I'm obliged and honored to share personal news: I've been elected president of my @HarvardChaplain colleagues, and the brilliant @emmabgo wrote about it for the @nytimes. Will add a đ§”here, later today.
"The New Chief Chaplain at Harvard? An Atheist."https://t.co/m5rZEqHnQV
— Greg M. Epstein (@gregmepstein) August 26, 2021
It’s no wonder that the masses of people don’t take religion seriously anymore.
The people running religious institutions don’t take religion seriously anymore.
Harvard Universityâs more than 40 chaplains have unanimously elected an atheist to be the new president of its chaplainsâ organization.
Greg Epstein, 44, a humanist who was raised in a Jewish household, will begin as president of the Harvard chaplains this week.
âThere is a rising group of people who no longer identify with any religious tradition but still experience a real need for conversation and support around what it means to be a good human and live an ethical life,â Epstein, the author of Good Without God, told the New York Times.
âWe donât look to a god for answers,â he said. âWe are each otherâs answers.â
Epstein, who also serves as humanist chaplain at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), has served as Harvardâs humanist chaplain since 2005 and, according to the Times, has been âteaching students about the progressive movement that centers peopleâs relationships with one another instead of with God.â
I have tried to show my kid around a paper copy of @nytimes on a weekly basis since he was 2 or 3, and I want to say that bought me 1 second of excitement from him, to see his dad's picture in print today. But I don't want to overstate the case!
— Greg M. Epstein (@gregmepstein) August 27, 2021
According to his bio, Epsteinâs special areas of interest include âethics in technology; meaning and purpose beyond religion; existentialism and humanism in literature and popular culture; developing healthy masculinity from a feminist perspective; secular humanistic Judaism; racial justice and healing; and the philosophy and practice of interfaith work.â
Margit Hammerstrom, Harvardâs Christian Science chaplain, told the Times electing an atheist âworksâ at the school.
âGreg is known for wanting to keep lines of communication open between different faiths,â she said.
The Times reported Epstein mentors âdozens of studentsâ who âhave found a source of meaning in the schoolâs organization of humanists, atheists and agnostics,â as young people in America have grown increasingly secular.
âGregâs leadership isnât about theology,â Charlotte Nickerson, 20, an electrical engineering student, said. âItâs about cooperation between people of different faiths and bringing together people who wouldnât normally consider themselves religious.â
A recent survey from the Cultural Research Center (CRC) at Arizona Christian University found young Americans are reshaping the country with a philosophy of life that rejects faith in God and organized worship.
The American Worldview Inventory (AWVI) 2021, an annual survey that examines the perspectives of adults aged 18 and over in the United States, found that while 57 percent of Millennials (born 1984-2002) consider themselves to be Christian, 43 percent âdonât know, care, or believe that God exists.â
These young people define success and morality in terms of personal happiness and economic social justice, the survey found, observing only 48 percent of Millennials say one should âtreat others as you want them to treat you.â
Epstein, reported the Times, often counsels students who are struggling with both personal and theological issues, helping them cope with anxiety about everyday issues, such as job-hunting, family arguments, and the pressures of dealing with social media.
Some of the students who are attracted to Epsteinâs humanist group have left their traditional faiths.
Adelle Goldenberg, 22, the Times observed, was raised in the Hasidic community in Brooklyn but found herself drawn to Epsteinâs humanist group. She described being mentored by Epstein as almost like having a secular rabbi.
âWhen the pandemic hit I was like, âGreg, do you have time to talk about the meaning of life,ââ Goldenberg said. âHe showed me that itâs possible to find community outside a traditional religious context, that you can have the value-add religion has provided for centuries, which is that itâs there when things seem chaotic.â
This is a particularly egregious and ridiculous situation. But frankly, the average evangelical church is not much more serious than this.
Making that Harvard label less prestigious by completely missing the role of a chaplain. Nicely done, you dopes.
— Suz Carragher (@TheRedDogInn) August 27, 2021
Why is he a chaplain then??? https://t.co/H0OVLqVUCb
— ElwĂ« Singollo đ§đ»ââïž (@Strangeland_Elf) August 27, 2021
It sounds like a grift. At the very least it shows that Harvard regards atheism as a more than suitable alternative to religious belief. No surprise there,but they have deprived the students of a legitimate chaplain.
— The Panda Detective (@DaveyCLand) August 27, 2021