NAMB stops endorsing women for military, federal chaplain positions_22304

Posted: 2/19/04

NAMB stops endorsing women
for military, federal chaplain positions

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

ALPHARETTA, Ga.--The North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention will stop endorsing women to chaplain positions "where the role and function of the chaplain would be seen the same as that of a pastor."

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Posted: 2/19/04

NAMB stops endorsing women
for military, federal chaplain positions

By John Hall

Texas Baptist Communications

ALPHARETTA, Ga.–The North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention will stop endorsing women to chaplain positions “where the role and function of the chaplain would be seen the same as that of a pastor.”

The action apparently ends SBC endorsement of female military and prison chaplains but will not necessarily preclude NAMB from endorsing women as hospital chaplains.

NAMB trustees took the action during their winter meeting, where they noted military and federally employed women chaplains serve in a pastoral role because they administer the Lord's Supper, baptize, preach, counsel and perform weddings and funerals.

Endorsing women as chaplains to perform pastoral duties would be inconsistent with the "spirit of the Baptist Faith & Message 2000."
—Terry Fox, NAMB trustee chairman

Endorsing women to minister in that capacity would be inconsistent with the “spirit of the Baptist Faith and Message 2000,” according to Terry Fox, NAMB trustee chairman and pastor of Immanuel Baptist Church in Wichita, Kan. The document limits “the office of pastor” to men.

The move affects new Southern Baptist women chaplains in the military, Federal Bureau of Prisons and Department of Veteran Affairs. Outside military and federal roles, chaplains are not viewed as pastors, Fox said.

Following discussions with military and civilian chaplains, the trustees came to understand soldiers often view military chaplains as pastors, Fox said. Soldiers look to the ministers for counseling, weddings, funerals, preaching and baptisms.

“If you think the military chaplain is not seen as a pastor, you're kidding yourself,” Fox said.

He argued the pastoral role sets military chaplains apart from those who work in other venues such as health care.

However, many hospital chaplains routinely perform most of the acts that NAMB trustees deemed fit for a pastor only, according to Mike Patrick, chaplain at the Hendrick Health System in Abilene. They counsel patients, perform weddings and funerals and lead worship services.

But hospital chaplains rarely administer ordinances, choosing to leave those to church staff, said Patrick, who has ministered in the hospital since 1990.

That self-limitation does not stop people from viewing him as a pastor, he said. Individuals commonly use the term in referring to him and look for chaplains to provide spiritual guidance.

“It is a generic term that many people use in ministry for someone representing God,” said Patrick, who is endorsed by the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

Of the approximately 2,500 NAMB-endorsed chaplains, 196 are women.

Twenty of the 430 NAMB-endorsed military chaplains are women.

Seven endorsed female chaplains work for the Federal Bureau of Prisons and the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Those already endorsed by NAMB and ministering in those fields can continue serving.

Chaplains working in any setting typically are required to be endorsed by a denominational entity. NAMB is the Southern Baptist Convention endorser.

The Baptist General Convention of Texas and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship also endorse chaplains and will continue endorsing women military chaplains.

NAMB formed a task force to examine the issue following a motion at the SBC annual meeting by two military chaplains who felt NAMB should make ordination a requirement for endorsed military chaplains.

Ordination is not required by the military to be a chaplain but can be required for a denominational endorser.

Endorsement is necessary to be a military chaplain.

The trustees' decision follows NAMB's 2002 action to stop endorsing all ordained women, but Fox insisted the action does not spell the end of Southern Baptist women chaplains.

They play a crucial role in Southern Baptist work, he said.

“The one thing I was real excited about is there was a stronger affirmation of women chaplains than I thought would be there,” Fox said.

The testimony the trustees heard distinguished hospital chaplaincy from military chaplaincy, Fox said.

Hospital chaplains are not called to perform many of the pastoral duties that military chaplains are to carry out, particularly when dealing with the Lord's Supper and baptism, he noted.

“I think we are satisfied,” Fox said. “We are happy with women being hospital chaplains.”

Sherry Blankenship, member of the NAMB task force and a non-ordained chaplain at Missouri Baptist Medical Center in St. Louis, insisted women chaplains serve under different circumstances in hospital and counseling roles.

She gives a “devotional” every other-week during a worship service for a crowd “about the size of a Sunday school class,” but said she is viewed as a “caregiver,” not a pastor.

She maintains the role of pastor is for men, as stated in the Baptist Faith and Message 2000.

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