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College Chaplain

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Kooli wrote: »
    Actually if you don't approach a counselling client from the point of view of what they believe to be true, you won't be seeing them for a second session.

    You dont approach helping them in terms of what they believe.
    Kooli wrote: »
    But there are other students who I couldn't help. Firstly, those who don't have any psychological issues at all, they just want spiritual guidance.

    A secular educational institution should not be directly funding spiritual advisors. (As nozzferrahhtoo suggests here, a student religious society set up in the usual way that all societies are, which funds its own advisor would be much fairer).
    Kooli wrote: »
    Secondly, those who do have psychological issues but they see them from a spiritual point of view, and they would never set foot in a psychologist's office, so I would never have the opportunity to help them!

    They would not get real world help from a religious chaplain anyway, so what difference would it make? (the chaplain would either try to approach their issue religiously, which would at best, solve nothing, or they would refer them to a psychologist, who they would not go to see anyway)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli



    They would not get real world help from a religious chaplain anyway, so what difference would it make? (the chaplain would either try to approach their issue religiously, which would at best, solve nothing, or they would refer them to a psychologist, who they would not go to see anyway)

    Well it depends what you call real world help.

    Imagine a student who is feeling a bit lost on campus, or a bit isolated, perhaps because their religion is very important to them and they haven't found others who feel the same. Maybe they don't feel they fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.

    They could go to the chaplaincy and find a 'real world solution'. There they will find advice and guidance, and a community in college that they can be a part of. They will find people that they have things in common with. The chaplain may give them support in religious matters, such as staying true to their beliefs (perhaps about premarital sex) in the face of peer pressure. They may be much happier that way, feel more settled in the college, feel they 'belong' and hey presto, they don't drop out! (Yay more fees for the college!)

    Yes that student could come to me, but you know what I'd do? Send them to the chaplaincy!! I don't see what 'real world solution' I could offer that would work as well for them (or better). The outcome would simply be better with a chaplain.

    Now where there are mental health issues involved, I of course think they should be seeing a mental health professional. But where there are none, there is no reason they should.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,367 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    Kooli wrote: »
    But if you look again at the question I asked Mark Hamill, I wasn't talking about someone who is 'hearing voices' at all, I was talking about someone looking for spiritual guidance or religious community (which I think would be common reasons to go to a chaplain).

    Yes I am aware of that being your point. It is not for me to moderate the discussion between you and him. I merely wanted to point out that your interpretation of what he said about those “voices” was entirely wrong.

    The user was using an analogy, that is all. You alas took that analogy up entirely wrong and suggested that the user was calling for counsellors to cure people of “faith”. Not so.

    However as for your main point… IF a person comes to the college counsellor looking for some form of spiritual guidance then let that counsellor refer that student on to the local Wiccan, Imam, Priest, Yogi, Guru or whatever it is that is relevant. We do not need to maintain a representative of each of those faiths in the college to achieve ANY of this.

    The student will then realise the same help from the person he is referred to.

    This is the point of a college GP and a college Counsellor. They do not need to fix every problem that comes before them. They DO need to be trained enough to recognise the needs of the student and refer them on.

    Just like we do not need an Octologist in colleges… but a GP who can diagnose Ear trouble enough to then refer the student on to an octologist… what need is there for a Chaplain?

    Counsellors are not just there to solve mental health issues. They are there to recognise and diagnose the non medical needs of a student and to help them work through it themselves.
    Kooli wrote: »
    Again, the homeopathy analogy doesn't make sense to me. If someone was sick and wanted homeopathy they would go to a homeopath.

    Our point exactly. And where would he find such a homeopath? A lot of people beleive in Homeopathy and some people would not be without it. Is there ANY onus therefore for the college to maintain a homeopathic salesman? Not in the slightest.

    Why? Because the college can simply not be expected to cater to every single whim the student body decides to have. The resources of the college MUST be put into things that are actually useful and effective. Just because some students would LIKE to have access to a homeopathic salesperson, does not mean we need to cater to that.

    So if some student randomly decides he would like to go to some sort of priest or chaplain... why should we pander to this? It has nothing to do with college and nothing to do with the successful completion of college courses... which is NOT something you can say about maintaining, say, a GP or a counselor.

