Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Fayetteville Veterans' Hospital Chaplain Speaks Out On Chapel Controversy
Archie Barringer, head chaplain at the Veterans' Administration Hospital in Fayetteville, NC, is finally speaking out on the controversy surrounding the hospital's chapel now that his early retirement has been approved. Last year, hospital officials interpreted VA neutrality requirements to mean that the Bible and cross in the chapel needed to be removed when Christian religious services were not in progress. (See prior posting.) Today's Fayetteville Observer quotes Barringer who said it was likely that hospital director Bruce Triplett would have found space for a separate non-Christian meditation room if the VA's National Chaplain Center had not gotten involved. Barringer said he will ask Fayetteville City Council to draft a resolution condemning the removal of Christian symbols from the chapel and asking the area's congressional representatives to obtain changes in the law. Barringer said: "I do not believe in using a room designated for Almighty God for other faith groups when we can provide other rooms for them." He also disclosed that at one chapel service in 2007, a chaplain concluded a pro-Christian presentation by saying that if anyone in the audience was a Muslim, a Buddhist or believed in the Dalai Lama, that they could leave.