi, imam) is a leader of a
local church, synagogue or mosque congregation, and as such represents the
movement, denomination or at the very least the congregation whom he or she
serves. A pastor is involved with the promotion of his or her faith,
congregation its programs, doctrinal distinctives and theological perspectives.
A Chaplain generally does not offer religious or spiritual advice unless the
employee specifically requests it. A Chaplain may share parts of his or her
spiritual journey where appropriate when it coincides with a specific aspect of
the clients’ situation. Law Enforcement Chaplains serve the personnel of the
agency and
their families, and have a responsibility to provide an effective and ethical
service.
A Chaplain is not a proselytizer. A Chaplain coerces no one. Counsel given by a
Chaplain is directed only to those who seek him or her out. It may be helpful
for the individual seeking help to differentiate between a Christian Chaplain
and a Chaplain who is a Christian.
Chaplains, in a desire for the good of the whole person, seek to contribute to
an environment which supports mutual respect, self esteem, and the appropriate
pursuit of personal and professional growth and agency goals.
The role of a Chaplain may differ according to the individual Chaplain’s
educational background, expertise experience and faith tradition, but generally
can be described as follows:
1. Pastoral
Chaplains provide pastoral or supportive care for employees and their families,
supplementing the other support services of the EAP. It is recognized that some
employees may prefer a chaplain to a peer or clinical counselor for personal
counseling. chaplains help to provide for spiritual, personal and social needs,
and to facilitate the goals and directives of the EAP. It is intended that these
services contribute positively to the quality of life and operations in the
agencyI.
2. Chaplains provide practical care in a number of ways which may include:
enabling individuals to understand their spiritual concerns;
providing personal advice and counsel;
providing prayer, counsel and spiritual support in times of crisis, such as
divorce, family problems, use of deadly force, lawsuits or internal
investigations.
providing services to newly assigned employees who are dealing with the
dislocation and adjustments of living and working in a new city. The chaplain,
as “local” can help ease the new arrival into the local culture;
diversifying social contact especially for newly arriving employees;
providing support for those who are spiritually inclined or are deeply
religious and want counsel and help that comes from someone who truly
understands their issues.
assisting EAP peer counselors and clinicians when dealing with those who are
deeply religious and who may distrust counsel that is strictly secular.
providing support for employees who are spiritually minded in relating
professional demands to the dictates of their conscience or religious
expectations;
promoting the sense of family and community within the agency as a whole;
advocacy where appropriate;
FBI Chaplains recognize that in many instances it is appropriate that they
work in conjunction with other units of the agency, as a ministry of presence or in
a consulting role; for example HRT, BSU or ERT’s.
3. Spiritual
Chaplains provide “presence” as an individual who is in touch with God, with the
spiritual aspects of life, and who bring peace, tranquility and understanding,
and hopefully offer counsel and comfort.
4. Religious Teaching
Chaplains may provide religious teaching and opportunities for dialogue and
discussion in accordance with the teachings of their faith traditions.
Specific Uses of a Chaplain
When an individual is deeply spiritual, and wants scriptural support for the
counsel he or she is receiving, it is a good thing to recommend a Chaplain.
(Many spiritual people naturally distrust advice and counsel given by someone
who does not believe in God or is unfamiliar with the scriptures whether it is
the Bible, Vedas or the Koran).
When the individual has been involved in use of deadly force and asks if God is
mad, because the scriptures say, “Thou shalt not kill,” it is a good thing to
recommend a Chaplain.
When there are life and death issues, such as a death or birth in the family,
suicide or diagnosis of the individual or family member with a possibly terminal
disease – it’s a good thing to recommend a Chaplain.
Conclusion:
We need to recognize Law Enforcement Officers and their families as a people
group with their own very specific values, stressors, and family dynamics.
We want to avoid the Humpty Dumpty Syndrome. As Chaplains we can help Humpty
Dumpty before he falls.
The counsel of a Chaplain, minister, priest or rabbi is a matter of ethics, not
one of religiosity. There is nothing inherently religious about God. If a
clinician or peer knows of a resource that could help one of our personnel or
has helped others, and does not offer that resourced, it would be unethical. It
is an ethical responsibility to inform personnel of the possibility of drawing
on spiritual resources.
It's with in bounds for clinician to bring awareness that many claim to receive
help, relief serenity, thru practicing presence of God and found it the pathway
to healing. Chaplains are a key component in Agency health and functionality.
