Navy Surrenders: Chaplain Eating

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Navy Surrenders: Chaplain Eating

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Another account of the left's "inside job" to silence Christianity...
R

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=48248

FAITH UNDER FIRE
Navy surrenders:
Chaplain eating
Hunger strike comes to end with OK
to pray in uniform in name of Jesus


Posted: January 6, 2006
9:00 p.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

The Navy chaplain who has gone without food for 18 days in protest of the Navy's policy encouraging "inclusive" prayers at public events says he has received permission to wear his uniform and pray in Jesus' name outside the White House tomorrow and will end his hunger strike by taking communion there.

Lt. Gordon James Klingenschmitt

Lt. Gordon James Klingenschmitt had said he would not eat until President Bush signed an executive order allowing chaplains to pray in public according to their individual faith traditions. Later, he said if the Navy would allow him to wear his uniform in public and pray in Jesus' name he would end his fast. Klingenschmitt told WND this evening he has received a letter from his commanding officer giving him permission to do so.

A previous letter from his commanding officer at Naval Station Norfolk said the chaplain could not wear his uniform for media appearances, which is standard Navy policy when a service member is expressing his own opinion. Klingenschmitt believed that letter was meant to prevent him from praying publicly in Jesus' name while wearing his uniform.

A 1998 Navy advisory to chaplains suggested that military clergy pray in an "inclusive" manner at "command settings" – secular events or ceremonies. It is that policy that Klingenschmitt objects to, pointing out that 74 members of Congress have asked President Bush to guarantee chaplains the right to pray as they wish.

At 11 a.m. tomorrow near the White House, Klingenschmitt says, he will lead a worship service while wearing his Navy uniform. After praying in Jesus' name, the chaplain says he will serve communion and then begin eating again.

Earlier this week, a Navy spokesman said Klingenschmitt's claim that he was not allowed to pray in Jesus' name in public was erroneous.

Lt. William Marks pointed out that the federal law allowing military chaplains to pray "according to the manners and form" of their own churches, in Title X of the U.S. Code, is under the heading of "Divine Services," which restricts that freedom to the voluntary religious events, he asserts.

"When you go to a command-hosted ceremony, that is not a 'divine service,'" Marks told WND. "That is a secular service." And that is the type of service addressed by the 1998 advisory.

Klingenschmitt says with comments such as Marks', the Navy is "trying to split hairs between public worship and private worship."


Related special offers:

CRIMINALIZING CHRISTIANITY: How America's founding religion is becoming illegal

"Christianity and the American Commonwealth "


Previous stories:

Navy rebuts fasting chaplain's claims

Chaplain 'starves himself' over Navy no-Jesus zone

Clergy to protest at White House

Effort afoot to protect military prayers

New Air Force rules: No religion

Air Force cracks down on Christian 'coercion'

Wiccans meet on Air Force base

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Pastors Sue Navy Over Discrimination

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http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=48687

FAITH UNDER FIRE
Pastors sue Navy for discrimination
65 chaplains claim they were passed over for promotions


Posted: February 6, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

Lt. Gordon James Klingenschmitt

Even though his hunger strike is over, the fight goes on for Navy Lt. Gordon James Klingenschmitt.

The Episcopal chaplain says his battle to say prayers in Jesus' name has cost him any chance for a promotion, and he's now joining an effort to allow chaplains in the military to pray according to their own traditions, instead of abiding by generic, pluralistic texts.

The Toledo Blade reports more than 65 ministers have signed on to a class-action lawsuit alleging religious discrimination by the Navy. The chaplains claim they have been passed over for promotions because their faith practices have not conformed to the Navy's pluralism policies.

"This is the result of the political correctness movement," Klingenschmitt told the paper. "My commanding officer told the Navy board to end my career, saying I overemphasized my own faith system in sermons and prayers. They also punished me, in writing, for quoting the Bible in chapel."

In the wake of publicity over Klingenschmitt's case, 75 members of Congress, led by Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., have requested President Bush sign an executive order granting chaplains in the armed forces permission to pray according to their beliefs.


