Thursday, April 2, 2009

POLITICAL CORRECTNESS 101

THIS IS OBSCENE.

NOBODY IN THEIR RIGHT MIND BELIEVES THIS IS REASONABLE.



Chaplains were told Feb. 23 to "cease and desist from using God in prayers."

THAT'S CRAZY. IT'S FAKE NEWS. SEE COMMENT BELOW.

Noting that spirituality has been linked to mortality and morbidity rates, Staver added: "To excise God from someone who is a grief counselor is an extreme and uncalled-for response.




A chaplain at Hospice by the Sea in Boca Raton has resigned, she says, over a ban on use of the words "God" or "Lord" in public settings.

Signorelli said that she and other chaplains were told Feb. 23 to "cease and desist from using God in prayers."

"CEASE AND DESIST FROM USING GOD IN PRAYERS????" THIS DIDN'T HAPPEN. IT'S FAKE NEWS TO MAKE SECULARISTS LOOK LIKE LUNATICS.

Signorelli said her supervisor recently singled her out for delivering a spiritual reflection in the chapel that included the word "Lord" and had "a Christian connotation."


Ban on word 'God' at meetings has chilling effect, she says





Chaplains still speak freely of the Almighty in private sessions with patients or families but, the Rev. Mirta Signorelli said: "I can't do chaplain's work if I can't say 'God' — if I'm scripted."

Hospice CEO Paula Alderson said the ban on religious references applies only to the inspirational messages that chaplains deliver in staff meetings. The hospice remains fully comfortable with ministers, priests and rabbis offering religious counsel to the dying and grieving.

"I was sensitive to the fact that we don't impose religion on our staff, and that it is not appropriate in the context of a staff meeting to use certain phrases or 'God' or 'Holy Father,' because some of our staff don't believe at all," Alderson said.



Signorelli, of Royal Palm Beach, said the hospice policy has a chilling effect that goes beyond the monthly staff meetings. She would have to watch her language, she said, when leading a prayer in the hospice chapel, when meeting patients in the public setting of a nursing home and in weekly patient conferences with doctors, nurses and social workers.

"If you take God away from me," she said, "it's like taking a medical tool away from a nurse."

A devout Christian who acquired a master's degree in theology after a career as a psychologist, running a program for abused and neglected children, Signorelli has been ministering to the dying for 13 years. She worked at the Hospice of Palm Beach County before moving seven years ago to Hospice by the Sea, a community-based nonprofit organization that cares for terminally ill patients in Palm Beach and Broward counties.

"But that was the 23rd Psalm," Signorelli said — not, strictly speaking, Christian, as it appears in the Old Testament.

"And I am well aware that there were people from the Jewish tradition in attendance. I didn't say Jesus or Allah or Jehovah. I used 'Lord' and 'God,' which I think are politically correct. I think that's as generic as you can get."

Signorelli resigned Feb. 25.

None of the six other chaplains objected to the ban on God's name, she said.

Alderson said she was surprised by Signorelli's reaction to what she characterized as a minor administrative directive aimed solely at improving the decorum of monthly staff meetings, where the desired tone from a chaplain should be motivational, not religious.

Alderson said it started after she asked a chaplain — not Signorelli — to say something "inspirational" and "thought-provoking" at a staff meeting. The remarks did not strike the secular tone she wanted, Alderson said. So, "I issued some guidelines."

Guidelines from HealthCare Chaplaincy, a multi-faith organization, state that professional chaplains should "reach across faith group boundaries and not proselytize." But they don't tell chaplains to refrain from speaking about God.

"I hope this is some sort of misunderstanding," said Rita Kaufman, spokeswoman for the Association of Professional Chaplains, based in Schaumburg, Ill.

Hospice of Palm Beach County has not barred "God," marketing director Karen Stearns said. It does direct chaplains to be sensitive to patients' religious sensibilities.

Likewise, a ban on the word "God" was new to Mathew Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel, a religious-freedom organization based in Orlando.

"That seems quite bizarre, and a significant restriction on her freedom of speech," Staver said.

Noting that spirituality has been linked to mortality and morbidity rates, Staver added: "To excise God from someone who is a grief counselor seems to be an extreme and uncalled-for response."




it is not appropriate in the context of a staff meeting to use certain phrases or 'God' or 'Holy Father,' because some of our staff don't believe at all,"


Utter bullshit. I don't believe at all; but I'm not going to be offended if people make references to their God. They must think that non theists are delicate little flowers, for whom the mere mention of, what to we atheists is a fictional character, will upset us.
They might as well ban use of the word Unicorn. Or those crazies who whenever you meet, they ask what star sigh you are. Actually it is very insulting to us atheists. Now that does take talent. To insult Religion and atheism at the same time.


ONE WRONG COMMENT;

"Leftists - cruel, controlling and self righteous to the end".

NO. NOT LEFTISTS. LUNATICS. AND ANTI PROGRESSIVES THAT ARE TRYING TO MAKE US LOOK CRUEL AND CONTROLLING. SO AN ARTICLE LIKE THIS GETS A LOT OF PRESS, AND IT'S FALSLY REPORTED, SEE COMMENT BELOW. IT'S THE VAST RIGHT WING CONSPIRACY. JUST LIKE THE VAST LEFT WING CONSPIRACY. GET USED TO IT. LYING AND MUDSLINGING HAS BEEN AROUND FOREVER.

1 comment:

  1. There is no ban on God at Hospice by the Sea. Never was, never will be. Here is the statement from the senior chaplain, who was present at the meeting in which the suggestion to be sensitive to the religious views of all employees at staff meetings was discussed.
    Six of seven chaplains understood the suggestion.

    STATEMENT FROM FRED MORTENSEN, SENIOR CHAPLAIN
    Hospice by the Sea
    March 18, 2009

    Hospice is a collection of services including medical, nursing, psychological and spiritual. Beyond that it is a life-affirming philosophy that exists on the crossroad of living and dying. It is a rare privilege to us as Spiritual Care Counselors at Hospice by the Sea to be invited into the lives of patients and families as they navigate that crossroad.

    The recent attention drawn by Chaplain Mirta Signorelli to the use of specific religious or spiritual language now gives us the opportunity to clarify exactly where we stand. What is the policy surrounding the use of specific religious terms or titles? There is no policy.

    Chaplain Signorelli’s statement that Hospice by the Sea has restricted use of the word ‘God’ or any deity is wrong.

    The only time the issue has risen among our hospice team has been concerning all-staff meetings that do not in any way include patients or families. Spiritual Care Counselors are provided the opportunity to offer a brief word of encouragement to the staff at these meetings. Our administration reminded us that our staff is a diverse group. We have many traditions, backgrounds and beliefs represented. That is a huge part of our strength in the communities we serve. The suggestion – not a policy, not a directive – was that we remember this as we provide ongoing support to the entire staff. We want to include everyone and exclude no one. The suggestion only referred to our participation in monthly all-staff meetings. In no way was it intended by administration as applying to patient care. The Spiritual Care team, with the exception of Chaplain Signorelli, understood this.

    At Hospice by the Sea every single expression of faith, spirituality, culture, and tradition is permitted and encouraged. Any language appropriate to that expression is permitted and encouraged. Any name by which people identify their core beliefs is permitted and encouraged. Whether that expression involves many words and meaningful ritual, or silence and no ritual, it is permitted and encouraged. All these expressions are accepted by the entire Interdisciplinary Team that serves them.

    The community should remain confident that the patients and families we serve will continue to be offered Spiritual Care in all its possibilities and expressions as they so desire. We remain proud and committed to serve the mission of Hospice by the Sea.

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