So you were never in the military.
No, and I never claimed to be, so if that's some kind of gotcha, it's not much of one. You comment on things you haven't personally experienced or don't have expertise in constantly, and never (that I recall) with actual links relating to the subject matter to support your claims.
Of course, the only reason we're going on this little tangent is so you can avoid addressing the actual point, that there in fact plenty of atheists serving in active duty.
So you are basing your facts on an article from where? Written by who?
Is this a joke? Click on the links and see for yourself.
I'm sure you can tell everyone about conditions in Poland in World war two or
Venezuela this week with the same level of authority as someone who was there perhaps?
Since I'm not a time traveling soldier from the future, I'm gonna say no.
But thank you for your service in the Wehrmacht and Red Army and on either past special forces ops in Venezuela or future military deployments that haven't happened yet. Like I said, impressive.
One doesn't have to personally experience something to know it exists and point you in the direction of sources to back up their claims.
As a former military person,I'd have to say I would not want an atheist being my chaplain.
What I noticed in the article was that they said the Chaplain also helps with regular counselling, but they have regular councellors for that.
A chaplain is supposed to be for 'spiritual' counselling. I can't think of an atheist helping someone with something they don't even believe. It honestly doesn't make sense.
No one would be forcing you to have an atheist chaplain. They wouldn't be "your" chaplain unless you requested them, because he's specifically asking to be assigned as a secular-humanist chaplain, which you would not choose, for obvious reasons. So what's the problem? You wouldn't choose a Muslim or Jewish or Buddhist chaplain either, I presume, so this is no different. There are people who are spiritual but not religious, who don't believe in god but have faith in other things, who don't believe in god but still need ethical and moral guidance, who might be on the fence about what they believe or not and need someone to talk to to learn more. While many of them can get the answers they need from existing chaplains or counselors, what's the harm in having someone with the training available to address their needs more specifically? Someone they might feel more comfortable with? Why are you looking at this issue strictly from your perspective instead of from others?
Also, he has a doctorate in divinity, so he knows the scripture even if he doesn't believe in a supernatural source for it. You can be an admirer of the teachings of Christ the man (or the disciples) without believing he was divine. What if someone religious requested to speak to him because they wanted an interpretation of scripture based solely on the text without your personal faith or fear or doubt of God influencing your answer? It's not like he'd conceal his lack of faith from the soldiers he was meeting, it would be disclosed in advance so they could have a choice.
Following the aphorism of "No atheists in foxholes" you raised, what if someone who was previously a non-believer found faith after a life-threatening moment and wanted to share their thoughts with someone he or she felt comfortable with as a fellow non-believer before officially "coming out" as a Christian because they're worried about sharing their previous non-belief with others who might condemn them?
My point is, what's the harm in having secular-humanist chaplains available to address the concerns of a fast-growing number of service people?