byFaith | 11.11.15
By Alan Dowd
The stories seem to be picking up in frequency: a Marinecourt-martialed because of a Bible verse on her office computer, a formal
reprimand for an Army chaplain who talked about faith in Jesus during a
suicide-prevention seminar, a threatened legal challenge against a “God Bless
the Military” sign posted on a Marine base in Hawaii, a Navy chaplain
reassigned for expressing his views on homosexuality, another chaplain stripped
of his authority for refusing to allow the base chapel to be used for
same-sex ceremonies, still another threatened with early retirement for sending
an email discussing changes to the military’s Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy, demands
that an Air Force general be punished for giving credit to God, an Air Force
cadet ordered to remove Bible verses from his personal whiteboard. These
stories remind us that U.S. troops don’t defend only our religious freedom; from
time to time, they also have to defend their own religious freedom.
America’s military is an exquisite reflection of the nation
it defends, and this is a nation of many creeds. So, it’s no surprise that the military
includes Christians of every denomination, Jews, Muslims, atheists, pagans and,
like the general population, a growing percentage of so-called “Nones”
(not to be confused with “nuns”).
Surveys of the U.S. military reveal that active-duty
personnel self-identify as: 2.77 percent Adventist, 17.56 percent Baptist, 0.27
percent Brethren, 2.23 percent Congregational, 0.87 percent Eastern, 0.86 percent
Episcopal, 0.99 percent Evangelical, 3.61 percent Humanist, 1.09 percent
Jewish, 2.57 percent Lutheran, 3.7 percent Methodist, 1.3 percent Mormon, 0.45
percent Muslim, 0.4 percent Orthodox, 3.28 percent Other Christian, 6.54
percent Other Protestant, 1.18 percent Pagan, 2.89 percent
Pentecostal/Charismatic, 1.68 percent Presbyterian, 20.11 percent Roman
Catholic, and 25.5 percent No Religious Preference.
Add it all up, and at least 66 percent of the military is
Christian. However, as Scott Taylor, who piloted F-15E fighter-bombers in
peacetime and wartime, is quick to note, “I was a Christian serving in the U.S.
military. I wasn’t serving in a Christian military.”
That’s an important distinction to keep in mind as we
wrestle with this challenge of religious freedom inside the military.
Friction
There are no atheists in foxholes, as the old saying goes. Given that America’s
military is waging a far-flung war on terrorist groups, digging in for Cold War
II with a revisionist Russia, keeping the sea lanes open, guarding the 38th
Parallel and bracing for what promises to be a dangerous dance with a rising
China—all while serving as civilization’s first responder and last line of
defense—our troops have unique and pressing spiritual-emotional needs. They wrestle
with an unimaginable mix of fear and worry, adrenaline spikes and emotional
lows, guilt and regret, physical hardship and family problems, mental anguish
and nightmares. All of them serve an essential but terrible function in a world
where might makes right. And some of them stare death in the face on a daily
basis.
In short, serving in wartime has a way of shaking the soul
and focusing the heart. “You are dealing with life and death,” Taylor explains.
“When people realize they’re not in control of what comes next, it affects how
they live and what they believe.”
So, as they go to the front—“downrange” in military
parlance—some troops are more open about their faith than in decades past. Some
are more vocal, quite literally more evangelical. And that causes friction in
the ranks. The military tries to address these internal faith challenges by
striking a balance between the believer’s right to share his or her faith and
the nonbeliever’s right to not feel harassed. Predictably, there are disagreements
over where that balance is found.
“We will not proselytize, but we reserve the right to evangelize the
un-churched,” said Gen. Cecil Richardson, retired Air Force Chief of
Chaplains, in a New York Times interview.
While some contend that one man’s evangelizing is another’s proselytizing,
there’s more than a semantic difference here: Proselytizing carries a
connotation of recruiting and pressuring, whereas evangelizing—rooted in the
Greek for “bringing good news”—carries a connotation of sharing and inviting.
Christians—whether on the battlefront or the home-front—are called to follow
the example set by Jesus. And it was always the latter. To expect
Christians in the military to do less than this is to ask them to disobey their
Lord. But to allow them to do more than this—to cross that line separating evangelizing
from proselytizing—presents other problems.
