Monica Sanford
Since 2021, Rev. Dr. Monica Sanford is the Assistant Dean for Multireligious Ministry in the Office of Ministry Studies at Harvard Divinity School. Dr. Sanford works to improve accessibility and support for students historically unable to access graduate-level "theological" education in the U.S. so that they may develop into religious and spiritual leaders within a variety of vocational fields. She is also the chair of the Buddhist Ministry Committee and leads efforts to expand programs in other non-Christian 'ministry' areas at HDS, such as those serving Hindus, Muslims, Jews, Pagans, Indigenous traditions, spiritual, and secular students and their communities.
Dr. Sanford was one of only two Buddhists in North America to lead a religious life department at a college or university. As the head of Spirituality & Religious Life at Rochester Institute of Technology, Rev. Dr. Sanford oversees a program with active on-campus Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Pagan, and Muslim communities and student clubs, while also coordinating interfaith programs and an innovative outreach program for secular/non-religious students called “Department 42.” RIT is a STEM-focused campus of 19,000+ students from all over the United States and the world. Trained as a Buddhist chaplain (MDiv, 2013) and ordained as a Buddhist lay minister in a Chan lineage (2015), Rev. Dr. Sanford also received her PhD in Practical Theology (spiritual care & counseling) from Claremont School of Theology (2018) with a first-of-its-kind qualitative study of Buddhist chaplains working in interfaith settings, such as hospitals, colleges, and the military. She is currently transforming her dissertation into the first comprehensive textbook for Buddhist spiritual care (expected in 2020).
Supervisors: Duane Bidwell, CST
Phone: 585-475-2137
Address: Schmitt Interfaith Center, 40 Lomb Memorial Drive, Rochester, NY 14623
Dr. Sanford was one of only two Buddhists in North America to lead a religious life department at a college or university. As the head of Spirituality & Religious Life at Rochester Institute of Technology, Rev. Dr. Sanford oversees a program with active on-campus Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Pagan, and Muslim communities and student clubs, while also coordinating interfaith programs and an innovative outreach program for secular/non-religious students called “Department 42.” RIT is a STEM-focused campus of 19,000+ students from all over the United States and the world. Trained as a Buddhist chaplain (MDiv, 2013) and ordained as a Buddhist lay minister in a Chan lineage (2015), Rev. Dr. Sanford also received her PhD in Practical Theology (spiritual care & counseling) from Claremont School of Theology (2018) with a first-of-its-kind qualitative study of Buddhist chaplains working in interfaith settings, such as hospitals, colleges, and the military. She is currently transforming her dissertation into the first comprehensive textbook for Buddhist spiritual care (expected in 2020).
Supervisors: Duane Bidwell, CST
Phone: 585-475-2137
Address: Schmitt Interfaith Center, 40 Lomb Memorial Drive, Rochester, NY 14623
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The profession of chaplaincy was originally a Christian vocation but began expanding to serve the needs of multireligious careseekers and train caregivers of various religious backgrounds in the 20th century. Thus, while chaplaincy is now a profession open to all comers, including Buddhists, humanists, and atheists, many of the educational, training, and professional standards for certification or licensing are still normed against Christian expectations and legacy organizational structures, particularly in North America, Europe, and the British Commonwealth. In the countries where Buddhist chaplaincy is flourishing in the early 21st century, different groups are developing degree programs, training opportunities, and professional expectations that accord with their local regulatory bodies and other forms of existing chaplaincy certification. In Asian nations, Buddhists are stepping forward to build standards for providing spiritual care in the context of cultural institutions that are not typically religious (e.g., hospitals and schools).
Diverse settings and differing requirements lead to distinctions between Buddhist chaplaincy in different countries. However, some of the core competencies for spiritual care are very consistent: compassion, listening, ritual proficiency, cultural understanding, and reflection. Buddhist and non-Buddhist chaplains alike agree to a fundamental skill set to care for people who are suffering in the various institutions where they work and volunteer. Distinctions between Buddhist and other forms of spiritual care are based on the care model employed, whether strictly co-religionist (i.e., Buddhists caring for Buddhists) or interfaith (i.e., Buddhists caring for all). In the latter case, professional chaplains (of any religion) are trained to provide spiritual care from the spiritual or religious worldview of the careseeker. As such, most Buddhist chaplains must possess basic knowledge and competency in many world religions. Nevertheless, Buddhist spiritual care may be distinct in its theory (Dharma based) and place more emphasis on mindfulness, meditation, and other contemplative techniques to benefit both careseekers and chaplains. Spiritual care that is “Dharma-based” means based on the teachings of the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, and/or the Buddhist traditions and teacher who followed after him. This includes a broad range of texts and teachings across the Buddhist world. As an emerging field, there is little literature on Buddhist chaplaincy, so it is currently somewhat difficult to say what theories and practices will come to dominate the profession.
