Richard Stenbakken, Director
The phone call came in the middle of dinner
(as they often seem to do). It was from the emergency room. “A terrible accident
. . . heavy truck . . . severe injuries . . . ambulance is inbound . . . family
is on the way . . . it doesn’t look good . . . We need a chaplain immediately
. . .” Adventist chaplains are prepared to “be there immediately” because emergencies
don’t keep schedules; they rearrange them. Chaplaincy is all about responding
to people in need in settings where other clergy may not be able or willing
to go.
Chaplains of the Seventh-day Adventist Church serve people
where they are, in whatever situation they may be. That means congregations
in the middle of a remote military training exercise or actual combat, in a
prison deathrow, on a public campus, or in an emergency room. In fact, there
are nearly 750 Seventh-day Adventist full-time clergy who are professional chaplains
around the world.
The term chaplain comes to us from a fourth-century
story of Martin of Tours. Martin was a military man who encountered a shivering
naked beggar along the roadway. The man came to Martin asking for help after
several others had ridden by on their horses, ignoring the man’s desperation.
Martin had little himself, but after seeing and hearing the pleas of the beggar,
Martin took the one valuable possession he owned—his cape—and cut it in half.
He kept half as his own shelter from the cold and gave the other to the beggar.
That night, as the story goes, Martin had a vision in which he came to understand
that the beggar was none other than Christ Himself! When he related the story
to others, the remaining half of the cape became an object of value as a reminder
of the event. Later, when Martin had become a Christian himself, the cape (Latin
cappa) was kept in a special container made for it. The container was
called the cappella. Thus we get the term chapel—that place where the
robe of Christ gets shared, not stored. The keeper of the cape was known as
the cappellanus. You guessed it, “the keeper of the cape,” the cappellanus,
is where we get the word chaplain, for chaplains are the ones who share the
comfort of Christ with those in need wherever people are. Adventist chaplains
make the story an everyday reality.
Adventist Chaplaincy Ministries is the department of the
church that manages and helps develop professional chaplains throughout the
denomination and beyond, into the secular settings in which chaplains are part
of the institutions in which they minister. ACM became a fully recognized department
at the General Conference session in 1995 after being voted as a service in
1985. The impact of the 1995 action mandated that all divisions of the church
have an ACM department or contact person to help develop and manage chaplaincy
in their respective divisions. Now, five years later, each division has its
own ACM functions, thus developing a wider and stronger network for chaplains
and chaplaincy ministry globally.
As a result of the 1995 decision to form an active department,
the Adventist Church’s first-ever Global Chaplaincy Advisory was held in 1997
with representatives from eight divisions. Since then chaplains Richard Stenbakken
and Martin Feldbush have visited 35 countries to assist divisions with the development
of professional chaplaincies and policies for chaplaincy ministries.
Notable happenings in chaplaincy during the past quinquennium
include an event organized in India by the ACM director and African students
attending colleges and universities in India. The group held evangelistic meetings
in remote areas among people who had not yet been reached by the Adventist Church.
The results? Many baptisms and a new congregation. And that experience is being
repeated in other places. Students working with chaplain coordinators are making
a difference now.
All across Africa where Adventist students are enrolled
on secular campuses there are organized Adventist student groups that meet regularly
for fellowship and outreach. Their annual meetings can draw as many as 2,000
attendees.
Prison may be an unexpected place to find Adventist clergy,
yet we have them there as well. One of our prison chaplains ministers to inmates
on death row. His is the chance literally to be the last human voice someone
will hear, the last opportunity to respond to the gospel before eternity grasps
life from the condemned, and to hear it from a Seventh-day Adventist chaplain.
A regular pastor cannot go there, but the chaplain walks down that corridor
with the condemned to the appointed place of death. Chaplains are there with
the robe of Christ to bring comfort.
During a battle a group of soldiers had surrounded the enemy
soldiers and was about to rain down death on them. An Adventist military chaplain
interceded with the commander to ask the enemy to surrender and live rather
than face certain destruction. The chaplain reminded the commander of the ethical
conduct of war. The commander listened to the chaplain, had a message broadcast
over the battlefield, and was shocked to see a stream of enemy soldiers surrender.
Lives were saved because of an Adventist chaplain. Less dramatic but just as
important are the opportunities to minister to people experiencing grief and
loss, at the bedside of a loved one who has just died, or with a grieving family witnessing a burial
at sea.
In many cases Adventist chaplains are paid out of funds
other than tithe. Many health-care chaplains are paid out of the hospital operating
funds. Military chaplains are paid by the government, and correctional chaplains
are paid out of state, local, or federal funds. Professional recognition of
Seventh-day Adventist chaplains, for which the church has labored much, allows
this funding to take place. If the church were required to fund all our chaplains
from tithe, it would cost us in excess of US$20 million per year.
Like Martin of Tours, Seventh-day Adventist chaplains are
there, wherever “there” is, bringing comfort, care, and ministry to those in
need. ACM is privileged to be a catalyst for that ministry and to serve as a
mentoring agency to chaplains and chaplain administrators around the world.
If you want more information about Adventist Chaplaincy
Ministries, you may contact the department via its Web site at www.adventistchaplains.org, or
phone 301-680-6780.