They are reruns.
The question was whether you are serving other faiths. If I remember correctly, having spoken to some of the chaplains in Trenton, you are fully capable of conducting.... A Roman Catholic priest might perhaps know, because it's so close, the Anglican faith. And the United Church minister would know a Lutheran service or have a connection. So I want to thank you for that. I know you answered that partly.
I have a couple of really quick questions, because time is running short.
In times of need, even people who really don't believe in God sometimes—I'm told—go to see a chaplain because they just need a shoulder in order to express their isolation and despair, or they just need somebody to talk to who they know won't rebuff them because they don't believe. They know they will receive a welcoming ear. I wonder if you could talk about that as well as about your methodology in dealing with the isolation, loneliness, and despair, and talk about some of the mechanics.
By the way, I understand fully, having done 30 years of police work, how terrible it is when you have to tell somebody that someone really close—a son, daughter, or father—has died in a traffic accident, and when you're a young officer it really does help when you have the local priest or minister there to do that.