Talked to the Chaplain
I had opportunity to speak with the Chaplain of my reserve unit this past weekend for about 20 minutes. Our mutually busy schedules did not allow more. Still, I think it was worthwhile, and I think you will find the same. I told him why I was asking (I didn’t mention JREF, just that I had a friend who questioned the role of chaplains as secular counselors both from a standpoint of avoiding proselytizing and from the standpoint of qualifications). He had no problem answering my questions and offering his thoughts.
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The facts about him (as he presented them; I did nothing to verify any of this):
He is Methodist and is still the pastor for his own congregation when he is not performing reserve duties.
He has been a military chaplain for 16 years (he is currently a Major) and became a pastor 10 years prior to that.
After Officer Basic Course (3 months) he immediately became a battalion chaplain as a First Lieutenant. The Basic Course had only two counseling classes and he rates their quality as fairly low in comparison to other training he has received both within and without the military.
To become an ordained Methodist he had to obtain a Masters Degree in either Theology or Divinity; his is in Divinity.
As part of his Masters, he took five Graduate Level courses in Counseling. They were specifically not psychology courses though by necessity they had to touch on it.
During the ten years prior to his becoming a military chaplain he was required to take continuing courses in many topics, including counseling. These courses ranged from suicide prevention to marriage counseling to financial counseling.
He also became a volunteer chaplain at his local hospital. This required him to take the hospital’s mandated counseling training.
After becoming a military chaplain, he had to also continue taking periodic training on many topics, including counseling; in the military, it is not the chain of command that reviews this, but his superiors in the Chaplain Corps. He has taken courses on suicide prevention (at least twice), trauma counseling, and crisis counseling. Each course is a two week residency.
He has been to Chaplain Officers Advanced Course which offered an additional two classes on counseling and which were of similarly low quality as those in Basic Course.
Since becoming a Military Chaplain, but outside his military duties, he has volunteered to act as a counselor for his hometown police department for both the police officers and any prisoners who request a pastor.
He estimates that during his 16 years in the military (not counting the 10 years previous) he has undergone at least 500 hours of counseling training, some of it low quality, some of it very high, and most of it worthwhile.
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About the process:
Any soldier can voluntarily visit the chaplain about any issue.
Those in a soldier’s chain of command can recommend the soldier visit the chaplain but cannot require it and cannot take adverse action if the soldier declines. The commander (and only the commander) can mandate a soldier receive a psychological evaluation from a psychologist or psychiatrist if the soldier declines to see the chaplain, but the commander could mandate such an evaluation even without offering the chaplain option first.
When a soldier visits the chaplain at the commander’s request, if the chaplain sees nothing to indicate a danger to anyone, the chaplain will report to the commander only the fact that the soldier visited and that there appear to be no problems relevant to the command. Alternatively, if the chaplain determines there may be a danger, or if he determines the issue is beyond his expertise and training, he will refer the soldier to a psychologist and inform the commander of that fact.
Soldiers who seek out the chaplain on their own separate from any recommendation or urging by the chain of command will not be reported at all unless they appear to present a danger or unless they are referred to a psychologist.
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General comments (paraphrased) from the chaplain:
There are no specifically mandated minimum training standards beyond the courses offered in Basic Course and Advanced Course, and those are the least helpful of any of the training.
As a rule, the military takes chaplains with experience and not newly ordained ones (or the equivalent of “ordained” for non-Christian denominations) specifically to take advantage of their civilian training and experience.
His experience with other chaplains (in and out of the military) indicate to him that all Christian denominations have roughly equivalent civilian training in regard to counseling. He is less sure of Jewish and Islamic chaplains.
The Chaplain Corps does a very good job of monitoring the continuing education of its chaplains in all regards, not just related to counseling, but they take that as a key duty.
Proselytizing during secular counseling is most definitely not allowed and is monitored both by the chaplain’s commander and by the Chaplain Corps.
Religious discussion during other counseling is allowed. As an example, he mentioned marriage counseling which makes up the bulk of his voluntary counselees; most come to him specifically because he is a chaplain and not because he is a counselor, i.e., they want to use his religious expertise in an attempt to help their marriage. Obviously it is appropriate to discuss religious beliefs in such cases.
There are no specifically drawn lines that a chaplain must not cross during counseling; there is no rubric and no algorithm the chaplain follows so that at some point he can say “Oops. I have to stop. You need to see a psychologist now.” However, recognizing one’s own limitations and biases are drummed in during all training and classes so that chaplains know to back off too early rather than too late. As a rule, they don’t take repeat visits for secular issues, though marriage counseling came up again as a big exception. Other exceptions are generally limited to something like: “Why don’t you drop by one more time next month, or, hey, I’ll come see you when you’re in the motor pool, and you can let me know if you need anything else.”
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Sorry that’s so wordy. I wanted to be complete, and I still can’t guarantee I was.
I came away from it, just as confident in the system as is as I was when this conversation started.