Chaplain 'school' offered at BYU

Published: Tuesday, Feb. 17 2009 12:04 a.m. MST

The U.S. military requires chaplain candidates to earn graduate degrees

that include at least 36 hours of course work in religious study.

In the past, such a rule posed an uneasy challenge for church members in

uniform hoping to become an Army, Navy or Air Force chaplain. Without a

traditional "divinity" school of their own to attend, LDS candidates often

enrolled in a graduate school operated by another religion to satisfy

"religious study" requirements.

Now LDS candidates have another option. Since last summer, seven LDS

chaplain candidates have been enrolled in Brigham Young University's

master's of religious education program. They are participating in graduate

courses generally populated by seminary and institute teachers.

The church-owned school has not been able to accommodate all chaplain

candidates in the competitive program, "but it's a beginning," said Frank

Clawson, director of the church's military relations office that oversees

the endorsement of LDS chaplains.

"We're excited about what we're seeing," added Roger Keller, a BYU

professor of church history and world religion and director of the school's

chaplain program.See the rest of this story at ldschurchnews.com.


This story is provided by the LDS Church News, an official publication of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It is produced weekly by the Deseret News.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS