Clergy: Helping Students Make The Spiritual Passage
In more serene times, the campus chaplain had little more to do than pre pare sermons for compulsory chapel and ladle out doses of manly Christian advice to the spiritually downhearted. Today, he is likely to wear wrinkled chinos instead of a turned-around collar, read Playboy as well as Plato and center his operations in a coffeehouse rather than in a Gothic church. Says Methodist Chaplain Alfred Dale, of San Francisco State College, "I'm generally where the action is."
The new clerical action seekers have brought a lot of excitement and experiment to a pastoral job that once ranked low among church assignments. Before the war, there were only a hundred full-time Methodist ministers on the nation's campuses, most of them waiting for a good parish assignment to open up. Now the Methodist Church has more than 400 full-time campus ministers, many of them so caught up by the challenge that they want the job for life.
Jazz Masses & Albee. For these chaplains, formal worship is merely the starting point of their ministry. Church services, says the Rev. Larry Rouillard, Episcopal chaplain at California's Claremont Colleges, are primarily a means of nurturing those who are already committed, not of reaching out to students. Most ministers agree with Yale's Protestant chaplain, Presbyterian William Sloane Coffin, that "liturgy doesn't carry the freight it used to," and they freely experiment with different worship forms. At M.I.T., chapel services have included everything from jazz Masses to a dance by a Radcliffe girl in leotards. Episcopal Father Malcolm Boyd, a "chaplain-at-large" to U.S. college students, often starts a prayer service with a reading from Edward Albee or from one of his own one-act plays about racial conflict in the U.S.
Princeton's Episcopal chaplain, the Rev. Rowland Cox, believes that students shy away from the open convert seeker or "the guy who wants to gimmick around with your life." "Our job is people," says the Rev. Harold Cooper, one of the Protestant chaplains at the University of Massachusetts, "and the idea is not to bring them into the fold but to help them live better lives as persons." Most chaplains today shun even such an old-fashioned evangelistic idea as a "Religious Emphasis Week"; they talk about God only when the students want to. Church-sponsored activities, often organized ecumenically by team ministers of different faiths, rarely stress their denominational origin. At Columbia, the Protestant Office sponsors a student hangout called "The Post-crypt," but Acting University Chaplain John Cannon stoutly contends that it is "not a Christian coffeehouse; it has nothing to do with evangelism at all."
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade From Hell
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- How to Get Smarter, One Breath at a Time
- Will Dubai's Financial Problems Spread Around the Globe?
- Obama's 'Mistakes': Way Too Early to Judge
- Germany's Doubts About Afghanistan Grow After Revelations About Air Strike
- Black Friday Sales Were Encouraging, Retailers Say
- Behind the Philippines' Maguindanao Massacre
- In Italy, A Sex Scandal to Rival Berlusconi's
- A Brief History Of Black Friday
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade From Hell
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- How to Get Smarter, One Breath at a Time
- Obama's 'Mistakes': Way Too Early to Judge
- Is Gene Therapy Finally Ready for Prime Time?
- How the Beans of Egypt, Maine, Sprouted a Militia
- Pie
- McDonald's Abroad
- National Affairs: Black Mammy
- Nation: LINCOLN AND MODERN AMERICA







RSS