You may have already spotted him in his rainbow waistcoat, but in case you've not had the pleasure, we've been getting to know more about Hospital Chaplain, Reverend Jonathan Sharp, who joined the chaplaincy team earlier this year.
What is your role?
"I'm a Christian minister, but my role is about offering spiritual care to anybody and absolutely everybody, whatever their spirituality."
Summarise your career background
"I started my career in the NHS in 1979 working for a decade in biomedical science, then felt a call to be trained for the ordained ministry in the Methodist Church.
"After studying for my degree in theology, and completing my ministerial training I served in various churches around the country before joining Mid Yorkshire Hospital as a healthcare chaplain. Before this role here at CHFT, I have been working as a Spiritual Care Lead and Chaplain for The Kirkwood who deliver specialist palliative care."
What is the highlight of your career so far?
"It's difficult to answer, but there have been individual, one-to-one interventions which will remain with me for the rest of my life.
"Collaborating with people of other faiths is also a highlight. Working with people who have a similar heart but different experiences and different ways of expressing that - I value this tremendously.
"I've also been really fortunate because I'm into Christian theatre and music and have had the opportunity to participate and write for national events."
Sum up your role in three words
"Being humanely useful.
"This for me is the crux of spiritual care. It's not just somebody coming along and sticking a piece of religious sticking plastic on something. It's about being humanely useful and engaged with the people we're serving."
Who is your hero or heroine and why?
"Plenty! To summarise, it would be somebody who makes a difference by being different.
"People like German Lutheran pastor, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and Methodist minister and broadcaster, Colin Morris."
When you're not at work, how do you relax?
"We've got two little girls, so family time is very important. We like being outside - walking hills, mountains, rivers and forests.
"I'm into theatre in general and have been involved in several productions - I was Norman Clegg in The Huddersfield Thespians production of The Last of The Summer Wine at the Lawrence Batley a few years ago. I've also worked in the slave galleries at The Museum of Liverpool Life as a writer and actor to bring the stories to life.
"I also enjoy reading and music - both playing and listening. My taste in music is eclectic: we were at the Picturedrome recently to see Kula Shaker, but I also like Buzzcocks, Nanci Griffith, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, and Vill Nelson - to name a few.
"And you know those TV programmes that "contain subjects that some viewers may find distressing"? Well, those are top of our watch-list at home!"
What is your favourite place?
"Borth-y-Gest in Wales. I've been going there since I was a boy. I find that because I have lived in so many different places in my life, it's kind of the one constant."
What would people be surprised to know about you?
"Well because of my stripey waistcoat, people often joke and call me Joseph and his Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat. I've never been Joseph, but I have been in the production twice - playing the eldest brother, Reuben.
"That always seems to surprise people! I actually have a MA in in Drama: Theatre, Heritage, Communities and I am a British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP) Registered Therapeutic Counsellor."