Conversing with Mark Labberton

Chaplaincy to the House of Representatives, with Margaret Grun Kibben

Feb 24, 2026
Margaret Grun Kibben, ordained Presbyterian minister and former Chief of Navy Chaplains who now serves as the 61st Chaplain of the U.S. House, reflects on vocation and pastoral identity. She discusses military chaplaincy, serving pluralistic communities, confidential care, crisis leadership including January 6, and the practice of blessing leaders in public life.
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ANECDOTE

Called To Chaplaincy As A Teen

  • Margaret Grun Kibben felt called to ministry at 14 and saw chaplaincy as a way to combine pastoral work with naval service.
  • At 17 she visited the Naval Academy chapel and realized she could be a Navy chaplain, leading to seminary and chaplain training.
INSIGHT

Chaplains Serve People Not The Machine

  • Chaplains are noncombatants who minister to people rather than serving the military machine or ideology.
  • They carry no weapons, enabling moral counsel, conscience conversations, and questioning of orders without being 'part of the machine.'
INSIGHT

Four Core Capabilities Of Chaplaincy

  • Military chaplains have four core capabilities: provide for their own faith group, facilitate others' worship, care for all, and advise leadership.
  • These roles preserve sacraments, arrange dietary/holy-day needs, offer confidential counsel, and guide commanders on ethical issues.
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