This paper presents University of the West in Rosemead, California, as a case study of a Buddhist-founded university practicing and communicating a value for religious pluralism. It describes the philosophical and historical foundations for religious pluralism within UWest, describes how pluralism exists and is encouraged on campus, and explores some foundational worldviews of Buddhists that enable both value for one's own tradition and openness to other traditions simultaneously.
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This chapter covers two primary areas of concern for Buddhist chaplains in higher education. First, it will outline the needs of college-aged young adults for spiritual support and the role of the campus chaplain and religious life office in meeting those needs. Going to college is often the first time that young adults are dislocated from their families and religious communities. At this age, students begin a process of spiritual questing to develop a “self-authored worldview” that is either a renewed commitment to their religious upbringing, integrating their family traditions with new ideas they encounter in college, or an exploration of new spiritual/religious (or non-spiritual/religious) paths. Chaplains are integral to this process while also providing general support to student undergoing other common college stressors. Finally, chaplains provide crucial religious services to students who are unable to attend their home temples or sanghas and may find it difficult to leave campus due to lack of transportation. Attending regular religious services on campus is a crucial support during their education.
Second, this chapter briefly discusses the structural barriers that currently prevent Buddhist chaplains from operating on college campuses at a level similar to Christian and Jewish counterparts. Structural barriers exist in two forms: within the institutions of higher education and within the Buddhist communities. Institutions place requirements on campus chaplains that are tailored towards Christian and Jewish chaplains, but difficult to meet for Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Pagans, and other religious minority groups. However, even when Buddhist chaplains can meet these requirements, there is often a lack of support for their work on college campuses from within the Buddhist communities. Part of the structure for religious life in higher education in western countries is a reliance on the religious communities themselves to fund the work of their representatives on college campuses. Christian and Jewish institutions have developed funding structures to support this work. Buddhist and other minority religions have not, resulting in an underrepresentation of services on college campuses at precisely the time when student enrollment from their religious traditions is increasing. This paper will conclude with recommendations for how Buddhist communities in the west can meet the needs of college students during this critical stage of their spiritual development.
The profession of chaplaincy was originally a Christian vocation but began expanding to serve the needs of multireligious careseekers and train caregivers of various religious backgrounds in the 20th century. Thus, while chaplaincy is now a profession open to all comers, including Buddhists, humanists, and atheists, many of the educational, training, and professional standards for certification or licensing are still normed against Christian expectations and legacy organizational structures, particularly in North America, Europe, and the British Commonwealth. In the countries where Buddhist chaplaincy is flourishing in the early 21st century, different groups are developing degree programs, training opportunities, and professional expectations that accord with their local regulatory bodies and other forms of existing chaplaincy certification. In Asian nations, Buddhists are stepping forward to build standards for providing spiritual care in the context of cultural institutions that are not typically religious (e.g., hospitals and schools).
Diverse settings and differing requirements lead to distinctions between Buddhist chaplaincy in different countries. However, some of the core competencies for spiritual care are very consistent: compassion, listening, ritual proficiency, cultural understanding, and reflection. Buddhist and non-Buddhist chaplains alike agree to a fundamental skill set to care for people who are suffering in the various institutions where they work and volunteer. Distinctions between Buddhist and other forms of spiritual care are based on the care model employed, whether strictly co-religionist (i.e., Buddhists caring for Buddhists) or interfaith (i.e., Buddhists caring for all). In the latter case, professional chaplains (of any religion) are trained to provide spiritual care from the spiritual or religious worldview of the careseeker. As such, most Buddhist chaplains must possess basic knowledge and competency in many world religions. Nevertheless, Buddhist spiritual care may be distinct in its theory (Dharma based) and place more emphasis on mindfulness, meditation, and other contemplative techniques to benefit both careseekers and chaplains. Spiritual care that is “Dharma-based” means based on the teachings of the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, and/or the Buddhist traditions and teacher who followed after him. This includes a broad range of texts and teachings across the Buddhist world. As an emerging field, there is little literature on Buddhist chaplaincy, so it is currently somewhat difficult to say what theories and practices will come to dominate the profession.
