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Atheists Warn Football Coaches and Chaplains Not to 'Instill Christianity in Vulnerable Young Men'
Aug 24, 2015 14:23:44   #
no propaganda please Loc: moon orbiting the third rock from the sun
 
Atheists Warn Football Coaches and Chaplains Not to 'Instill Christianity in Vulnerable Young Men'
By Susan Jones | August 24, 2015 | 11:35 AM EDT
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Former Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow kneels in prayer. (AP File Photo)

(CNSNews.com) - An atheist group is demanding that publicly funded universities take immediate steps to bar Christian coaches and chaplains from "converting football fields into mission fields."

"The words of coaches and chaplains make clear that their purpose is to instill Christianity in vulnerable young men," the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) says in a new report, titled "Pray to Play."

"Public universities and their employees cannot endorse, promote, or favor religion," the report states. "Yet, many football coaches at public universities bring in chaplains -- often from their own church or even members of their own family -- to prey on and pray with students, with no regard for the rights of those students or the Constitution.

"These coaches are converting playing fields into mission fields and public universities are doing nothing to halt this breach of trust. They are failing their student athletes."

FFRF says the purpose of its report is to "expose this unconstitutional system, encourage universities to fix it, and stimulate further efforts to protect studentsÂ’ rights of conscience."

The report quotes various team chaplains to make its point that public universities are bankrolling Christian ministers who mix the roles of "coach, parent and minister, all while promoting their personal religion to athletes."

FFRF says this is a problem, even if team chaplains aren't on the school's payroll:

"No matter how chaplaincies are set up, the chaplains are treated as an official part of the university and team. Chaplains often attend team events, host team chapel services, lead teams in prayers, travel with the team, patrol the sideline, wear team apparel, have special access to coaches and players, help with recruiting, and have athletic department offices."

Moreover, the report says most universities do not have policies regarding chaplains: "They set no limitations, guidelines, or expectations for their coaches or chaplains regarding religious activities. Chaplains who appear to be school employees, are given access as school employees, and act as school employees inflict the same legal liability on schools as any other employee."

FFRFÂ’s report cautions that it is in the "best interest" of public universities to adopt policies that protect student athletes from discrimination and unlawful religious coercion.

In an August 18 letter to the University of Missouri chancellor, FFRF warned of the "legal liability that the University of Missouri exposes itself to by allowing its chaplaincy to continue," adding, "it is not a matter of if but when an issue will arise from this entanglement."

To prevent lawsuits, FFRF recommends that public universities adopt a "model policy" in which a "character coach" or a "player development coach" replaces the chaplain in instilling secular values such as respect, perseverance, humility, sportsmanship, and teamwork.

FFRF said any character development coach would be "explicitly prohibited from promoting a particular religious viewpoint, pressuring student-athletes to choose religion over non-religion, or directly or indirectly coercing student-athletes to participate in any type of religious activity."

Qualified candidates should have training in psychology, psychiatry, sports psychology, secular therapy, or a substantially equivalent field. FFRF insists that mere "divinity or religious counseling experience" does not qualify a person to hold the character development position

Susan Jones


This sounds much like the comment I received from a poster, who has since apologized, when we were discussing our work with victims of abuse.

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Aug 25, 2015 10:47:40   #
She Wolf Loc: Currently Georgia
 
To me religion is a private matter. I worship at my temple. It would not bother me for a Christian Chaplain to speak with the young people in my family. I am secure in our belief system.

But, what of the young people who are not Christian and do not wish to pray to a God they do not believe in? Does it make them feel less like a member of the team? Are they allowed to leave during the prayer without being punished in some way? I don't see why there should be any prayer connected with a game. If the young people wish to pray before a game do so in quite prayer.

I don't agree with the laws but they are the laws. If we allow one faith to have prayer, we must allow all faiths to have prayer. This is a nation of many different belief systems. We would never get to the game if every religion demanded equal time.

I don't think many Christian parents would appreciate having their child feel social pressure to pray to another God. I believe we should keep religion or lack of it private. Keep it in the temples, churches, of wh**ever your place of worship is and your home. Don't force it upon others.

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