    The whole aspect of this is people are just auto assuming that spiritual health is on a par with physical and mental health. I already suggested more than once on this thread a set of experiments to test that and I suggest to you that the result of those experiments will likely show that physical health and mental health have a direct effect on general results, while nurturing a students faith in the supernatural will not.

    And if the latter does not, what right have the masters of the limited resources of a college got to be investing in such things? The onus on them is to use resources wisely and effectively, not to squander it on random whims of the that the student population feel might be important.
    Kooli wrote: »
    But a lot of people on this thread seem to be arguing that someone who is looking for religious guidance should go to a counsellor!

    Again, as I have just written, this is not wholly accurate. That they should go to the counsellor is a given frmo what we are saying, but not fort he spiritual guidance itself. The counsellor should be a first point of contact who will help a student work through their issues. A counsellor can easily diagnose the students problem as religious and spiritual in nature, and pull out the relevant leaflets, blurb and contact numbers that the student requires.

    The example I keep using is that we do not maintain a college Octologist just because the college GP is unable to deal with most issues of the Ear. The GP infact diagnoses the ear issue and pulls out the necessary blurb and contact details of a trained octologist.

    How is a counselor referring the student to an external Yoggi or Priest ANY different to that?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,367 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    Kooli wrote: »
    Imagine a student who is feeling a bit lost on campus, or a bit isolated, perhaps because their religion is very important to them and they haven't found others who feel the same. Maybe they don't feel they fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.

    No need to imagine it. It happens ALL the time.

    For example there was a student in my class in college who was into Warhammer Fantasy gaming. He did not drink, hated night clubs, and so did not entirely fit in.

    What did he do? He set up a Warhammer gaming society in our college, applied for funding for it and then partnered himself with the one in the University up the road and one in a university on the opposite coast to us.

    Through this he found internally and externally a network of people where he did fit in.

    What I am suggesting for the Christian student is to follow the same procedure as everyone else… stop pretending that being Religious gets you some special Bypass where you can avoid normal procedure… and then set up their own society by the normal methods.

    Again I have to repeat my as yet unanswered question… what there is so unfair? Why does one persons fantasy based society usurp anothers? Why does one have to go through all proper procedures and another gets a free ride?
    Kooli wrote: »
    The chaplain may give them support in religious matters, such as staying true to their beliefs (perhaps about premarital sex) in the face of peer pressure.

    You are totally assuming the “Chaplain” has any relevance to the faith the student feels part of at all. What of the Muslim student in a college with a Christian chaplain?? How is he going to feel any less left out than your example? Do we maintain a Muslim chaplain too then? If yes… what of the Hindu? The Wiccan? How many Chaplains do you want?

    In fact what you suggest is MORE damaging to that student. Not only will he feel left out, but when he looks at the services offered he will not only feel left out, but will find that the college openly supports a religion that is not Islam. It will feel like even the college is against him.

    However if there was only a secular counsellor… who could take BOTH students, diagnose their needs separately, and refer them on to the relevant external sources…. Then both students get a resolution…. And both students are not given the impression the college is specifically catering for the needs of others and not him.
    Kooli wrote: »
    Yes that student could come to me, but you know what I'd do? Send them to the chaplaincy!!

    As you should. No one is saying you should not.

    The argument is whether the college itself should be maintaining the contact that you refer the student to. Diagnosing the needs of the student and referring them on is EXACTLY WHAT WE WOULD WANT YOU TO DO.

    The point we have is not that there is an issue with that… but there is an issue with the person you are referring to being one maintained by the college.

    Your diagnosis and solution are sound. However just like the college does not hold in supply all the drugs the college GP might prescribe... the college ALSO should not hold in supply all the contact points the Counselor might prescribe.

