More than 100 chaplains signed a letter urging local Texas school boards to vote against putting chaplains in public schools, calling efforts to enlist religious counselors in public classrooms “harmful” to students and families.

The letter was issued just days before a bill allowing public schools to hire school chaplains becomes law in Texas, the first state in the country to pass such a measure. The legislation, which had been pushed by activists associated with Christian nationalism, gives the state’s nearly 1,200 school boards until March 1 of next year to vote on whether to employ chaplains.

The letter was organized by the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty and Interfaith Alliance as well as the local advocacy group Texas Impact.

The chaplains who signed the letter, released Tuesday, bemoaned the lack of standards for potential school chaplains aside from background checks, contrasting it with the extensive training required for health-care and military chaplains.

“Because of our training and experience, we know that chaplains are not a replacement for school counselors or safety measures in our public schools, and we urge you to reject this flawed policy option: It is harmful to our public schools and the students and families they serve,” the letter reads.

Although chaplains who operate in multifaith environments are generally barred from proselytizing, the Texas bill, SB 763, outlined no such restriction, leaving each school district to answer the question on its own.

  • carl_dungeon@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    So separation of church and state can just be ignored now? Can I be a teacher as a satanic Chaplin in Texas? Hang some sweet Baphomet posters and teach kids to think rationally and not blindly follow authority figures?

  • Nougat@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Can’t wait for the Satanic Temple to get their people in public schools as chaplains.

    • HandsHurtLoL@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      But no school district in Texas who stupidly thinks that chaplains should work in public schools would knowingly hire Satanists when there are probably many Christian denomination chaplains available.

      Different story if the only applicant is a Satanist, but the district just declares the search as failed without interviewing the Satanist. Then it’s a matter of religious discrimination in the hiring process for that one individual.

      I can’t think of any situation in which the actual chaplain at any given school could challenge this law to the point it starts moving through the courts.

      To get into the court system, some parents are going to have to sue. I’m predicting a Jewish family, Muslim family, or Bahai family raising suit after the WASP chaplain starts evangelizing to the non-believers.

  • SpeedLimit55@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    This is a strange thing to have in a public school especially suggesting that a chaplain can replace a counselor. Most private religious based schools have both.

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      10 months ago

      Strange isn’t the correct word. The purpose is to insert their religion everywhere and force complete indoctrination on youth. It’s not strange for an organization built on curling its subjects to want more. Evil maybe.

    • Takatakatakatakatak@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      Mind your words, heathen. Through faith, all things are possible… including the rape of multiple children before this ridiculous idea gets rolled back.

      Is Florida trying to become Gilead for real? This is the most backwards shit I’ve seen in a while.

  • GFGJewbacca@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    I am a trained chaplain, currently practicing in a hospital. I absolutely agree with the chaplains who signed this letter.While we are trained to help people in spiritual and/or emotional crisis, we are specifically trained not to give people advice. Rather, we are trained to help people recognize what they are feeling, have each person feel heard and understood, and to use the helpful parts of a person’s theology to bring about emotional/spirit healing.

    What this also fails to mention is that chaplains are not inherently christian. I am Jewish clergy. I know for sure that Texas schools wouldn’t allow me as a chaplain to participate because of this.

  • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I have little patience for preachers or anyone who recruits vulnerable people into their religion.

    But I do respect these chaplains for standing up and saying “thats not our job.”

    School is neither the time or place for this shit.

  • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Fun fact, a prominent group to argue in court that creationism shouldn’t be taught in school was actually pastors and religious leaders. They believed that teachers, who were not ordained preachers nor religious scholars, would not accurately explain their religions. Perhaps not the best reasoning from a secular perspective, but I appreciate it nonetheless.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    10 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The legislation, which had been pushed by activists associated with Christian nationalism, gives the state’s nearly 1,200 school boards until March 1 of next year to vote on whether to employ chaplains.

    The letter was organized by the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty and Interfaith Alliance as well as the local advocacy group Texas Impact.

    Although chaplains who operate in multifaith environments are generally barred from proselytizing, the Texas bill, SB 763, outlined no such restriction, leaving each school district to answer the question on its own.

    “There is no requirement in this law that the chaplains refrain from proselytizing while at schools or that they serve students from different religious backgrounds,” the letter reads.

    Franz Schemmel, Texas Impact board president and pastor at Messiah Lutheran Church in Weatherford, said in a news release.

    763 made its way through the Texas Legislature in May, state Rep. James Talarico, a Presbyterian minister in training, repeatedly challenged the bill and linked it to Christian nationalism.


    The original article contains 620 words, the summary contains 164 words. Saved 74%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!