This paper presents University of the West in Rosemead, California, as a case study of a Buddhist-founded university practicing and communicating a value for religious pluralism. It describes the philosophical and historical foundations for religious pluralism within UWest, describes how pluralism exists and is encouraged on campus, and explores some foundational worldviews of Buddhists that enable both value for one's own tradition and openness to other traditions simultaneously.
This chapter covers two primary areas of concern for Buddhist chaplains in higher education. First, it will outline the needs of college-aged young adults for spiritual support and the role of the campus chaplain and religious life office in meeting those needs. Going to college is often the first time that young adults are dislocated from their families and religious communities. At this age, students begin a process of spiritual questing to develop a “self-authored worldview” that is either a renewed commitment to their religious upbringing, integrating their family traditions with new ideas they encounter in college, or an exploration of new spiritual/religious (or non-spiritual/religious) paths. Chaplains are integral to this process while also providing general support to student undergoing other common college stressors. Finally, chaplains provide crucial religious services to students who are unable to attend their home temples or sanghas and may find it difficult to leave campus due to lack of transportation. Attending regular religious services on campus is a crucial support during their education.
Second, this chapter briefly discusses the structural barriers that currently prevent Buddhist chaplains from operating on college campuses at a level similar to Christian and Jewish counterparts. Structural barriers exist in two forms: within the institutions of higher education and within the Buddhist communities. Institutions place requirements on campus chaplains that are tailored towards Christian and Jewish chaplains, but difficult to meet for Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Pagans, and other religious minority groups. However, even when Buddhist chaplains can meet these requirements, there is often a lack of support for their work on college campuses from within the Buddhist communities. Part of the structure for religious life in higher education in western countries is a reliance on the religious communities themselves to fund the work of their representatives on college campuses. Christian and Jewish institutions have developed funding structures to support this work. Buddhist and other minority religions have not, resulting in an underrepresentation of services on college campuses at precisely the time when student enrollment from their religious traditions is increasing. This paper will conclude with recommendations for how Buddhist communities in the west can meet the needs of college students during this critical stage of their spiritual development.
This presentation will cover two primary areas of concern for Buddhist chaplains in higher education. First, it will outline the needs of college-aged young adults for spiritual support and the role of the campus chaplain and religious life office in meeting those needs. Going to college is often the first time young adults are dislocated from their families and religious communities. At this age, students begin a process of spiritual questing to develop a “self-authored worldview” that is either a renewed commitment to their religious upbringing, an integration of their family traditions with new ideas they encounter in college, or exploration of new spiritual/religious (or non-spiritual/religious) paths. Chaplains are integral to this process and also provide general support to student undergoing other common college stressors. Finally, chaplains provide crucial religious services to students who are often unable to attend their home temples or sanghas and often find it difficult to leave campus due to lack of transportation. Attending regular religious services on campus is a crucial resource during their education.
Second, this presentation will discuss the structural barriers that currently prevent Buddhist chaplains from operating on college campuses at a level similar to Christian and Jewish counterparts. Structural barriers exist in two forms: within the institutions of higher education and within the Buddhist communities. Institutions place requirements on campus chaplains that are tailored towards Christian and Jewish chaplains, but difficult to meet for Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Pagans, and other religious minority groups. However, even when Buddhist chaplains can meet these requirements, there is often a lack of support for their work on college campuses from within the Buddhist communities. Part of the structure for religious life in higher education in western countries is a reliance on the religious communities themselves to fund the work of their representatives on college campuses. Christian and Jewish institutions have developed funding structures to support this work. Buddhist and other minority religions have not, resulting in an underrepresentation services on college campuses at precisely the time when student enrollment from their religious traditions is increasing. This paper will conclude with recommendations for how Buddhist communities in the west can meet the needs of college students during this critical stage of their spiritual development.
This workshop introduces participants to a framework that integrates compassion and self-care, meditation practices from the Buddhist tradition to cultivate compassion, equanimity, and awareness, and describes a Buddhist understanding of compassion, especially as it pertains to the work of chaplains and other caregivers and in relation to self-care for caregivers.
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Kalyāṇamitra: A Model for Buddhist Spiritual Care is the book Buddhist chaplains have been waiting for. Rev. Dr. Monica Sanford presents research and analysis into the professional practice of Buddhist spiritual care based on the work of actual chaplains in hospitals and hospices, the military, prisons, and colleges. Just like their Christian counterparts, Buddhist chaplains provide spiritual care to distressed people from a variety of religious backgrounds, including people who aren’t religious at all, but still need a caring companion in times of crisis. Kalyāṇamitra is one of less than a dozen books about this young, but growing profession, and the first to present a comprehensive theory for Buddhist spiritual care.
