of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. Major claimant staff chaplains
are assigned to the following locations:
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The Chaplain, Headquarters, U.S. Coast Guard
Staff Chaplain, Chief of Naval Operations
Staff Chaplain, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Staff Chaplain, Bureau of Naval Personnel
The Chaplain, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps
Staff Chaplain, Naval Sea Systems Command
Fleet Chaplain, Commander in Chief, U.S.
Atlantic Fleet
Fleet Chaplain, Commander in Chief, U.S. Naval
Forces Europe
Staff Chaplain, Chief of Naval Education and
Training
Staff Chaplain, Naval Security Group Command
Staff Chaplain, Naval Computer Telecommuni-
cations Command
Fleet Chaplain, Commander in Chief, U.S.
Pacific Fleet
Staff Chaplain, Commander, Naval Reserve
Force
Primarily, the role of the staff chaplains is to advise
the major manpower claimants and Chief of Chaplains
on matters that bear upon the quality of ministries within
their claimancies. Claimant chaplains monitor the
billets and billet requirements for chaplains and RPs in
all units of the fleet, force, or command and advise on
the initiation of manpower authorization change
requests. The staff chaplains also monitor the Auxiliary
and Contract Chaplain Program and participate in the
naval command inspection program for the purpose of
evaluating the effectiveness of CRPs.
Supervisory Chaplains
Supervisory chaplains are senior chaplains of a
force, staff, or unit. They are department heads or
principal staff officers with responsibility to the
commander or commanding officer through the
executive officer or chief of staff for administering,
supervising, and facilitating religious ministries and
chaplain activities.
This responsibility includes the
professional supervision of chaplains, assigned enlisted
and civilian personnel, and chaplains in subordinate
commands, as appropriate.
Coordinating Chaplains
A senior chaplain who is assigned to the staff of an
area or regional area coordinator is designated as a
coordinating chaplain. When necessary, a regional area
coordinating chaplain delegates responsibilities within
a local geographical area to a local area coordinating
chaplain. Coordinating chaplains are responsible for
professional activities, ceremonies, training, and duty
chaplains watchbills among area chaplains and RPs.
Additionally, they support area civic and religious
ceremonies and activities. Coordinating chaplains also
conduct area RP applicant screening boards.
Command Religious Ministry Programs
Article 0727 of U.S. Navy Regulations, 1990,
requires commanders and commanding officers to use
all proper means to foster high morale and spiritual
well-being of the personnel under his/her command and
ensure that chaplains are provided the necessary
logistics support to carry out the commands religious
ministry programs.
With Article 0727 in mind, the Navy established the
CRP. The CRP placed the authority, responsibility, and
accountability on Navy commanders and commanding
officers to provide for the free exercise of religion by
personnel in the naval service.
Chaplains
Chaplains are professionally qualified clergy,
certified and endorsed by their ecclesiastical endorsing
agency. Chaplains are assigned or attached to a specific
command primarily to provide and facilitate religious
ministries within that command.
Chaplains are an integral part of any command.
They stimulate religious and general well-being of
command personnel as advisors to commanders,
commanding officers, and those in authority on
religious and morale matters.
Although chaplains may be assigned collateral
duties, these duties must not violate the religious
practices of the chaplains faith group or the chaplains
noncombatant status. Except as administrator or
custodian of a religious offering fund (ROF), a Navy
chaplain is prohibited from serving as director or
treasurer of fund drives or in any capacity relating to the
solicitation, collection, or disbursing of any monies.
Chaplains will not serve on a court-martial or render
judgment in disciplinary cases, except as required by
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