A case in point came to light a decade ago at the Air
Force Academy, where cadets were encouraged to see The Passion of the Christ and the football teamposted a locker-room creed that included phrases such as “I am a member of Team
Jesus Christ.” (The academy has since promulgated new guidelines to promote
greater sensitivity and respect between religious groups.)
Testing Times
In designing our government, the Founders erected heavy
bulwarks to safeguard religious liberty. The Constitution makes clear that “no
religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or
public trust under the United States.” So, the government cannot demand that a
person confess, renounce or practice a certain faith in order to serve in the
public sector, which, of course, includes the military. Americans don’t want military
personnel to feel that their service and/or advancement are dependent on
espousing certain religious beliefs. To this point,
the Air Force recently brought its oath
of enlistment in line with its sister branches,
dropping a requirement that all enlistees say “so help me God.” This seems
reasonable: A person does not have to believe in God to serve honorably in the
U.S. Armed Forces. Many atheists have done—and are doing—just that.
Of course, Americans don’t want military personnel to be prohibited from
espousing religious beliefs, either. “For
Americans, free speech and the free exercise of religion exist both inside and
outside the military,” explains Chaplain Brig. Gen. Douglas Lee (U.S. Army
Reserve-Ret.), who was a military chaplain for 31 years and currently
serves as executive director of the Presbyterian and Reformed Commission on
Chaplains and Military Personnel. He notes that the First Amendment gives
protection to military chaplains and enlisted personnel alike. But Lee is
concerned that “A culture of fear has come into the military since the changes
made to Don’t Ask Don’t Tell. Christians in the military are not sure what they
can say and when they can say it.”
That’s not healthy. After all, our troops are human beings with
consciences and beliefs and opinions. We don’t want them to be turned into
unfeeling, unthinking automatons. While every American—civilian or military—has
a right not to believe in this god or that god or any god, we do not have a
right not to ever hear about this god or that god or any god.
Atheists—especially those in the close quarters of the military—need to
recognize that our Constitution does not guarantee freedom from religion, let alone freedom from religious people. And to
paraphrase something Paul counseled, people of faith—especially those in the
close quarters of the military—need to respect those whose faith is weak or
nonexistent.
“I’ve never thought the best way to share the Christian
message is to shove it down someone’s throat,” says Brian Nicholson, a retired
Marine who is now a pastor. Lt. Col. Joe
Hilbert, a long-time active-duty soldier, agrees: “I try to live my faith and
hope they see Christ in my life.”
Pastor Nicholson and Lt. Col. Hilbert offer good advice—whether you wear a suit,
jeans or fatigues to work. After all, it comes straight from scripture. As Paul
writes, we should lead “quiet lives” that “win the respect of outsiders.”
At a time when the military is more diverse than ever, this can be challenging.
“Just
like the first disciples, we have to use discernment [and] follow the leading
of the Spirit,” Lee wisely observes.
Good News
Long before the Declaration of Independence, Gen. George
Washington requested ministers for his army. He understood well the heavy
burdens—emotional, spiritual, psychological, physical—that warriors bear. If
anyone needs spiritual support, it is the one who stands in harm’s way, the one
who goes to war so that others might live in peace, the one who is willing to
lay down his life so that others might live.
Those first military chaplains “didn’t have any specific
duties: perform divine service, pray with wounded, bury the dead,” as Col. John
Brinsfield, a retired Army chaplain, explained in an interviewearlier this year.
Today, they do that and much more.
Chaplains provide comfort, care and counsel. They “preach
and teach according to their particular faith group,” Lee explains. “We also
provide religious support to any servicemember requesting that,” he adds—regardless
of religious background—all while trying to traverse a minefield of political
correctness created by civilian policymakers and military personnel alike.
“There is a clear political agenda at work among atheist and
homosexual groups to silence, it seems, Christians,” Lee concludes. “The storm
clouds are brewing. I suspect there will be increasing pressure put on
chaplains to be less vocal about the Gospel. But the good news is that our
chaplains are pressing on. Our chaplains are answering the call to serve and
share the Gospel.”
Their example should inspire us all.