Chaplains Reach River Mariners

The 50,000 men and women who work on the nation’s waterways are rarely on dry ground long enough to attend church regularly. So a new chaplaincy ministry is bringing the church to the rivers.

Seven clergy and one lay leader from cities along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers have volunteered as chaplains as part of a ministry developed by the New York-based Seamen’s Church Institute (SCI), which has provided chaplains to ocean vessels since the 1840s.

The river chaplains’ duties include responding to calls from mariners on the program’s toll-free phone number, delivering Christian literature, and providing pastoral counseling. The volunteer chaplains—who maintain full-time positions as clergy—also rally their congregations to bake cookies and knit gloves and scarves as Christmas gifts for the boat crews.

Family tensions are common for river mariners, who typically work 30 days and have 15 days off. “These are people away from their homes, away from their support systems, their churches, for long periods of time,” says Jean Smith, director of SCI’s river chaplaincy program.

Jim Wilkinson, chaplain and pastoral coordinator with the program, sees his role more as a counselor than a pastor. “It’s a listening, learning, and sharing ministry in the workplace,” he says. An Episcopal priest and former army chaplain, Wilkinson spends two to three days each week on towboats.

Smith hopes churches in maritime communities will see the chaplaincy program as a tangible way to help mariners and their families. “I think there are a lot of churches that are looking for new ministries that are relevant to their communities,” Smith says. “If [the churches] back up to the river, it’s relevant.”

Copyright © 1999 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

The New Theologians: In a realm once dominated by theological liberals, many of today's top scholars are orthodox believers.

Cover Story

Ellen Charry: Reclaiming spiritual nurture.

Cover Story

N.T. Wright: Making Scholarship a Tool for the Church

Cover Story

Kevin Vanhoozer: Creating a theological symphony.

Cover Story

Miroslav Volf: Speaking truth to the world.

Cover Story

Richard Hays: Recovering the Bible for the church.

Cover Story

New Theologians

Napalm Victim Now Agent for Peace

Why I Love Small Churches

Max Lucado’s Maxims

Baroness Caroline Cox: The Price of a Slave

Was the Revolutionary War Justified?

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from February 08, 1999

Muddy Murals

Tales of a Reluctant Convert and more

Is Orlando New Promised Land?

Churches Accused of Electioneering

Bridging Kosovo's Deep Divisions

Neighbors Fight Cell Tower 'Cross'

In Brief: February 08, 1999

Why I Can Feel Your Pain

World Vision Boots Austrian Affiliate

Christians Recreate Jesus' Home

In Brief: February 08, 1999

New Unreached Group Targeted

Holy Land Archaeology Imperiled

Ethiopia Focus on Evangelism

Churches Retrain Workers

In Print-Does God Live in Your Brain

Key Year for Lewisian Thespians

On the Back Flap—Lewis Smedes

A Six-Pack of Strobel's

Letters

Revival: Pensacola Outpouring Eyes Global Goals

$12 Million Fraud Scheme Parallels Greater Ministries

Cuba: Did the Papal visit Change Anything?

Group Helps Communities Curb Smut

Congo: Missionaries Flee Amid Latest Fighting

Hypertext-Spirituality Sightings

Editorial

A Silent Holocaust in Iraq

The Gypsy Reformation

Trying Patience on for Size

View issue

Our Latest

Sent to Your Street

Mission isn’t just across the ocean. It’s across the street. God places his people in neighborhoods and cities so the nations might know him.

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Brooke Baldwin: Is the News Broken – or Are We?

The just life means living in the light with truth and integrity.

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Angela Stanton King: Mothers, Babies and The Measure of Justice

How ordinary people can create extraordinary change and why serving moms and protecting children belongs at the heart of justice.

The National Guard Won’t Fix Our Crime Problem

Lasting solutions come when we draw near to victims and seek God’s help in prayer.

How Then Shall America Pray?

The White House’s new prayer initiative reveals much about our national character.

News

Most Men Are Pro-Life. Activists Want Them to Speak Up.

Programs seek to help fathers voice opinions and take responsibility.

Analysis

For Kirk’s Fans, Provocation Wasn’t the Point

Young Christians in Kentucky remember how he treated question-askers and critics.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube