Video Transcript: Commissioned to Visit — Your Calling as Chaplain Officiant
Henry - Well, Tom, we're at this last sojourn here at the end of this class on officiating chaplain. And so now I to me it really is just reflecting, even though it's online and we're talking together, just sort of it's time to reflect on you, the student, your role. What is the Holy Spirit putting on your heart? As you've heard now various presentations, you've read readings, and now you're saying, Okay, Lord, what is the next step for me? So let's just talk some steps through here. So step one, basically revisit your testimony, your first credential, your testimony. How did you meet Jesus? What pain or struggle has He redeemed? What milestones shaped your journey and your first credential is your testimony. And what we often talk about at Christian leaders Institute is, what have you been saved from? How has Christ saved you? Your credential is not the credential you might buy or the ordination card. It really is the truth of your own transformation. Have you noticed that, that in the end of the day, it all starts here?
Tom - Yeah, and I like that, that it's all you know. What has, how has God changed your life? What? Who are you? Because you're a new creation in Christ Jesus, you know it's, it's important to know a lot of stuff about chaplaincy, and a lot of stuff about taking care of people, and a lot of stuff about the Bible. But if it's not real in your life, you're going to have a very difficult time making it be a real thing in other people's lives, right?
Henry - So in a sense, we talked about that too, like one of the things we want all ministers to do is to have their public testimony, a little bit of their journey, to be transparent and to know that, you know they have been saved, and they need a savior. Step two, connect testimony to calling chaplaincy often grows out of your own wilderness. Who do you feel called to walk beside? What brokenness have you known where compassion stirs? Where does compassion stir in you?
Tom - And different people will feel a calling to be with other people, depending on their experiences, depending on what's happened in their lives. Some people have an affinity for medical support personnel. Some people have a desire to help, particularly people in law enforcement. Lots of opportunities in all sorts of like we talked about, the Bicycle Club, the motorcycle club, all sorts of opportunities.
Henry - Step three, discern your chaplain parish from Greek para oika to dwell beside your chaplain. Parish is your circle of influence, workplace recovery group, shelter club, online group, discerning your parish. So did you? Now you thought of it that way. You maybe didn't use the word parish, but ultimately,
talking to you last fall, and just sort of research this and seeing your life. I mean, at what point in your life did you say, This is my parish.
Tom - I'll let you know when I figure it out. Still figured it out, but you know, I I was a missionary, and loved being a missionary in the Dominican Republic. I enjoyed being a pastor, and then when I was called to become a military chaplain, it put the mission field, if you will, aspect of being in a different culture, a different place, a different world, together with parish ministry, which was teaching and counseling and discipling, it kind of put all those things together. I really felt, and feel an affinity to the Coast Guard. So I was a Navy chaplain, and then I just happened to be assigned to the Coast Guard. And it was about two days after I was assigned to the Coast Guard that I said to Jackie, this is my home. Wow. Because I love the Coast Guard mission, a humanitarian mission of saving lives. I loved getting to know the people in the Coast Guard. They're kind of a mix between the military and the fire department. You know? They're a military force. Course, but they're but saving lives and property is a huge focus. I really appreciated the people, and they were a group of people that I just felt very comfortable with. I'm not I did a Marine Corps assignment, which I appreciated, and it was a great assignment, but being around Coast Guard members, as opposed to Marines. I was much more the humanitarian side of things than the military side of things. And I don't see myself as a as a warrior as much as a lifesaver, which is more of the Coast Guard. So even in retirement, I don't want that to end. I want to continue to help people in the Coast Guard, even though it's not my job anymore. So last fall or last winter, I went and spent 10 days on an icebreaker in Alaska, on a Coast Guard ship, and I visit Coast Guard units here in the area. And I can do it when I can do it, and when I can't do it, I don't do it, but I'm, you know, I get to go to the other side of the state this week and teach a suicide class. I can, I can use the, what I hope is the credibility I've built up over many, many years to still allow me to have an impact on on that parish.
