MEDIA

Memorial Day Focus Spotlight on Military Chaplains Transitioning in the Marketplace

May 23, 2013  |   tagGeneral

Chaplains have been a part of the U.S. Military for more than 200 years. On this Memorial Day, like those preceding it, these men and women will be honored for their dedication and service to the United States of America.  As veterans transition to civilian life, there is an emerging trend of their migration to the workplace chaplaincy world.

Marketplace Chaplains, America’s original and largest workplace chaplain organization, has many chaplains on staff who use their acquired military skills to help those in today’s stress-filled and problem-riddled workforce.

“When we interview veterans to possibly hire them as a Marketplace Chaplain, we know they have experience and have performed their chaplain duties under stressful conditions,” said Michigan-area Marketplace Chaplains’ Division Director Greg Duvall, a West Point graduate, who served as a helicopter pilot for the U.S. Military in Somalia.

“Certainly the servant leadership model in the military works well in the marketplace,” he added.

Marketplace Chaplains 2,700 + Marketplace chaplains are serving in 44 states, 4 countries and 1 commonwealth, with a wide variety of backgrounds. Many in leadership capacities have extensive service in military chaplaincy as well, including Gil A. Stricklin, when he founded the organization in 1984.

“For some 239 years, America’s military, the finest and most successful military force the world has ever known, has relied on dedicated chaplains to help calm and comfort soldiers, sailors and airmen in harm’s way, and a great many of those same people continue to do so in today’s workplace,” said Gil A. Stricklin.

Among the other Marketplace Chaplains who have taken their military chaplain skills into the workplace is Doug Underhill, a former Navy chaplain who served as a Marketplace Chaplains Regional Vice President until his recent retirement; Indiana chaplain Maurice Stonecypher served on a Navy submarine, Lloyd Lusher, Army veteran, of Columbus, Georgia, and Northeast Regional Vice President Andy Bunn, was commissioned as an Army officer from West Point.

“I think Marketplace Chaplains has a long history of transferring the skills needed as a military chaplain to those of a workplace chaplain, helping those hurts and hopes in the combat zones of the military and in everyday life,” said Bunn.

Stewart Wiggins, President of client company McLane Northeast Food Services, spent 9 ½ years in the Army in logistics, retiring as a captain, and said he sees an easy connection between chaplains in the military and Marketplace Chaplains at McLane Northeast.

When he was hired at McLane and found out the company had chaplains, Wiggins reverted to his military experience and knew what a good management tool it was for his staff. “People will absolutely tell chaplains things that are going on in their lives that they won’t tell their bosses,” said Wiggins.

“There is a direct correlation between the military and Marketplace Chaplains. When I was serving in the military, one of my guys was killed and the chaplain was there with everything I needed. At McLane, the chaplains have always been there, knowing what to say and do,” added Wiggins.

“It’s vital as we enter into this Memorial Day season to thank the many men and women who have served us so well in the military and those who have taken their valuable chaplain skills to serve others in the workplace, “said Richard S. De Witt, President and COO of Marketplace Chaplains and an Air Force veteran himself.