Clerical Errors, a followup
I can't let this go, so I looked up the "spiritual care" department at New Hanover Memorial Hospital.
Chaplains in the Spiritual Care Department are members of the hospital's "healing team" who are trained to help patients and their families tap into their own spiritual resources to facilitate healing and recovery. In providing care, our chaplains respect the traditions, fait and beliefs of our patients.
OK, so they are capable of healing spells, and claim to respect the beliefs of the patients. If my uncle was into death worship would he even BE in a hospital?
I've been looking at the facilities they have for worship. They have a chapel, Bible, Qu’ran and Islamic Prayer Rug, but I don't see sacrificial daggers anywhere. I assume all faiths could share an alter, you'd just have to clean it after each service so the next faith wouldn't see the blood. Maybe daggers are considered "personal gear" or something. It may be the sort of thing you don't share with everyone for sanitation reasons. I noticed they don't list communion chalice, rosary beads, or Brit Milah knife, so sacrificial daggers may be lumped in with these sort of artifacts.
I am willing to accept the possibility that in all of the mountains of paperwork, someone accidentally checked the box next to Kali, Anubis, or Pluto in the religion section. So now my only question is why were they so insistent? A follower of a death god would be pulling the tube out themselves, not fighting the priest trying to do it for them.
Do these guys work on a quota system with their god?