Henry - So real, practical reflections. Now, as we what is your parish? Maybe write it down. My Chaplain parish is, let that sentence shape your ministry path. And in some ways, to name it is, in some ways, the discernment comes when I know, when I named my parish is the country club, again, it's, it's not your typical parish, but it's a parish. And, you know, and these people in the country club and my friends there, who like to golf, many of them do not go to church. They have church in their residue in the background. And last year, two years ago, I had led on hole six Johnny who went through a real crisis where his girlfriend left him for someone else, and he was very upset, very, very upset. And that hole six had led him to the Lord, and he wanted to know the Lord. And interestingly enough,
he died three months later, and I did the funeral of the country. Wow, but that's an example of what we're talking about here.
Tom - And you know, you said that that's maybe not a I don't remember what word you used traditional thought of a parish, but that's why that line is so important. My Chaplain parish is you may be a person who has a connection with people who are bike riders or softball players or a fishing club or a gardening club. I mean, it can be anything, because everybody needs that reminder of the sacred and the spiritual Wow in their lives. So whether anybody else thinks of it as a parish really doesn't matter if that's where God has called you and given you a voice and an opportunity that can absolutely be your parish.
Henry - So, so, so amazing. So anyway, the steps complete your training plan. You know, timeline, goals. I know around here. This is online correspondence. So you bring the discipline to this. We don't have cohorts. You're not going to go in student debts because you need cohort. I mean, that's pretty expensive. So if you can be a self starter, okay, get your target date, get your study goals. Break down the goals, your credential goals, you know you need endorsement and endorsements for further Chaplain programs, ordination celebration goal, mark your commissioning. All of those things that you go through are about legitimacy and about building public trust, as we've talked about earlier. Step five, one of the things we have here is a soul center. And what that is, is a ministry hub, so it's publicly recognized. You have a mailing address registered with the Christian leaders Institute directory. Actually it's the Alliance directory there, I should say, anchored in a chaplain parish, you'll actually publish what you're ministering to, and it becomes a platform for weddings, funeral and care for your community. And you know, Tom, this is something I'll just comment on, because I know you don't know too much about soul centers, but what they really are about is how local, credentialed ministry Chaplain can if he has or her parish is the country club, then, hey, he's a chaplain and or a fire department. It just more and more in our society, our attorneys tell us that ministry people have to have a transparency level that. They're going to need to reveal it's not a private I'm a chaplain private. It is definitely you have a public trust in your chaplaincy, and that's true whether you're with the military or whatever. So at Christian leaders Alliance, we are making that available for people as well. We say name your soul center, like Soul cares for veterans, Hope House for recovering, recovery. Chaplaincy, healing table, grief and prayer. Ministry, crossroad, Soul center. So we actually give you some examples. Again, you don't have to have a soul center to be a credentialed chapel at the chaplain at the Christian leaders Alliance, but we are giving you ways to keep advancing your ministry. So we're at this point now for the final charge. You are not just finishing the course. You
are beginning a calling. Bring your story. Step into your parish, stay rooted in Christ, become fully present for others, As the Father has sent Me, I also sent you. This is your commissioning, go and sojourn, become a chaplain where people need Christ's presence. So we're here to wrap this up. You know, this has been fun, and I gotta tell you, Tom, you know, when I first met you, decades ago now, and to see that decades later, like your birthday is May 13, my birthday is May 14. So we just had our birthday. It's like May here. And as time goes on, I'm more conscious. I knew you're more conscious, more to reach the world, and you've seen the power of the Lord being revealed, and an army of sojourners.
Tom - Yeah, this is, this is been exciting, and I've learned a lot about chaplaincy today that I hadn't thought about before. So this is very thought provoking. Thank you.
Henry - Well, God bless you and Lord willing Tom will come back and help us even develop chaplaincy more at Christian leaders Institute and Alliance.