Religious leaders without religion: How humanist, atheist and spiritual-but-not-religious chaplains tend to patients’ needs – The Conversation

In times of loss, change or other challenges, chaplains can listen, provide comfort and discuss spiritual needs. These spiritual caregivers can be found working in hospitals, universities, prisons and many other secular settings, serving people of all faiths and those with no faith tradition at all.

Yet a common assumption is that chaplains themselves must be grounded in a religious tradition. After all, how can you be a religious leader without religion?

In reality, a growing number of chaplains are nonreligious: people who identify as atheist, agnostic, humanist or “spiritual but not religious.”

Source: Religious leaders without religion: How humanist, atheist and spiritual-but-not-religious chaplains tend to patients’ needs | The Conversation

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