I.F.P.C.M
LAW ENFORCEMENT
INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION POLICE CHAPLAIN MINISTRY USA-HAITI / DOMINICANA. ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT
1) DIRECTOR PAP HTI (JEANNOT ARIZME
2) DIRECTOR NATIONAL JOSUE CESAR.
3) DIRECTOR GENERAL EDMONDE B
Charge of Spiritual Mission International./ Police Psychology Counseling. LIFE MEMBER
Membership Military Officers Association Of America
1- Indianapolis, 2- Brasil
La
w Enforcement Chaplains:
Use of chaplains to improve functioning of organizations began centuries ago with the military and continues today with hospitals, hospices, fire departments, and law enforcement agencies.
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Despite their increasing prevalence, the exact roles that chaplains fulfill vary from one organization to another. Some individuals consider the lack of a single role as a weakness in the agency’s use of chaplains. However, one of the greatest strengths of a chaplaincy program is the ability to offer a variety of services to achieve the greatest satisfaction.
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Sixty years ago chaplaincy was in its infancy due to role conflicts, such as military officer versus clergy and religious beliefs versus participation in war.
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Over time chaplains developed and improved their abilities to assist organizations by identifying unmet needs. To maximize chaplains’ effectiveness, law enforcement agencies should specifically define their roles. Police departments benefit immensely from chaplains’ services.
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Chaplains improve the overall functioning of law enforcement through involvement in correctional facilities, community-police relations, line-of-duty death notification and burial service facilitation, crisis intervention, and officer and department well-being. Corrections Facilities Chaplains commonly assist corrections administrations in the fulfillment of inmates’ religious and spiritual rights as required by the Religious Freedom Restoration
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In this capacity, chaplains help prisoners adjust psychologically to incarceration, aid in reduction of recidivism by helping them find meaning and purpose, assist with acquiring job-skills training, communicate with family, and support reentry into the community through resources and access to social networks.
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Studies indicated that inmates who engage in religious practices less likely will commit infractions while incarcerated.
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Because they are separate from law enforcement, chaplains build unique relationships with prisoners by expressing a greater degree of sympathy and providing hope for individuals who find themselves in a lonely place.
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Corrections agencies employ full-time, part-time, and volunteer chaplains.
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Individual departments decide the capacity, and many find success with a small staff of full-time chaplains who coordinate numerous volunteers. Due to shrinking budgets, volunteer chaplains prove valuable.
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They can fulfill inmates’ diverse religious needs for services, special dietary requirements, or reading materials.
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Full-time chaplains assist staff with managing the program and organizing and training volunteers, and they often achieve more education toward a chaplaincy certification. A police chaplain serves as a support system for law enforcement in times of crisis. They can be volunteers or sworn officers. They come from all faiths and are fully ordained. Some hold degrees or certifications in mental health treatment. It’s well-known that many officers are guarded by nature and can have trouble opening up about their trauma to a psychologist or other mental health professional in a formal environment. Similar to peer support programs, police chaplains can be effective in these cases because they offer a more informal source of support for the affected officer. DOESN’T THIS BLUR THE LINE BETWEEN RELIGION AND GOVERNMENT? The way chaplains are used in agencies passes the Lemon test, established by the Supreme Court in the 1971 Lemon v. This means chaplains must have a secular purpose, cannot advance nor inhibit religion, and cannot “excessively entangle” government with religion. Police chaplains aren’t there to push a religion on police officers; their role is primarily to listen and offer emotional and spiritual support to those in need. Police Chaplain Alex Evans, who worked with officers in the wake of the Virginia Tech mass shooting, described the job as one of presence.
“It’s less about what you say, and more about where you are. You show up,” Evans said in an interview with A&E. WHAT DO POLICE CHAPLAINS DO? Police chaplains have a range of responsibilities that vary from agency to agency. In addition to supporting officers struggling with issues such as burnout, stress or trauma, some chaplains also assist officers with some of their duties. These can include tasks like death notifications, crime victim support and homeless outreach. In Chicago, chaplains respond after every officer-involved shooting. Officers are required to take a daylong class after a shooting incident, part of which is led by a chaplain. In some agencies, chaplains are also taking an active role in community policing as LEOS look to bridge the post-Ferguson divide and ease tensions. Chaplains accompany officers on the beat and serve as a calming presence in everything from traffic stops to domestic disputes. HOW DO YOU BECOME A POLICE CHAPLAIN? First and foremost, handling the unique demands that come with working within the law enforcement profession requires specialized training. The nature of the job – from assisting in suicide calls to managing the aftermath of a line-of-duty death – presents significant challenges that go beyond the skill level of a traditional minister. While other requirements may vary, the International Conference of Police Chaplains – arguably the most prominent and influential chaplaincy program in the world – breaks down the qualifications like this:
No criminal convictions;
Ordained and in good standing with a ministry;
At least five years of experience in ministry;
Screened by a police chaplaincy committee;
Different type of Chaplain
1) Chaplain polytheism to Christianity
2) Chaplain Catholic Christianity
3) Chaplain early Christianity
4) Chaplain monotheisms
5) Chaplain Judaism
6) Chaplain. ecumenical.
8) Chaplain Buddhism
9) Chaplain Gospel of Christ. ext. We are Police Chaplain 100/100 of Cristo Jesus I am General Police Chaplain to serve in the Spirit of God true Frederico Petit Frere
ATTENTION TO ECUMENICAL
The Greek word oikoumenikós arrived in late Latin as oecumenĭcus, which in turn arrived in our language as ecumenical. This term is used to describe that which is universal or that encompasses the whole world. The notion is usually associated with that of ecumenism, the movement that promotes the union of Christian Churches.
2 Corinthians 3:15 "And even to this day, when Moses is read, the veil is placed over their hearts. But when they turn to the Lord, the veil will be removed."
2 Corinthians 4: 4 "In whom the god of this world has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God, may not shine on them." (The light of what? Of Catholicism, of Buddhism, of Protestantism, oh no, the light of the gospel of Christ.) The whole Bible prepares and enables man to understand that this is true, many people are scared because they have been told not to read the Bible because he goes crazy, many have been told that the Bible is not needed, that you have what what to do is come to ecumenism, it does not matter if you worship the sun, the moon, the stars, if you believe in the horoscope, practice the new age, come to ecumenism, yesterday I heard someone speaking on television and said: it is not necessary understand the Bible, or believe what is in the Bible, because it is not true that the whole truth is in the Bible, a person of the largest religion in the world said that the Bible is not all the truth, and that you could have full confidence to be able to live better with this book, that in order to truly live you had to believe tradition, the church and the word, but that this word without the tradition of men was worth nothing, what will they do when they read :
2 Timothy 3:16. "All Scripture is inspired by God, and useful to teach, to convict, to correct, to instruct in righteousness." LAW ENFORCEMENT