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Book Description A Hospital Chaplain at the Crossroads of Humanity
tells the stories of patients who represent the diversity of
divinity and the divinity of diversity-- and the commonality of
humanity. Patients who reveal a hospital is actually a global
neighborhood that calls for a chaplain to embrace diversity of
belief-"without exception." Chaplains without theological blinders.
Thus pastoral/spiritual care begins with the humanness that
prepares a chaplain to enter into and honor this global
neighborhood. The inward journey where one becomes self-aware, and
is in touch with and accepting of oneself. Such self-awareness
prepares one to understand and accept patients and their loved ones
as themselves, and to experience their reality not interpret it.
Chaplains have to know where we-- and our god-- are coming from in
order to know where patients and their families-and their god-are
at. Pastoral/spiritual care, therefore, is not about the chaplain
but about the patient. It is about the chaplain in terms of his or
her awareness that it is about the patient. Self-awareness is key--
whether one is a chaplain or another kind of caregiver or a
concerned citizen. Chaplaincy is about empowering patients and
their families not imposing any belief or value system on them. It
is about empathy not evangelism. This emphasis on the patient is
not to minimize the identity and faith of the chaplain. Rather, it
is to stress the pastoral/spiritual care qualities of
self-awareness and inner emotional security that enable the
chaplain to allow patients and their loved ones to be who they are.
The patients' stories reveal their commonality as well as their
diversity. Illness confronts all people with their mortality and
hence their vulnerability, their humanness-their oneness and
connectedness with each other. In a hospital there is the
pronounced human sharing of struggles with life and death, hope and
fear, pain and anguish, love and anger, joy and sorrow. And it is
these very struggles that bring out the tremendous wisdom patients
and their families possess. The role of pastoral/spiritual care is
to affirm these common human struggles and the wisdom they elicit
by giving them air and reverence. A hospital is a global
neighborhood that brings into sharp focus the humanness everyone
shares: a precious insight, the embracing of which facilitates
competent patient care by all staff, and, likewise, the
understanding that makes possible truly democratic and just
relationships between people and nations. Patients' come together
at the hospital's exceptional crossroads of humanity and remind us
of what our global neighborhood looks and feels and is like-like
everyone of us.
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