Christian Post
 
Censoring Eisenhower and Religious Freedom in the Military
 
By _Tony Perkins_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/tony-perkins/) 
July 29, 2013|12:56 pm
If President Eisenhower were alive today, the five-star general may be  
shocked to know that his own speeches are too offensive to be quoted in the  
military he used to command. 
A military chaplain has _been taken to task_ 
(http://radio.foxnews.com/toddstarnes/top-stories/chaplain-ordered-to-remove-religious-essay-from-military-
website.html)  for fulfilling the job description  that most spiritual 
leaders (until recently) were hired to do: talk about faith.  In a harmless 
post 
for his online website, "Chaplain's Corner," Lt. Col. Kenneth  Reyes (USAF) 
of the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska wrote an  inspirational 
piece called, "No Atheists in Foxholes: Chaplains Gave All in  World War II." 
The phrase, which President Eisenhower made famous in 1954, dates way back 
to  the Japanese attack at Corregidor. Reyes had hoped to encourage his 
troops –  believers and non-believers – with the brave story of the man who 
first coined  the quote. 
Turns out, the story only encouraged the attack of anti-faith zealots. 
Mikey  Weinstein, whose own statements are fairly well known ("_Christian 
monsters of human degradation, marginalization,  humiliation and tyranny_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-l-weinstein/fundamentalist-christian-_b_307265
1.html) "), organized a letter to Reyes's commanding officer,  Col. Brian 
Duffy, demanding the chaplain be censored. Weinstein and Military  Religious 
Freedom Foundation (MRFF) representative Blake Page blasted Reyes for  his 
"redundant use of the bigoted, religious supremacist phrase, 'no atheists in  
foxholes,'" and accused the chaplain of "defil[ing] the dignity of service  
members." Of course, anyone who has actually read Reyes's column would  
understand how preposterous those charges are. Reyes never suggested that 
"there  are no atheists in foxholes," he was merely tracing, in a very neutral 
way, the  history of the well-known phrase – a far cry from the "anti-secular 
diatribe"  MRFF calls it. Reyes goes out of his way to include unbelievers 
in his piece,  even suggesting that "faith" can mean different things to 
different people. 
Nonetheless, his superior, Col. Duffy, snapped to attention and within five 
 hours of Mikey's complaint ordered the article scrubbed from the 
chaplain's  website. In his profuse apology to MRFF, he promises to keep a 
vigilant 
watch  over his troops' speech. "We remain mindful of the governing 
instructions on  this matter and will work to avoid reoccurrence." Not 
surprisingly, 
that didn't  satisfy Weinstein and MRFF, who are demanding a formal 
punishment for Reyes.  "Faith-based hate is hate all the same," Page wrote. 
"Lt. 
Col. Reyes must be  appropriately reprimanded." 
For what – doing his job? Engaging in constitutionally-protected speech? 
Like  it or not, a chaplain's duties, by definition, are to offer prayer, 
spiritual  guidance, and religious instruction. Whether Duffy punishes Reyes or 
not, the  damage has already been done. As FRC's executive vice president, 
Lt. Gen. (Ret.)  Jerry Boykin told Fox News's Todd Starnes, chaplains across 
the military are  already afraid of carrying out the most basic duties of 
their job. "In this  case, a chaplain has been censored for expressing his 
beliefs about the role of  faith in the lives of service members. ... Why do we 
have chaplains if they  aren't allowed to fulfill that purpose?" 
Thankfully the U.S. House of Representatives is on the verge of passing the 
 Defense Department budget with language inserted to protect troops' 
conscience  and religious rights. Additionally, _over 160,000 Americans have 
signed a petition to Defense Secretary  Hagel_ 
(https://www.frc.org/get.cfm?c=CHECKOUT&dmy=2B64D85C-E439-40AD-47CEA3CB16E42735&CFID=24920377&CFTOKEN=c6d02ac76
fab9ff6-2B64B9FF-9D04-C317-9C937050242AF9F6) , urging him to issue clear 
policies to protect the religious freedom  of our troops. Without such 
protections, the free speech rights and religious  liberties of our nation's 
most 
diligent servants will continue to be  trampled.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to