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Chaplaincy and Spiritual Care in the Twenty-First Century

By: Wendy Cadge - editor, Shelly Rambo - editor
Narrated by: Tanya Eby
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Publisher's summary

Wendy Cadge and Shelly Rambo demonstrate the urgent need, highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic, to position the long history and practice of chaplaincy within the rapidly changing landscape of American religion and spirituality. This book provides a much-needed road map for training and renewing chaplains across a professional continuum that spans major sectors of American society, including hospitals, prisons, universities, the military, and nursing homes.

Written by a team of multidisciplinary experts and drawing on ongoing research at the Chaplaincy Innovation Lab at Brandeis University, Chaplaincy and Spiritual Care in the Twenty-First Century identifies three central competencies—individual, organizational, and meaning-making—that all chaplains must have, and it provides the resources for building those skills. Featuring profiles of working chaplains, the book positions intersectional issues of religious diversity, race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and other markers of identity as central to the future of chaplaincy as a profession.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2022 The University of North Carolina Press (P)2022 Audible, Inc.
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What listeners say about Chaplaincy and Spiritual Care in the Twenty-First Century

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Useful, and also not that useful

Useful: This book describes the often overlooked interpersonal aspects of chaplain ministry. There are some approaches and intervention methods you will find useful.

Not useful: this book is way too focused on race and gender (it is super woke)—the book is saturated in it. Unsurprisingly, they even present paradigms for assessment and intervention based on that worldview.

Either way, I’d still recommend reading it; you will still learn a couple useful things.

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Very good read, highly recommend! Good narration p

Very good read, highly recommend! Good narration performance. Good information, easily understandable. Will listen again!

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A helpful modern overview of chaplaincy

This book presents a modern view of chaplaincy’s role in society. Highly recommend recommended. The recording is well produced.

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20 Year Chaplain and Trainer of Chaplains

As a professional healthcare chaplain of 20 years and as one who actively trains chaplains, this is the best book on Audible about chaplaincy. To those who believe it to be "too woke," if you approach a patient with racism, sexism, homophobic, transphobic, religious intolerance, or any other unchecked bias, you will do harm. Chaplaincy is about the spiritual care of vulnerable people in crisis. You must approach with compassion and openness if you want to be of help. If that is too woke, please feel free to go back to sleep, find another book, and not be a chaplain.

The book covers the history, the basic functions of professional chaplains, and a small introduction to how one becomes a chaplain. It contains many examples from diverse chaplains, diverse care situations, and diverse contexts because that is who chaplains are and where they serve.

The book is the culmination of many hours of work of hundreds of professional chaplains, ACPE educators, and academic professors. No book is perfect, but this one does a good job of presenting the world of professional chaplaincy in the 2020s.

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More of a liberal playbook

This book is marketed as a guide for chaplaincy. But that seems like a secondary objective, only after the reader acknowledges and agrees with leftist ideals.
As an example, words like spirituality, empathy, or patient care, appear a fraction of of the time when compared to words like patriarchy, systemic (used in the context of racism, sexism, or oppression), or critical race theory. This really isn’t so much a helpful guide for chaplains as it is guilting of conservatives using extreme examples.

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Good but Woke

Some great information in here but all of the woke ideology of race and religious pluralism is ridiculous.

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Bias Ahead: Humanist, Critical Race Theory

"This part of the volume represents its' authors conviction that chaplains, in whatever sector they serve, are called to dismantle white supremacy and its component isms, including racism, sexism, and classism..." p193. The thread of humanistic ideology and Critical Race Theory is strung throughout the text. If you became a chaplain to "dismantle" the institution this is your book, if not, avoid this text.

What I find interesting and frustrating is how the authors assert that white supremacy is ubiquitous within our culture and demand readers to unquestionably adopt this viewpoint. They suggest that unless one subscribes to the notion that every institution is inherently tainted by white supremacy, they’re in the wrong and must be re-educated until they fully embrace the tenets of Critical Race Theory (CRT). Thus they are to commit to dismantling all existing structures because they are all bad. What is ironic is that even if a white, heterosexual, Christian male aligns with CRT, they’re still portrayed as part of the problem.

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Trash

Was a great book until Chapter 10. Last 2 Chapters killed the whole book.

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