As a candidate, Joe Biden promised a pivot toward multilateral cooperation. But on foreign policy and the border, parallels with the Trump administration are striking.
The headlines struck a provocative note: 鈥淗arvard鈥檚 atheist chaplain: It鈥檚 another sign of America鈥檚 growing secularism,鈥 and 鈥淭he New Chief Chaplain at Harvard? An Atheist.鈥 The stories fed concerns that an elite, liberal university was pushing its secular agenda onto faith-based campus organizations. And this at a time when studies show fewer young people are affiliated with organized religion.聽
But the story turns out to be quite different.
The man who galvanized such attention, Greg Epstein, was elected unanimously last spring by 30 colleagues to serve as president of Harvard Chaplains. It wasn鈥檛 until news reports about him surfaced earlier this month that people took to social media to voice objections.聽聽
Mr. Epstein, who wrote the book 鈥淕ood Without God: What a Billion Nonreligious People Do Believe,鈥 is considered by his colleagues to be a thoughtful and experienced chaplain. The humanist tradition to which he belongs is more concerned with living a moral life through self-reflection, discussion, and good works than with adhering to doctrine or believing in a higher power.聽
One of Mr. Epstein鈥檚 peers, Pete Williamson, an evangelical 海角大神 chaplain, wrote a defense of his colleague in 海角大神ity Today. The article, explains that the media had mischaracterized the president鈥檚 role, which is to advocate on behalf of the entire group, including evangelical 海角大神, Protestant, Roman Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, and other chaplaincies.
鈥淭he mission of Epstein鈥檚 chaplaincy is not to convince people to become atheists but rather to serve students who find themselves without faith (of which there are many at Harvard),鈥 Mr. Williamson writes. He also argues that the cooperative, interfaith nature of the group 鈥 which does not influence doctrine or hold sway over the independent chaplaincies 鈥 has made Harvard a more welcoming place for students who are religiously affiliated or interested in becoming so.