Part Two: Other Resources Related to Chaplaincy
Chaplains and Separation of
Church and State
In an interview with Tom Witosky for the Des Moines Register, June 1, 2007, Tom
Berg commented on the constitutionality of chaplains in a secular environment.
Berg is a constitutional law professor at the University of St. Thomas College
of Law in St. Paul, Minn. He has authored two legal case books and more than 25
legal briefs on issues of religious liberty and free speech. He is also an
expert on the constitutional issue of separation of church and state. Berg said
that the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that religion-based programs can enter
public institutions, but become inappropriate when religion and government
become one or the program becomes coercive.
When religious initiatives are appropriate, according to Professor Berg:
The use of chaplains in the U.S. military and in prisons indicates that the
government can be used to provide religious counsel and help to those who want
it. "Government is deeply involved in those situations," Berg said. "If it
didn't provide that avenue for prisoners and soldiers to have access to a
clergyman, then government would be viewed as suppressing religion."
Berg said that an institution needs to "… structure [the Chaplain’s program] in
such a way as to make sure the chaplain is simply there as a resource and not
participate in any kind of coercive pressure."
Excerpts from From Chaplain Leadership as the Art of Persuasion by Chaplain (MAJ)
Paul A. Baker, USAR , published in the “Army Chaplaincy” Winter 1998.
“Military chaplains have not been exempt from the legal and historical
influences of voluntary association. This is why the legal justification for
military chaplains rests on the free exercise clause of the First Amendment.
Soldiers must be free to practice their religious faith and have access to
clergy of their particular faith community as an exercise of religious freedom
and voluntary association. To allow this to happen, the government provides
clergy who serve as chaplains. Chaplains provide for the religious needs of
soldiers and their families, while performing direct ministry to those who seek
it from the chaplains of particular faith traditions.
The legal and historical roots of religious freedom resulted in the
non-acceptance of clergy using coercive power as an instrument of government
authority. These same roots also forbid chaplains from exercising the coercive
power that undergirds command. That is why chaplains, along with civilian
clergy, are leaders who rely on the exercise of persuasion to accomplish their
mission.
“Consider the differing vocabularies of command and ministry. Words like
control, dominate, dictate, order, regulate, and obey are identified with
commanders. Words like mercy, caring, sensitivity, compassion, reflective,
loving, justice and servant are identified with chaplains. These words mirror
the cultural expectations of clergy as leaders reflected in Schuller’s study.
Most Army commanders, it seems, expect chaplains to comply with the cultural
roles required of all clergy. Chaplain Everette J. Thomas in 1981 surveyed
thirty-nine Army colonels with the intent of identifying how commanders perceive
chaplains.
The following percentages indicate how many commanders identified each
characteristic. The survey indicated that commanders perceive a chaplain as a
dedicated person of God (100%); a counselor to soldiers (97%); a moral influence
on troops (95%); concerned with service, not status (95%); a member of the
military team (90%); a clergyperson more than an officer (74%). The chaplain was
not seen as unnecessary by all 39 commanders. Also, the vast majority of
commanders surveyed did not perceive the chaplain as without dedication or
calling (95%), involved with non-clergy duties (92%), or as a justifier of the
military establishment (85%). The characteristics perceived by the colonels as
positives mirror the qualities and expectations of leadership that rely on
persuasive techniques and personalities. (from Everette J. Thomas, "The
Commander-Chaplain Perceptual Communication Gap," unpublished study paper,
February, 1982)
Excerpts from Warrior, prophet, priest: the strategic value of chaplains to the
war effort and community - Infantry Magazine, July-August, 2006 by Stephen Muse,
Glen L. Bloomstrom
Contributions of the Chaplaincy
Historically Army chaplains have been and remain the critical link in assisting
with Soldiers' morale and helping with the transition between war and civilian
life. Chaplains have consistently been catalysts and innovators in addressing
Soldier and family needs and initiating programs, which later became independent
Army programs. Chaplains established lending closets and provided "Helping Hand"
funds using offerings taken up at chapels which were the precursors to today's
Army Community Service and Army Emergency Relief. After World War II, chaplains
were at the forefront of initiatives to racially integrate the force. During the
Vietnam period and following, chaplains initiated and were integral to drug and
alcohol treatment and "Human Relations" programs.
