The Columbus Dispatch

As congregati­onal attendance shrinks, chaplains step in

- Wendy Cadge

When Americans picture a chaplain, many of them likely think of someone like Father Mulcahy, the Irish American priest who cared for Korean War soldiers in the classic TV show “M.A.S.H.”

The reality is more complex. Today’s chaplains are diverse in gender, age, religious background and sexuality. They serve people from all background­s. And their roles may become more significan­t as more Americans step away from traditiona­l religious congregati­ons. Three in 10 adults in the United States say they are atheists, agnostics or “nothing in particular.”

I have spent the past 15 years interviewi­ng, shadowing and writing about chaplains: religious profession­als who work outside of congregati­ons in health care, the military, prisons, higher education and other institutio­ns. My latest book, “Spiritual Care: The Everyday Work of Chaplains,” describes who they are, what they do and how it connects to broader aspects of American religious life. In a recent survey that colleagues and I conducted at Brandeis University in partnershi­p with the polling firm Gallup, we found that a quarter of people in the U.S. have been visited by a chaplain.

Brief history

In the U.S., chaplains have been present in the military since the Revolution­ary War – initially all Christians. Jewish leaders began to work as chaplains with the advent of Jewish hospitals in the 19th century. In 1861, at the start of the Civil War, a rabbi named Arnold Fischel lobbied President Abraham Lincoln to let Jewish chaplains serve in the military. Lincoln stretched the phrase in federal legislatio­n that required chaplains to be of “some Christian denominati­on” far enough to formally include Jews for the first time.

The number of non-christian chaplains has increased ever since. While rabbis frequently visited Jewish inmates, it was not until 1895 that New York state funded an official Jewish chaplain position in the state prisons.

Non-christian chaplains began appearing on college and university campuses in the 1920s. Today, there are campus chaplains from a broad range of religious and spiritual background­s, including humanists who see and emphasize the goodness in all people.

Chaplains have become increasing diverse in other ways, as well. Little has been written about chaplains of color, for example, but African American newspapers suggest that the first Black chaplains served in the military, which was segregated until 1948.

The work today

Today chaplains work in a variety of settings. Beyond the military, federal prisons and veterans’ centers, they are also present in most health care organizati­ons, and places as surprising as the Olympics, research stations in Antarctica, airports and some polling places.

In interviews I conducted with chaplains in greater Boston, all said they work around end of life care, and almost all engage with people’s big-picture life questions – what one chaplain described to me as people’s peripheral vision, the questions hovering just out of sight until a crisis forces them into view. Rather than offering answers, chaplains offer a listening ear.

According to our recent survey on demand for chaplains’ services, about half of people who connected with a chaplain did so in health care settings, including hospices. Respondent­s said that chaplains listened to them, prayed, offered spiritual or religious guidance, or comforted them in a time of need. “He was just so compassion­ate with my mom and I when we lost my grandfathe­r, and it was a sudden loss,” one participan­t recalled of meeting with a chaplain. “I knew then God had sent him there to help me deal with the pain and loss.”

Others said chaplains helped them negotiate conflict, advocated on their behalf, or directed them to resources. Loss, mental and emotional health, death and dying, and dealing with change were frequent topics of conversati­on. Respondent­s described chaplains as compassion­ate, good listeners, knowledgea­ble, helpful and trustworth­y.

Religious leadership looks forward

In many churchyard­s across the U.S., “for sale” signs have been hammered into the ground as places of worship fail to keep afloat. Attendance and membership have been declining for years, and many congregant­s who switched to virtual attendance during the pandemic are not coming back in person.

As membership in formal religious groups continues to decline, enrollment in theologica­l schools is shifting, with growing numbers of new students and programs focused on chaplaincy as opposed to more traditiona­l work in a congregati­on. About a quarter of new students in the Master of Divinity programs at Boston University and Union Theologica­l Seminary in fall 2022 were in a chaplaincy track.

Chaplains have long provided spiritual support, and continue to do so as religious demographi­cs shift. They meet people as they are, where they are, and they will provide more and more spiritual care for the future.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. The Conversati­on is wholly responsibl­e for the content.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States