    What difference is there between the GP saying "Go to the Chemist and get drug X" and the counselor saying "Go down to Saint Anthony's and speak with Father Mickey"?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,518 ✭✭✭axer


    Kooli wrote: »
    Imagine a student who is feeling a bit lost on campus, or a bit isolated, perhaps because their religion is very important to them and they haven't found others who feel the same. Maybe they don't feel they fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.
    There are plenty of relgious societies that they can join and plenty of people that can point them to those societies without needing a chaplain.
    Kooli wrote: »
    They could go to the chaplaincy and find a 'real world solution'. There they will find advice and guidance, and a community in college that they can be a part of. They will find people that they have things in common with. The chaplain may give them support in religious matters, such as staying true to their beliefs (perhaps about premarital sex) in the face of peer pressure. They may be much happier that way, feel more settled in the college, feel they 'belong' and hey presto, they don't drop out! (Yay more fees for the college!)
    This is asking for special priviledge for religious students here.
    Kooli wrote: »
    Yes that student could come to me, but you know what I'd do? Send them to the chaplaincy!! I don't see what 'real world solution' I could offer that would work as well for them (or better). The outcome would simply be better with a chaplain.
    Why not send them to a meeting of the religious society that would suit them best? What would you do with a athiest student experiencing the exact same issues only from the point of view of an athiest?
    Kooli wrote: »
    Now where there are mental health issues involved, I of course think they should be seeing a mental health professional. But where there are none, there is no reason they should.
    You don't have to have a mental health issue to see a counsellor in fact I would assume a counsellor can help prevent a mental health issue from arising due to the counselling provided. Would you not agree?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,598 ✭✭✭✭prinz


    axer wrote: »
    There are plenty of relgious societies that they can join and plenty of people that can point them to those societies without needing a chaplain.

    Really? There are? Funnily enough I don't remember a single one in my university.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,518 ✭✭✭axer


    prinz wrote: »
    Really? There are? Funnily enough I don't remember a single one in my university.
    http://www.socs.nuigalway.ie/society_profiles/view/27
    http://www.socs.nuigalway.ie/society_profiles/view/66
    and thats only NUIG.

    Heres one in in UCD:
    http://www.ucd.ie/cunion/

    Then there are two in Maynooth:
    http://studentactivities.nuim.ie/clubsandsocs.shtml


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,598 ✭✭✭✭prinz


    axer wrote: »

    If only I'd gone to one of those huh. Point being, not every university has a religious/faith society.

    Edit: The one I attended seems to have a Christian Society now. Must be a new thing. Don't recall that being there 8 years ago.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli



    You are totally assuming the “Chaplain” has any relevance to the faith the student feels part of at all. What of the Muslim student in a college with a Christian chaplain?? How is he going to feel any less left out than your example? Do we maintain a Muslim chaplain too then? If yes… what of the Hindu? The Wiccan? How many Chaplains do you want?

    In fact what you suggest is MORE damaging to that student. Not only will he feel left out, but when he looks at the services offered he will not only feel left out, but will find that the college openly supports a religion that is not Islam. It will feel like even the college is against him.


    Actually I think this point is important. My take on it (and I'd love to hear from a religious person if I'm totally off the mark here) is that if a religious person has religious issues, they would be more comfortable talking to a chaplain from any religion than to a secular counsellor. They would probably feel more understood there. I'm just imagining that if I were a believer I would prefer to go to someone else who believed (even if it was a different religion) than to someone who possible doesn't believe and might think I'm a bit mad. I can think of one of my clients who attends the chaplaincy regularly who is of a pretty uncommon religion, but I couldn't be sure they are representative.

    So while minority religions probably won't find a student society on campus (cos there aren't enough of them), they may feel comfortable in the chaplaincy.

    To repeat something I said earlier, if there comes a time when the number of religious students on campus has dropped and the chaplaincy is no longer justified, I will be really delighted! It's not something I have any time for myself.

    But at the moment, there quite simply are lots of students with a strong Christian faith (which at the moment is a lot more than Wiccans or Warhammer players or even muslims) and I'm happy for any student service to continue to meet the needs of students for as long as required, as long as non-religious students don't feel that their needs are not being met as a result.

    Student life can be really tough for some people, so I would never be one to advocate the removal of a student service unless I saw real evidence of harm. Ideological reasons just aren't enough of a justification.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli


    axer wrote: »

    What would you do with a athiest student experiencing the exact same issues only from the point of view of an athiest?

    Well that's a really important point. I don't see what an atheist equivalent would be? What service would an atheist look for that is to do with their atheism? Atheism simply means not believing in God, what specific supports would they need around that?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Kooli wrote: »
    Well that's a really important point. I don't see what an atheist equivalent would be? What service would an atheist look for that is to do with their atheism? Atheism simply means not believing in God, what specific supports would they need around that?

