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marle35

(172 posts)
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:05 PM Feb 2015

US colleges bringing in chaplains to serve the nonbelievers

Source: AP and Yahoo

LOS ANGELES (AP) — When Bart Campolo broke with the church almost five years ago, he immediately began to feel something missing.

It wasn't so much that the pastor's son no longer believed in God; he'd never been that much of a believer anyway. What he missed, Campolo said, was what the church had represented to him: a place where like-minded people could gather for fellowship, to pursue moral justice, to help one another and to try to live good lives.

So the onetime United Methodist youth minister, who worked for decades with the poor in inner-city neighborhoods in Philadelphia and Cincinnati, figured he'd try to keep doing that by presiding over what he cheerfully calls "a church for people who don't believe in God."

Campolo, 51, joined a growing movement of college "humanist chaplains," arriving at the University of Southern California last September.

Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/us-colleges-bringing-chaplains-serve-nonbelievers-134700270.html

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US colleges bringing in chaplains to serve the nonbelievers (Original Post) marle35 Feb 2015 OP
I always find it interesting that enlightenment Feb 2015 #1
I agree. elleng Feb 2015 #3
There are many groups/organizations in a college area w/o trying to make atheism/agnostacism a relig Panich52 Feb 2015 #2

enlightenment

(8,830 posts)
1. I always find it interesting that
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:09 PM
Feb 2015

so many people feel they need a place to go in order to do what they know is right (pursue moral justice and try to live good lives). As if, somehow, they cannot do that without a support group.

I'm not criticizing - I just find it perplexing, and as such, interesting.

elleng

(131,077 posts)
3. I agree.
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:16 PM
Feb 2015

Years ago, a friend tried to encourage me to join her at a 'humanist' something. No thanks. And a good friend now is very involved in a Universalist Unitarian 'church.' Darned if I understand except we are social animals, and they want more 'society' around them than I'm interested in.

Panich52

(5,829 posts)
2. There are many groups/organizations in a college area w/o trying to make atheism/agnostacism a relig
Sun Feb 15, 2015, 03:14 PM
Feb 2015

Hard to believe someone couldn't find a comnunity to which they felt a 'belonging' or fellowship w/o it being religious in nature.
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