Victory for Military Chaplains Who Pray "In Jesus Name"

David E. Guinn davideguinn at hotmail.com
Mon Oct 2 07:30:59 PDT 2006


From: "Brad Pardee" <bp51414 at alltel.net>
>
> It sounds to me very much like the Navy has, in essence, said that a 
> person can only be a chaplain if they act as if they don't actually 
> believe anything.  That doesn't sound like what 200+ years worth of 
> American fighting men and women were willing to die to defend.

*******

I don't think that 200+ years worth of Americans died in order to have a 
Navy Chaplain attempt to indoctrinate their fellow soldiers into the 
particular faith of that Chaplain.  Seeking to protect the religious freedom 
of all soldiers, and not just the priveledged few, hardly seems out of 
accord with American values.

I am not familiar with the military chaplancy, but I am familiar with 
hospital chaplains who work to serve the needs of all patients regardless of 
their faith position--including chaplains working in sectarian hospitals 
(most often Catholic).  They do not find it necessary to impose their 
beliefs on the patients they serve.  Why should the military be different --  
particularly when they are being paid by all citizens, not just their faith 
cohort?

If the issue is simply the religious freedom of the chaplain, then we can 
revert to the practices within hospitals that allow outside clergy to attend 
to the special religious demands of their co-religionists?

David 



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