Related special offers:

CRIMINALIZING CHRISTIANITY: How America's founding religion is becoming illegal

"Christianity and the American Commonwealth "


Previous stories:

Navy surrenders: Chaplain eating

Navy rebuts fasting chaplain's claims

Chaplain 'starves himself' over Navy no-Jesus zone

Clergy to protest at White House

Effort afoot to protect military prayers

New Air Force rules: No religion

Air Force cracks down on Christian 'coercion'

Wiccans meet on Air Force base

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Air Force Still "No-Jesus Zone"?

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http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=48766

TESTING THE FAITH
Air Force still no-Jesus zone?
New guidelines have some Christians cheering, but others say chaplain-prayer muzzle remains


Posted: February 10, 2006
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Ron Strom
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

Revised interim guidelines from the Air Force on religious expression released yesterday are getting mixed reviews from Christians – with some saying they protect chaplains' freedom of expression while others contend they still discriminate against evangelical chaplains.

Meanwhile, a Jewish publication is hailing the new policy, saying it "continue to bar Christian chaplains from praying in Jesus' name during official government ceremonies."

The guidelines are the latest version of a new policy drafted by the Air Force in August after complaints arose from non-Christians at the Air Force Academy who believed Christians, both cadets and staff, were being too heavy-handed about their faith on campus. The August policy allowed only a "brief nonsectarian prayer" by a chaplain during official ceremonies and events.

After the first set of guidelines were released, the Air Force received feedback from members of Congress, the public, religious groups, members of groups professing no faith, legal and civil liberties groups and individual citizens, a press release from the Air Force explained. In addition, more than 500 active, Reserve and Guard airmen from eight Air Force bases were interviewed.

The revised guidelines [a .pdf file] have been reduced from four pages to one.

"The guidelines address prayer at military events, but in no way restrict private prayer or chaplains' activities in religious settings," Lt. Gen. Roger Brady, Air Force deputy chief of staff for personnel, said.

The policy states: "We will respect the rights of chaplains to adhere to the tenets of their religious faiths and they will not be required to participate in religious activities, including public prayer, inconsistent with their faiths."

Brady says the Air Force will now go through another interim period before final guidelines are issued.

Christian organization Focus on the Family, whose headquarters are near the Air Force Academy in Colorado, praised the new rules.

"We applaud these guidelines. If they are applied properly, they will safeguard the free exercise of religion guaranteed to all citizens, both military and civilian," said Tom Minnery, senior vice president of government and public policy for Focus on the Family, in a statement.

Minnery didn't comment on the chaplain-prayer issue, but focused on the freedom of airmen to worship.

"We particularly thank the Air Force for specifically recognizing that 'voluntary participation in worship, prayer, study and discussion is integral to the free exercise of religion,'" he said. "Some have claimed an offense against the Constitution at the mere mention of these matters, although nothing could be further from the truth."

Similarly, the American Center for Law and Justice, which sponsored a petition drive to protect the rights of chaplains to pray in Jesus' name, lauded the new guidelines, calling them "appropriate and constitutional" and an "important victory" for chaplains.

"This is an important move by the Air Force to protect the free-speech rights of chaplains to pray according to their faith," said Jay Sekulow, Chief Counsel of the ACLJ, in a statement. "We are delighted that the Air Force has clarified this issue and has moved to protect the rights of chaplains in a manner that is both appropriate and constitutional."

Continued Sekulow: "The revised guidelines issued today by the Air Force not only protect the rights of chaplains, these guidelines should serve as a model for the other branches of the military. From the very beginning, we have maintained that chaplains have a constitutional right to adhere to the religious expressions of their faith and exercise them freely. We're pleased the Air Force has taken action to guarantee these protections."

'Nothing has changed'

But not all Christians are happy with the policy.

Lt. Gordon Klingenschmitt is the Navy chaplain who went on an 18-day hunger strike recently to protest Navy guidelines that are similar to the Air Force's. They encourage "inclusive" prayers at public events, a policy he says in effect prohibits prayer in Jesus' name. Klingenschmitt says the new Air Force policy does nothing to free up chaplains to pray according to their own religious traditions.