    An atheist student may be looking for an atheist (or humanist) association (maybe because they are feeling discriminated against because of all the religious chaplains :p). What would you do then? Send them to the religious chaplain?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli


    An atheist student may be looking for an atheist (or humanist) association (maybe because they are feeling discriminated against because of all the religious chaplains :p). What would you do then? Send them to the religious chaplain?

    I still don't get what their actual need is? What issue are they looking for help with? What service do they require??
    It sounds like they are just trying to make some sort of political point. Student services aren't really there for that....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Kooli wrote: »
    I still don't get what their actual need is? What issue are they looking for help with? What service do they require??
    It sounds like they are just trying to make some sort of political point. Student services aren't really there for that....

    Here is a your description of a theistic student who you said wouldn't be best helped by a secualr counsellor :
    Kooli wrote:
    Imagine a student who is feeling a bit lost on campus, or a bit isolated, perhaps because their religion is very important to them and they haven't found others who feel the same. Maybe they don't feel they fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.

    Lest apply that example to an atheist student:
    Imagine a student who is feeling a bit lost on campus, or a bit isolated, perhaps because religion is not important to them and they haven't found others who feel the same. Maybe they don't feel they fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.

    What do you do? Do you send them away, saying student services are there to help with these issues, all the while welcoming in theistic students with open arms? If its not the student services job to help atheistic students wth these issues, why is it the student services to help the theistic students with these issues?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli


    Here is a your description of a theistic student who you said wouldn't be best helped by a secualr counsellor :


    Lest apply that example to an atheist student:
    Imagine a student who is feeling a bit lost on campus, or a bit isolated, perhaps because religion is not important to them and they haven't found others who feel the same. Maybe they don't feel they fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.

    What do you do? Do you send them away, saying student services are there to help with these issues, all the while welcoming in theistic students with open arms? If its not the student services job to help atheistic students wth these issues, why is it the student services to help the theistic students with these issues?

    That really makes no sense to me. You're saying someone would be looking for support services because religion is not important to them? And they are looking for other people who religion is not important to? I can't really imagine that.

    Golf is something that is not important to me. I wouldn't particularly feel the need to seek out other people with the same non-interests as me to feel a sense of community!

    I think you are determined to feel discriminated against!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,518 ✭✭✭axer


    Kooli wrote: »
    That really makes no sense to me. You're saying someone would be looking for support services because religion is not important to them? And they are looking for other people who religion is not important to? I can't really imagine that.
    Nope, they are exeriencing the exact same problems as the hypothetical person you posted about. The person is feeling lost on campus or a bit isolated. Religion means nothing to them. Maybe they feel like they don't fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.

    What do you do?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli


    axer wrote: »
    Nope, they are exeriencing the exact same problems as the hypothetical person you posted about. The person is feeling lost on campus or a bit isolated. Religion means nothing to them. Maybe they feel like they don't fit in. Maybe they don't drink and most of the 'freshers' activities revolve around drink, as do the ways in which their class get to know each other.

    What do you do?

    Oh OK so you're saying that their atheism is actually irrelevant. The previous poster said they were feeling lost or isolated because religion is not important to them.

    You're just talking about a regular student who is feeling lonely, isolated, not fitting in or whatever. If they choose to come to me, I will help them. They might choose to go somewhere else (students union, societies, support groups, student advisor etc) and get the help there.

    There are number of places they can go, and they will choose the one that best suits them based on what they feel they need. I'm not sure what the argument is? Are you saying they are discriminated against? Or that there should be some sort of 'atheist service' even though the students problems have nothing to do with belief or lack of belief? An extra service on top of what is already available?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Kooli wrote: »
    That really makes no sense to me. You're saying someone would be looking for support services because religion is not important to them? And they are looking for other people who religion is not important to? I can't really imagine that.

    Golf is something that is not important to me. I wouldn't particularly feel the need to seek out other people with the same non-interests as me to feel a sense of community!

    I think you are determined to feel discriminated against!!

    OK. You have said the part in bold on an Atheist and Agnostic forum, so I can only assume that you are taking the piss. Are you being satirical or something? Have I fallen for Poes Law?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli


    OK. You have said the part in bold on an Atheist and Agnostic forum, so I can only assume that you are taking the piss. Are you being satirical or something?

    Nope, not at all.

