Theos’ stand on this is quite miffed. (It is a “theological discussion” site, remember….)<\/p>\n
Where chaplaincy provision is removed it is not replaced by secular pastoral support – assuming \u00e2\u20ac\u0153You are only a ‘lumbering robot’ programmed by your genes so you shouldn’t fear an eternity of non-existence,\u00e2\u20ac\u009d qualifies as pastoral support. Instead, it is simply lost to those most in need.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
(I personally would be quite cheered by a deathbed counsellor who said something like that.)<\/p>\n
Admittedly, NHS chaplains don’t force their attentions on the unwilling. However, the appearance of “caring” soul-seeking religious vampires can be one of the minor horrors of serious illness for non-believers and half-arsed believers alike. I know of a Catholic mother who called in a priest to sneakily administer the last rites to her (unconscious) dying atheist daughter, over the very strongly-expressed wishes of the dying woman’s husband. <\/p>\n
There is a subtle idea underpinning the whole concept of the NHS chaplain that expresses the silly ” no atheists in foxholes” myth. This is that fear can not only overpower reason but that it should. Some things are too hard to bear. If our levels of fear or grief or pain are really enormous, we start craving for impossible, magical solutions and trying to bargain our way out. That seems to be a natural part of being a human. It doesn’t make religion true.<\/p>\n
Religions promise false escape routes, in exchange for believing their myths, observing their regulations and, usually, handing over a contribution. This is basically taking advantage of the sick and grieving. So, I’d have to say that the loss of a 54,000 chaplain-hours is at least another half a million chaplain hours too few.<\/p>\n
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\nGratuitous aside for connoisseurs of tv so bad that it’s good
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\nDoes anyone else remember an ultra-low-budget Scottish 1980s daytime tv production called “Airport Chaplain?” The entire series was in that title….
\nStorylines were things like “man has heart attack on plane. He needs the last rites! But there’s a snowstorm and a priest can’t get there in time! Can the C of E airport chaplain get away with delivering the last rites?” <\/p>\n
It was so beyond any concepts of “naff” or “camp” that my brother and I even produced a fanzine for it. <\/p>\n