โฑ 1h 28m
๐ 8 lessons
๐ง Audio version
About this course
A hospital chaplain may serve a Muslim patient, a Jewish patient, an evangelical Christian, a secular humanist, and a Tibetan Buddhist on the same afternoon. A prison chaplain may hold Friday Jumah prayers in one hour and a Native American sweat lodge circle the next. The diversity of spiritual and religious need in institutional settings is not an occasional complication; it is the defining condition of the work. This course builds the foundational competencies for spiritual care in genuinely pluralistic environments.
By the end of this course you will be able to demonstrate functional religious literacy across at least six major world religious traditions, distinguish between religious literacy, cultural competency, and theological agreement as separate dimensions of interfaith care, explain the ethical framework that underlies non-coercive spiritual care in a pluralistic setting, and articulate the unique challenges of interfaith care for caregivers from faith traditions with exclusive truth claims.
What you will learn:
- Religious literacy as a professional competency: what it is, what it is not, and why it matters in care settings
- Survey of spiritual care considerations across six traditions: Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity, and Indigenous/traditional practices
- Non-religious and post-religious identities: spiritual needs outside of formal religious frameworks
- The ethics of non-imposition: how to be genuinely present across difference without abandoning your own identity
- Cultural humility versus cultural competency: the ongoing relational stance versus a checklist of facts
- Practical considerations: prayer, rituals, dietary needs, sacred objects, and end-of-life practices across traditions
- The caregiver's own tradition as both a resource and a potential obstacle in interfaith settings
- Working with religious community leaders, imams, rabbis, and clergy as partners in institutional care
The course is organized across six thematic units covering the theoretical framework, tradition-specific literacy, non-religious identities, and the application of principles to common interfaith care scenarios. Each unit combines explanatory readings, tradition-specific reference material, case examples from clinical and pastoral settings, and reflection prompts. A comparative worksheet in the final unit asks you to apply your learning to a complex multi-tradition care scenario. This course is educational; qualification as a board-certified chaplain requires accredited training and supervised experience.
This course is designed for chaplains in training, spiritual care volunteers, parish nurses, and ministry students preparing for work in diverse institutional settings. It is suitable for those new to interfaith contexts. No prior background in world religions is required, though openness to engaging traditions different from your own is essential.
What you'll get
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Certificate of completion
Add it to your LinkedIn profile
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Personal AI tutor
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๐ง
Audio version included
Learn on the go โ no screen needed
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โพ๏ธ
Lifetime access
Come back anytime, no expiry
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๐ฑ
Phone or computer
Works anywhere, any device
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30-day refund
No questions asked
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โก
Short & focused
1h 28m of practical content
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Frequently asked
What do I need to take this course?
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Just a phone or computer with internet. No installs, no special hardware.
How do I pay?
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By card via Stripe, or with cryptocurrency. We do not store card details โ Stripe handles them securely.
Can I get a refund?
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Yes โ full refund within 30 days, no questions asked.
How long will I have access?
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Forever. Once you purchase, the course is yours to revisit anytime.
Will I get a certificate?
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Yes. On completion you'll receive a certificate you can add to your LinkedIn profile.
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