    I just can't imagine a student needing support on campus because they are an atheist, and wanting that support to be atheist-specific. Perhaps you could explain it to me?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Kooli wrote: »
    Nope, not at all.

    I just can't imagine a student needing support on campus because they are an atheist, and wanting that support to be atheist-specific. Perhaps you could explain it to me?

    I dont understand your problem. What did you come to this forum for? What do others come to this forum for? They want other athiests/agnostic to talk to, they want a little sense of community, like the people who go to the soccor forum want a little footbal community, the film forum goers want a little film community. I dont understand how you can you easily accept someone wanting a community on religious terms, but you have a problem with someone who specifically wants one without religious domination (not necessarily atheistic, just non religious, like a humanist society).
    I honestly think you are just being difficult on purpose.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,628 ✭✭✭Truley


    I dont understand how you can you easily accept someone wanting a community on religious terms, but you have a problem with someone who specifically wants one without religious domination (not necessarily atheistic, just non religious, like a humanist society).
    I honestly think you are just being difficult on purpose.

    But apart from college chaplains and religious societies aren't nearly all college societies and services without religious domination :confused: So what you're saying doesn't make any sense.

    Can you name an aspect of college life that specifically isolates non-religous people?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Truley wrote: »
    But apart from college chaplains and religious societies aren't nearly all college societies and services without religious domination :confused: So what you're saying doesn't make any sense.

    Can you name an aspect of college life that specifically isolates non-religous people?

    I dont understand how you can think that what you say here applies to students in college, but doesn't apply to people here on this forum? Do you have a problem with this forum? Does it baffle you why people come here to discuss things atheistically/agnostically?
    Take what people want to discuss in their religious community* (abortion, education, presence in law and the constitution) and atheists/agnostics want to discuss the same things, but from the other point of view (ie non religiously). That is the point of this very forum. To not recognise that people outside of this forum may want the same things in college, is just madness.

    *remember that a religious community only offers one thing that a secular community doesn't, and thats religious ceremony. Everything else (all the little clubs people make-book clubs, gaming clubs, sports clubs, discussion groups) still exist in secular societies.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,518 ✭✭✭axer


    Truley wrote: »
    Can you name an aspect of college life that specifically isolates non-religous people?
    The same thing could be asked back to you. This is why secularism is a good thing as nobody should be isolated from anything or treated any better or worse just because of their beliefs. I for one would not visit a chaplain for advice since their beliefs are worn around their necks.

    I think the overall point here is that you cannot cater for every belief or religion so it is best just to be secular and cater for everyone. A religious person can be helped just as well as a non-religious person with a secular counsellor. A religious counsellor might help a religious slightly better by affirming their beliefs but then a non-religious person or a person from a different religion loses out. Religious counsellors have no place in a secular college unless they want to fund themselves.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,345 ✭✭✭johnfás


    I'd have no problem with a parallel support service being paid for by the university, in addition to current provisions, for those who are of an atheistic point of view. The problem is certification and accountability. In order to sanction somebody to have an official capacity on campus there has to be structures for both certification of the person in question and an accountability structure. If atheists want to organise themselves with like minded atheists and sort out such a structure, more power to them I say. The more choice for our young people when they go through struggles the better.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli


    I dont understand your problem. What did you come to this forum for? What do others come to this forum for? They want other athiests/agnostic to talk to, they want a little sense of community, like the people who go to the soccor forum want a little footbal community, the film forum goers want a little film community. I dont understand how you can you easily accept someone wanting a community on religious terms, but you have a problem with someone who specifically wants one without religious domination (not necessarily atheistic, just non religious, like a humanist society).
    I honestly think you are just being difficult on purpose.

    I personally come here because this is a topic that interests me and I enjoy discussing it.
    I don't need any support around my atheism or atheist guidance. Maybe others come for that reason. I don't. Do you come here for atheist guidance?

    I feel like we're arguing about a bizarre hypothetical. I would wager that it has never occurred that a student has requested a student support service that revolves around their atheism. If there was a need, then it would make sense that we are discussing it here. But I don't think there is one. So there's no need to argue about whether it should be provided!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,628 ✭✭✭Truley


    I dont understand how you can think that what you say here applies to students in college, but doesn't apply to people here on this forum? Do you have a problem with this forum? Does it baffle you why people come here to discuss things atheistically/agnostically?

    eh... what?
    Take what people want to discuss in their religious community* (abortion, education, presence in law and the constitution) and atheists/agnostics want to discuss the same things, but from the other point of view (ie non religiously). That is the point of this very forum. To not recognise that people outside of this forum may want the same things in college, is just madness.

