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Good evening, all.
With my application on hold until September, I've been re-considering my options for the reserve, and having thought of a question for which I could not find an answer neither here, nor on the DND website, decided to formally ask it.
A little background: I am finishing my second year at McGill, and in two years, with graduate with Joint Honours in Classics (history, but focusing on the Latin side of things), and Religious Studies (focusing on East Asian religions, especially Japanese). Having finished this degree, it will be the same as having a done a major in each field, but with higher academic standards.
As my application was put on hold in January until September, i will *not* be able to do my planned, infantry officer training etc this summer. Instead, an opportunity has arisen to spend a month in Taiwan, in a Zen Buddhist monetary, through a Religious Studies/East Asian Studies programme, which got me thinking...
I have been considering the idea of eventually becoming ordained in the Buddhist tradition, but at the same time, have felt a draw to the armed forces. The obvious compromise, needless-to-say, is to become a Chaplain--but while the DND site does not say specifically that one must be Christian, they seem to allude to it by suggesting that a) I need a Master's degree in Divinity, which is offered only for Christians and b) that I might be called upon to hold masses, which again, are a Christian practice. The best one can do, if *not* studying religion from the Christian perspective, is to do a World Religions/Religious studies undergraduate degree, and some specialized graduate work, again, in some very specific aspect of, say, Buddhism.
So--can anyone clarify anything in regards to this? Any chaplains out there? From what I remember of cadet days, if you weren't Catholic, you *had* to go to the "other" mass on Sundays, if you weren't on leave, and it was a Protestant service. However, especially with Canada's growing ethnic and religious diversity, I would think that doors might be opening in regards to other faiths.
Info?
Much thanks,
-Cincinnatus
With my application on hold until September, I've been re-considering my options for the reserve, and having thought of a question for which I could not find an answer neither here, nor on the DND website, decided to formally ask it.
A little background: I am finishing my second year at McGill, and in two years, with graduate with Joint Honours in Classics (history, but focusing on the Latin side of things), and Religious Studies (focusing on East Asian religions, especially Japanese). Having finished this degree, it will be the same as having a done a major in each field, but with higher academic standards.
As my application was put on hold in January until September, i will *not* be able to do my planned, infantry officer training etc this summer. Instead, an opportunity has arisen to spend a month in Taiwan, in a Zen Buddhist monetary, through a Religious Studies/East Asian Studies programme, which got me thinking...
I have been considering the idea of eventually becoming ordained in the Buddhist tradition, but at the same time, have felt a draw to the armed forces. The obvious compromise, needless-to-say, is to become a Chaplain--but while the DND site does not say specifically that one must be Christian, they seem to allude to it by suggesting that a) I need a Master's degree in Divinity, which is offered only for Christians and b) that I might be called upon to hold masses, which again, are a Christian practice. The best one can do, if *not* studying religion from the Christian perspective, is to do a World Religions/Religious studies undergraduate degree, and some specialized graduate work, again, in some very specific aspect of, say, Buddhism.
So--can anyone clarify anything in regards to this? Any chaplains out there? From what I remember of cadet days, if you weren't Catholic, you *had* to go to the "other" mass on Sundays, if you weren't on leave, and it was a Protestant service. However, especially with Canada's growing ethnic and religious diversity, I would think that doors might be opening in regards to other faiths.
Info?
Much thanks,
-Cincinnatus