Chapter 1 describes what a Buddhist chaplain is, including definitions of terms and vivid stories that paint the picture of the work they do. A personal narrative from Rev. Dr. Sanford outlines the process of personal and spiritual formation Buddhists experience as they learn to both be and do the work of a chaplain. The chapter concludes with an introduction to the practice of reflection, sometimes called “theological reflection,” an essential skill for putting one’s spiritual and religious knowledge to work in an interreligious and intercultural world.
Chapter 2 describes what Buddhist chaplains do, starting with a careful summary of the sources of Dharma that guide a Buddhist chaplain’s practice. Rev. Dr. Sanford reviews texts from Theravada, Mahayana, and Vajrayana sources – both ancient and modern – in a cogent and accessible way, ensuring that this work is valuable to Buddhists of any background. The chapter also describes the role of traditional teachers and sanghas in the support and formation of Buddhist chaplains. It furthers the training in reflection begun in chapter 1, before diving into a careful description of each of the contexts in which Buddhist chaplains work – healthcare, the military, prisons, and colleges and universities. It concludes with an analysis, based on data derived from Rev. Dr. Sanford’s unique study of chaplains in the field, of how to determine the effectiveness of spiritual care provided to those in need.
Now that readers have a good sense of who Buddhist chaplains are and what they do, Chapter 3 presents the first comprehensive theory of Buddhist chaplaincy – the Three Prajñās Framework for Spiritual Care. Rev. Dr. Sanford presents the Framework both evocatively, in the form of a sutta or scripture, and through the data she painstakingly collected from thirteen practicing Buddhist chaplains and analyzed over many months. She clearly breaks down the Framework into four developmental stages that describe the lifelong spiritual formation of Buddhist chaplains. Then she further breaks down each stage into a three-part heuristic that can guide the professional work of chaplains in any setting. The final stage – kalyāṇamitra or spiritual friendship – serves as a model for modern Buddhist spiritual care.
Chapter 4 presents the kalyāṇamitra model in full, including detailed review of Theravada, Mahayana, and Vajrayana literature on the topic. Rev. Dr. Sanford presents the first model for Buddhist chaplaincy suitable for Buddhists from any tradition or culture. She is also forthright about the implications, applications, and limitations of this model and her research as a whole. The final reflection invites readers to join in the work of defining the profession of Buddhist chaplaincy as an ongoing project for the benefit of all.
These four chapters comprise Volume 1 of the book, to be published in January 2021. Volume 2 will follow a few months after.
Kalyanamitra, Volume 2, focuses on the development of pragmatic skills throughout the education, training, and internship of new Buddhist chaplains, as well as an overview of professional issues facing Buddhist chaplains in North America. Skills covered in this volume include listening and responding, empathy and compassion, ritual and prayer, presence, interreligious and culturally competent care, power, privilege, and oppression in care, spiritual assessment, and reflection. The final skill – reflection – assists the reader to integrate their personal and professional practice to become a wise and compassionate Buddhist chaplain. The volume concludes by charting a path for the further development of the field of Buddhist chaplains in North America.
Volume 2 builds on the theoretical framework and model presented in Volume 1 by placing the skills within their context and advancing a plan for the integration of the framework and model in Buddhist chaplaincy pedagogy.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rev. Dr. Sanford received a B.S. in Design from the University of Nebraska – Lincoln, a M.Div. in Buddhist Chaplaincy, and a Ph.D. in Practical Theology (spiritual care and counseling) from Claremont School of Theology, making her one of only a handful of Buddhist chaplains who are also fully trained “practical theologians.” She is the only one currently conducting, publishing, and presenting field research on the work of Buddhist chaplains in interreligious settings in North America. Rev. Dr. Sanford is also one of only two Buddhist chaplains to lead a religious life program at a college or university, making her a rare scholar-practitioner.
Rev. Dr. Sanford has contributed chapters to various Buddhist and interreligious anthologies, co-authored the article on “Buddhist Chaplaincy” for the Oxford Research Encyclopedia (with Rev. Dr. Nathan Jishin Michon). She has now literally written the book on Buddhist chaplaincy – the first one to present a comprehensive theory of the profession suitable to Buddhists of all traditions and cultures. She regularly presents at international conferences on these topics. She is on the advisory board of the Journal of Interreligious Studies and a member of the Buddhist Ministry Working Group. Her current research project is “Mapping Buddhist Chaplains in North America,” in collaboration with Harvard Divinity School, Brandies University, and others.