The chaplain's chief concern has been what the Armed Forces will allow at a non-religious military event, such as a change-of-command ceremony. At those events, the Navy wants inclusive, non-denominational prayers, but Klingenschmitt believes that chaplains, regardless of their specific faiths, should not be restricted in such settings.

States part of the new policy: "Non-denominational, inclusive prayer or a moment of silence may be appropriate for military ceremonies or events of special importance when its primary purpose is not the advancement of religious beliefs. Military chaplains are trained in these matters."

Lt. Gordon James Klingenschmitt

Responded Klingenschmitt on his website: "Nothing has changed! They want prayers, but no religious beliefs. Huh? Non-religious prayers? The new guidelines and the old guidelines are practically identical, so even now Air Force chaplains cannot pray 'in Jesus name' in public ceremonies. Blatant censorship continues! These new guidelines are a sham, they're deceptive, they're not new at all, and they still prohibit prayers 'in Jesus name' and authorize commanders to exclude chaplains who pray 'in Jesus name' solely based on the content of their prayers."

Klingenschmitt emphasized the part of the guidelines saying chaplains "will not be required to participate in religious activities, including public prayer, inconsistent with their faiths" – claiming it discriminates against evangelical chaplains.

The activist believes the Air Force is saying, in effect, "We won't require them to participate (nor allow them to participate) if they're unwilling to pray to the false neutered god of civic-religion. But if chaplains insist on praying publicly 'in Jesus name' we support their right to not participate."

Said Klingenschmitt: "Under these guidelines, the Air Force will continued to punish and exclude chaplains who pray in Jesus' name."

Though he supported the ACLJ petition drive, which collected 200,000 signatures in support of the right to pray in Jesus' name, Klingenschmitt strongly disagrees with Sekulow's rosy interpretation of the new guidelines.

"They fooled everybody," Klingenschmitt told WND. "They fooled Jay Sekulow."

GOP beat back

While Christian groups such as the ACLJ and Focus on the Family are praising the revised policy, Jewish Week, a New York publication, is also cheering – but for a different reason. A story in the paper says the rules "bar Christian chaplains from praying in Jesus' name during official government ceremonies and place restraints on evangelical chaplains."

The story in the weekly notes Rabbi Arnold Resnicoff, special assistant for values and vision to the secretary of the Air Force and the chief of staff of the Air Force, helped draft the new guidelines.

Saying the Air Force "beat back GOP pressure," the Jewish Week writer agrees with Klingenschmitt that the guidelines have not really changed anything:

"The bottom line has not changed – clergy may not invoke the name of Jesus Christ while offering prayers at official government ceremonies, Rabbi Resnicoff said."

"We are trying to balance the rights of people in the military with the rights of that uniform and the responsibilities that go with it," Resnicoff told the publication. "It has been very difficult. This has not been a knee-jerk reaction but rather a sincere struggle to respect the rights of those who serve our country."

Instead of using the name Jesus Christ, Rabbi Resnicoff told the Jewish Weekly, chaplains can simply say, "In Your name we pray."

Klingenschmitt says it is Resnicoff who wrote the 1998 Navy guidelines that urge inclusive prayers.

"I hope the secretary of defense does not implement these guidelines in the Navy because I will definitely sue," the chaplain said.

"The word 'non-denominational' is just a euphemism for 'no Jesus,' and until that is removed, they are censoring the content of my prayers."

Klingenschmitt says he's working with attorney Mat Staver of Liberty Counsel on possible legal action.

Added Klingenschmitt: "I will sue if the president doesn't fix this."


If you would like to sound off on this issue, participate in today's WND Poll.


Related special offers:

CRIMINALIZING CHRISTIANITY: How America's founding religion is becoming illegal

"Christianity and the American Commonwealth "


Previous stories:

Pastors sue Navy for discrimination

Navy surrenders: Chaplain eating

Navy rebuts fasting chaplain's claims

Chaplain 'starves himself' over Navy no-Jesus zone

Clergy to protest at White House

Effort afoot to protect military prayers

New Air Force rules: No religion

Air Force cracks down on Christian 'coercion'

Wiccans meet on Air Force base


Ron Strom is a news editor for WorldNetDaily.com.

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