The chaplain remains the primary frontline professional person in whom Soldiers
are likely to confide in or seek out in distress. While the stigma of the label
of "mental illness" still prevents Soldiers from talking with psychiatrists and
medical personnel, the American Association of Pastoral Counselors found that
when "... confronted with a personal problem needing counseling, 66 percent of
persons would prefer a counselor who represented spiritual values and beliefs.
Eighty-one percent prefer someone who enables them to integrate their values and
belief system into the counseling process." Results of the Sample Survey of
Military Personnel (SSMP) indicate that next to a friend or close relative,
Soldiers rank chaplains as the one "most likely for Army personnel to turn to
for advice about confidential personal or family problems."
Excerpt from : Chaplains: The Calm in the Chaos, Newsweek - May 7, 2007 issue By
Lisa Miller
“They inspire, give comfort and pray for safety. Throughout America's history,
chaplains have 'come nigh unto the battle.”
History's battlefields have almost always held a place for men and women of
God—someone to inspire and give comfort, give parents and fiancées the bad news,
file forms, educate, pray for safety and, failing that, safe passage.
Deuteronomy 20:2-4 says, "And it shall be when ye are come nigh unto the battle,
that the priest shall approach and speak unto the people."
In America, the role of military chaplain has, in the past 250 years, grown from
ad hoc—the village pastor who fought with the boys in his congregation—to
bureaucratic. But from the start, the job has had inherent tensions: To whom
does the chaplain ultimately report? To the troops who need guidance? The
government that pays the bills? God? And in the hell of war, how does a chaplain
hold on to faith?
George Washington thought chaplains belonged in the military and he wrote 50
letters saying so; in 1775, Congress approved funding. Almost immediately,
though, the position raised ethical and constitutional questions. In his
"Detached Memoranda," James Madison worried that military chaplains might
violate the Establishment Clause.
In the 1840s, a group of Protestants from Tennessee wrote a letter to the
secretary of War, saying they didn't want their tax dollars to pay for a
Catholic chaplain—and as the diversity of the U.S. troops grew (black and Jewish
chaplains joined the military in the Civil War), so did these tensions. Two
years ago, the Air Force had to issue a statement saying it didn't prefer one
religion to another after staffers complained of proselytizing by evangelicals;
in 2004, General William G. Boykin was reprimanded for making anti-Muslim
remarks.
On a frigid night in 1943, the U.S. transport ship Dorchester was sailing near
Greenland when it was hit by a torpedo from a German sub. Among the dead were
four chaplains—two Protestants, a Catholic and a Jew—who gave their own life
jackets to men on deck. They could be heard praying together as the massive ship
slipped under water, and their sacrifice and compassion became the stuff of
legend.
With Sarah Childress, Sarina Rosenberg and John Barry © 2007 Newsweek, Inc.
Excerpt from War in the
Chaplain Corps
By Ward Sanderson, Stars and Stripes
Stripes Sunday magazine, November 23, 2003
The American Civil Liberties Union does not oppose chaplains.
"It’s been challenged and upheld by the courts," said Arthur Spitzer, legal
director of the ACLU’s national capital affiliate. "The reasoning is, when the
military takes someone and puts them on a ship, or somewhere in Afghanistan,
it’s reasonable for the government to provide some means of exercising their
religion. That’s the same thing that happens in the prisons. We’re not opposed
to that."
Doug Bandow, a religion and politics analyst with the libertarian Cato
Institute, agreed.
"I don’t see how you can have folks in the military and not give them access to
chaplains," Bandow said. "You can’t put guys in Iraq and say, ‘Good luck, now
find a church.’ I don’t think anyone can argue that it’s establishment of
religion."
The chaplaincy is inherently about religion, and diverse ones. Navy chaplains
constantly bring up the idea of pluralism. The problem, evangelicals maintain,
is that it can mean the ability of all chaplains to pursue their faith, a
requirement that all chaplains not offend the faith of another or simply
describe the environment of many faiths making up the sea service.
Cmdr. Lawrence Zoeller, an equal opportunity investigator testified: “A chaplain
wouldn’t preach his doctrine if it was offensive to another religious group,"
"That is, in effect, both an establishment of religion and a violation of free
exercise," Arthur Schulcz, the Vienna, Va.-based attorney said of the testimony.
"That is, in fact, contrary to the whole spirit of the First Amendment."
"Pluralism, again, doesn’t describe how we do what we do," Navy Chaplain
Hendricks testified. "It more describes the context in which we serve."