The first thought I had was to wonder whether ADPi has any resources for chaplains.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ADPiTigergurl
We really aren't all that diverse: we have CHristians, Jews (they use the Torah, prettys sure its like 36 books of the Old Testament . . .
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Just FYI, the Torah is the first
5 books of the Christian Old Testament. The Hebrew Bible (the
Tanakh or
Mikra) consists of the Law (
Torah), the Prophets (
Nevi'im) and the Writings (
Ketuvim). It basically consists of the 39 books of the Protestant, or shared Christian, Old Testament, altough the books are ordered, grouped and numbered differently, so that what is 39 books in the Protestant Old Testament = 21 books in the Tanakh.
And yes, I referred to the Protestant Old Testament. For historical reasons, Catholic and Orthodox Old Testaments have books and material that is not in the Protestant Old Testament. The original Christian Bibles used the Greek version of the Jewish Bible (the Septuagint) as a source, not the Hebrew version. The Septuagint included books and passages that the Hebrew version did not. At the Reformation, Protestants rejected all portions of the Old Testament not found in the Hebrew version, leaving the 39 books recognized by all Christian churches. The Septuagint "extras" are sometimes published separately in Protestant Bibles as the Apocrypha.
More than you wanted to know, I'm sure, but potentially helpful info I hope if you're trying to be sensitive to different traditions represented in your chapter.
Thus endeth the lesson for today.
Quote:
Originally Posted by DrPhil
This is not an issue in every collegiate and graduate chapter because some chapter members are so close that they do know someone's professed faith, including chapters that attend religious services together.
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It's also not an issue for some groups because some groups do not have a chaplain position and do not incorporate anything like devotions into their meetings or activities.