    Yes but what I'm saying is people outside of this forum, ie in third level institutions (which is the point of this thread) have all the freedom they want to discuss things from a specifically non religious point of view, or to get non-religious advice. The vast majority of the third level welfare and education services are, by their very ethos, non religious. So why would there be a need to set up another service that is specifically non religious? All colleges offer the freedom to set up humanist or athiest clubs. A chaplain is a religious guidance counsellor, a counsellor/psychologist/welfare officer is a secular guidance counsellor - are you suggesting a specifically athiest guidance counsellor? As in one who will be biased to the idea of no god?
    remember that a religious community only offers one thing that a secular community doesn't, and thats religious ceremony. Everything else (all the little clubs people make-book clubs, gaming clubs, sports clubs, discussion groups) still exist in secular societies.

    A chaplain offers a service specifically tailored to religious people who want it. It is a specific service that if taken away could not be replaced. The issue here isn't so much should we have a chaplaincy, the question is should we take it away.
    axer wrote: »
    The same thing could be asked back to you. This is why secularism is a good thing as nobody should be isolated from anything or treated any better or worse just because of their beliefs. I for one would not visit a chaplain for advice since their beliefs are worn around their necks.

    I wouldn't consider it isolating as it is a seperate service for a specific type of person that people go out of their way to find and partake in. If you don't use it it has no direct effect on you, you simply don't use it. I don't consider myself isolated from the Cuman na Gaelige because I'm not a member and don't use their services.
    I think the overall point here is that you cannot cater for every belief or religion so it is best just to be secular and cater for everyone. A religious person can be helped just as well as a non-religious person with a secular counsellor. A religious counsellor might help a religious slightly better by affirming their beliefs but then a non-religious person or a person from a different religion loses out. Religious counsellors have no place in a secular college unless they want to fund themselves.

    As I said before the chaplaincy is a specific branch that works in conjunction with the overall mental health services. You can't easily compare a counsellor with a chaplain as they do not offer the same service, it is not just a case of one or the other. Doctors, Nurses, Psycharitists, Counsellors, Chaplains, Psychologists are all specialised branches of the Mental Health service. I don't see the point in forcing a student to see as psychologist or a counsellor when they would have been happier to see a chaplain. It wouldn't be financially better - as another poster already pointed out, and it wouldn't be conducive to a better overall service.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Kooli wrote: »
    I personally come here because this is a topic that interests me and I enjoy discussing it.
    I don't need any support around my atheism or atheist guidance. Maybe others come for that reason. I don't. Do you come here for atheist guidance?

    I get guidance without any religious overtones, so in a way yes. I get to have conversations about things like abortion and smacking kids and science without any useless religious undertones and I get to discuss the issues religion presents in the real world, be it supposedly secular primary schools discriminating against the non religious or the issue of the burka. I come here, not for atheistic support, just for non-religious support, and sure some of the debates with theists can be interesting challenges.
    Kooli wrote: »
    I feel like we're arguing about a bizarre hypothetical. I would wager that it has never occurred that a student has requested a student support service that revolves around their atheism. If there was a need, then it would make sense that we are discussing it here. But I don't think there is one. So there's no need to argue about whether it should be provided!

    You are looking at from the wrong way around (I thought I avoided this obvious convolution by describing these students as atheists and agnostics and humanists) Its not sevices that revolves around their atheism that they want, its services that dont revolve around religion (ie secular services).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Kooli



    Its not sevices that revolves around their atheism that they want, its services that dont revolve around religion (ie secular services).

    Like for instance counselling? And the health service? And the students' union? And the careers service? And the disability service? And the student advisory service?

    Are you arguing that such a student who wants a secular service can't access one?

    I'm confused, when I said I didn't understand why someone would seek an atheist support service, you were incredulous that I could not understand this, because I use this forum.

    You're now saying that you weren't talking about an atheist support service at all, just a secular one?

