Chaplains Serve Faithful, Faithless in War
A Memorial Day article at the Washington Post covers the service of a group of chaplains at Arlington National Cemetery. The chaplains recall their sacred service and their combat duty, to all members of the military.
Chaplain (LtCol) Keith Croom, the senior Army chaplain at Arlington, has seen the two extremes of that service:
He has been sworn at by dying soldiers and steeped in calamity and sorrow. He ministers to service members of all faiths, and to those of none at all.
“We have to understand that people don’t have to agree with any faith. They have a right not to practice, and I need to be OK with that,” he said. “I’ve had a guy say, ‘I don’t believe in your God,’ and he died right in front of me.”
On the other hand, the opposite occurred in Iraq in 2004: Read more