She lives in Rochester, NY, with her partner, dogs, and cat, and works at full-time at Rochester Institute of Technology, where her encyclopedic knowledge of Star Trek and Marvel movies comes in handy.
Part confessional and part scholarly, this chapter serves to highlight the internal and external tensions derived from our religious locations as Buddhists in a predominantly theistic society. Tensions often arise from assumptions, whether our own or those of others, and unconscious or unresolved normativity. What should a Buddhist look like? Who should a Buddhist worship? How should a Buddhist bring their wisdom to the caregiving relationship (or not)? Rich with vignettes and thick description, the purpose of this work is not to resolve the tensions that often accompany Buddhist religious locations. Rather, the chapter serves both to educate those unfamiliar with these forces and as a call to Buddhists (and other non-theists and atheists in professional care work) that they are neither alone nor unrecognized in their struggles.
limited. It also explores the benefits and limitations of Christian literature and other religious traditions in relation to Buddhists and considers some issues related to comparative theology. I then summarize the constructivist grounded theory methods I used in this research. Grounded theory methods generated a theoretical framework for reflection among Buddhist chaplains known as the Three Prajñās Framework for Spiritual Reflection. The Framework is comprised of wisdom derived from three tasks–listening (śrutamayīprajñā), contemplating (cintāmayīprajñā), and practicing (bhāvanāmayīprajñā)–carried out through four overlapping stages–self, student, spiritual caregiver, and spiritual friend (kalyāṇamitra). The thesis is that Buddhist chaplains who have sufficient experience developing wisdom through these tasks–listening, contemplating, and practicing–in relation to their own spiritual/religious lives; who have been guided and accompanied as students in these tasks by mentors, teachers, and spiritual friends (kalyāṇamitra); and who can apply them to their own work as spiritual caregivers, are then better able to accompany and guide careseekers as spiritual friends (kalyāṇamitra) using this framework. The Framework accomplishes many of the outcomes of “facilitating theological reflection in the context of pastoral care” among Buddhist chaplains, yet is distinct from the Christian understanding of theological reflection. It is not a Buddhist substitute for theological reflection, but rather a method of learning and reflection fully explicated within a Dharmic worldview. Finally, this proposal explores the limitations and potential benefits of this work. This dissertation serves as a foundation for developing distinctly Buddhist methods for reflection in spiritual care and contributes to a growing field of literature analogous to pastoral theology for Christians.
The profession of chaplaincy was originally a Christian vocation but began expanding to serve the needs of multireligious careseekers and train caregivers of various religious backgrounds in the 20th century. Thus, while chaplaincy is now a profession open to all comers, including Buddhists, humanists, and atheists, many of the educational, training, and professional standards for certification or licensing are still normed against Christian expectations and legacy organizational structures, particularly in North America, Europe, and the British Commonwealth. In the countries where Buddhist chaplaincy is flourishing in the early 21st century, different groups are developing degree programs, training opportunities, and professional expectations that accord with their local regulatory bodies and other forms of existing chaplaincy certification. In Asian nations, Buddhists are stepping forward to build standards for providing spiritual care in the context of cultural institutions that are not typically religious (e.g., hospitals and schools).
Diverse settings and differing requirements lead to distinctions between Buddhist chaplaincy in different countries. However, some of the core competencies for spiritual care are very consistent: compassion, listening, ritual proficiency, cultural understanding, and reflection. Buddhist and non-Buddhist chaplains alike agree to a fundamental skill set to care for people who are suffering in the various institutions where they work and volunteer. Distinctions between Buddhist and other forms of spiritual care are based on the care model employed, whether strictly co-religionist (i.e., Buddhists caring for Buddhists) or interfaith (i.e., Buddhists caring for all). In the latter case, professional chaplains (of any religion) are trained to provide spiritual care from the spiritual or religious worldview of the careseeker. As such, most Buddhist chaplains must possess basic knowledge and competency in many world religions. Nevertheless, Buddhist spiritual care may be distinct in its theory (Dharma based) and place more emphasis on mindfulness, meditation, and other contemplative techniques to benefit both careseekers and chaplains. Spiritual care that is “Dharma-based” means based on the teachings of the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, and/or the Buddhist traditions and teacher who followed after him. This includes a broad range of texts and teachings across the Buddhist world. As an emerging field, there is little literature on Buddhist chaplaincy, so it is currently somewhat difficult to say what theories and practices will come to dominate the profession.