    I'm a bit lost...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Truley wrote: »
    The vast majority of the third level welfare and education services are, by their very ethos, non religious. So why would there be a need to set up another service that is specifically non religious?

    All third level welfare and college should be nonreligious. Its called secularism.
    Truley wrote: »
    A chaplain is a religious guidance counsellor, a counsellor/psychologist/welfare officer is a secular guidance counsellor

    So chaplains are guidance counsellors? Are you sure? Because they weren't a page or two ago.
    Truley wrote: »
    - are you suggesting a specifically athiest guidance counsellor? As in one who will be biased to the idea of no god?

    No where did you get that from?
    Truley wrote: »
    A chaplain offers a service specifically tailored to religious people who want it. It is a specific service that if taken away could not be replaced. The issue here isn't so much should we have a chaplaincy, the question is should we take it away.

    The question is should a secular place of education be directly funding a chaplaincy. I say no because
    1)A secular institution should not directly fund a discriminatory religious service.
    2)If the religious students want one, then they can get the religious society to fund one.
    3)A place of education, who holds to the ideals of providing the best possible education, should not be providing the untested placebo that is religious guidance (no more than they should provide homeopathy)
    Truley wrote: »
    I wouldn't consider it isolating as it is a seperate service for a specific type of person that people go out of their way to find and partake in. If you don't use it it has no direct effect on you, you simply don't use it. I don't consider myself isolated from the Cuman na Gaelige because I'm not a member and don't use their services.

    You choose wether or not to be part of Cuman na Gaelige, wether or not to pay the membership fee and fund their activities. You dont in the case of a university employed chaplain.
    Truley wrote: »
    As I said before the chaplaincy is a specific branch that works in conjunction with the overall mental health services. You can't easily compare a counsellor with a chaplain as they do not offer the same service, it is not just a case of one or the other. Doctors, Nurses, Psycharitists, Counsellors, Chaplains, Psychologists are all specialised branches of the Mental Health service.

    The chaplains are not specialised branches of the health services. You cant get a credited degree in chaplaincy, any one can offer their services, the label is legally protected. Where do you get this nonsense from? Its utter BS.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,345 ✭✭✭johnfás


    You choose wether or not to be part of Cuman na Gaelige, wether or not to pay the membership fee and fund their activities. You dont in the case of a university employed chaplain.

    You choose whether or not you are a member of Cuman na Gaeilge, but not whether or not you fund the Irish language officer.
    The chaplains are not specialised branches of the health services. You cant get a credited degree in chaplaincy, any one can offer their services, the label is legally protected. Where do you get this nonsense from? Its utter BS.

    Chaplains have either an undergraduate degree with a pastoral component, and most have a masters degree or postgraduate diploma in pastoral studies. Such degrees are accredited by universities including the National University of Ireland and most major universities around the world.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Kooli wrote: »
    Like for instance counselling? And the health service? And the students' union? And the careers service? And the disability service? And the student advisory service?

    Are you arguing that such a student who wants a secular service can't access one?

    I'm confused, when I said I didn't understand why someone would seek an atheist support service, you were incredulous that I could not understand this, because I use this forum.

    You're now saying that you weren't talking about an atheist support service at all, just a secular one?

    I'm a bit lost...

    Its your own fault. You keep trying to twist what I say and you continuously conflate two issues. The issues of atheists/agnostics wanting the same the same sense of community that that lost lonely theist you described a few pages pack would want, and the issue of what a chaplain actually provides and wether the college should be directly funding it.
    All students want a sense of community in college, all students want groups of likeminded people that they can discuss and act out their hobbies with. And so, colleges fund these based on the numbers who join each one. These are the societies and sports clubs you get.
    The directly funded services supplied by the college, things like clinics, counsellors, the administration etc, are funded because these are essential for keeping the students healthy and for keeping them in class.
    The chaplaincy however is not covered by either of these. As you said ,it is not just a counsellor with a religious slant, its worth is purely in terms of the religious ceremonies it covers.
    However why should a college cover that?
    The sense of community it supposedly gives is well covered by the other societies in college (both religious and non religious). As for the objective mental benefit? Its no more effective than homeopathy, a placebo which people will cheering support the efficacy of while dying of treatable disease. It doesn't offer anything that either: cant be gotten elsewhere, that can be objectively shown to work and that a secular institution should directly supprot and fund.


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