[]Ron Crews: Religious Freedom Project
It is almost
the height of irony that the American military is experiencing serious religious
disharmony. The nation founded on the promise of religious tolerance now boasts
a military where devout service members are increasingly forced to choose
between hiding their religious beliefs and leaving the service. Serving as an
openly faithful, devout person is proving to be difficult, if not impossible.
Take the
case of Monifa Sterling, a Marine currently awaiting word on the appeal
of her
court-martial. She had printed out small strips of paper with her
favorite scripture paraphrased on it: “No weapon formed against me shall
prosper” (Isaiah 54:17). She posted them at her Camp
Lejeune work station in three places (she said it was one for each part
of the
Holy Trinity) for daily inspiration and devotion.
Though other
Marines had similarly decorated their workspaces with personal effects, only Monifa
was asked by her superior to remove her papers. When Monifa asserted that she
had the freedom under the First Amendment to express herself in that way, her
superior took them down. When Monifa reposted her papers, she found herself charged
with criminal offenses and brought before a panel for trial by court-martial.
Monifa was
found guilty and given a bad-conduct discharge. She will never get the veterans
benefits she earned, and her discharge will be a “Scarlet Letter” on her record
for life. She lost her appeal to the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Appeals. In
fact, that court went so far as to find that posting those scripture verses was
not an exercise of religion. She now awaits word on her appeal to the highest
military court, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.
In addition,
take the case of Lt. Cmdr. Wes Modder, a Navy chaplain separated from his
service and his flock after a complaint about how he ministered in private
counseling on homosexuality and premarital sex. His ministry was wholly consistent
with the positions of his endorsing church, the Assembly of God.
Chaplain
Modder was banned from even attending the memorial service on base for one of
his fallen flock. It was only recently and after several months that the Navy
reversed course and admitted that no evidence exists that this decorated
officer had done anything resembling the “gross negligence or complete
disregard for duty” of which he was accused. Had the Navy persisted, Chaplain
Modder would have had a similar “Scarlet Letter” on his record as Monifa
Sterling currently has on hers.
There is also
the case of Senior Master Sgt. Larry Gallo, who wrote a piece for the Air Force
Reserve Command website about the charitable work that he and his family do
over Christmas. Public Affairs thought it was an inspirational story. The
command disagreed.
Larry had
written about how his family traveled to Mexico and Guatemala over the
Christmas holidays to provide medical care to more than 720 patients in three villages.
But because he did this through an organization called T.I.M.E. for Christ
Medical Ministries, his article was censored.
He did not
proselytize in his writing. The mere mention of his faith was enough to elicit
censorship from the military command. Col. Florencio Marquinez, medical group commander
for the 180th Fighter Wing of the Ohio Air National Guard, met with
similar censorship when he wrote “A Spiritual Journey as a Commander” for his
newsletter—even as an analogous piece by an atheist airman was allowed
to stand untouched.
Then there
is the Air Force Academy cadet who wrote his favorite scripture on his door’s
whiteboard, only to have it removed, and the airmen at Robins Air Base in
Georgia who were gagged from greeting people with the words, “Have a blessed
day.” Unfortunately, the additional anecdotes about service members,
particularly Christian service members, disciplined for exercising their
religious liberty are too many to list here.
We at
Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty hear about these cases nearly every day.
They have become more numerous—and more bitter. The Pentagon appears to be
egged on by a very organized and well-funded network of outside groups that
believe that no room exists in the military for religious liberty.
This bold
assertion has no basis in history. Since George Washington first led our
military onto the battlefields of the Revolutionary War, service to God and to country
have been simultaneously possible and encouraged. Chaplains were considered so
indispensable to a working military that they were even drafted during the
Civil War. The assault on the religious liberty of our service members is a new
phenomenon.
Nor is
there any basis in law for the demand that service members leave their
religious liberty at the recruiting door. The Religious Freedom Restoration Act
(RFRA), one of the key federal statutes guaranteeing religious liberty for all
Americans, has always been viewed by the courts as applying to the armed
services. Indeed, the US Department of Defense removed any doubt by expressly
incorporating RFRA into its regulations effective January 2010.
Congress has
repeatedly admonished the Pentagon in recent years that the religious liberty
rights of service members must be respected; yet, the reality of life in the
armed services tells a very different story. It has become hostile territory
for service members, particularly those of Christian faith, who wish to freely
exercise their First Amendment right to religious liberty—the very First
Amendment they fight to defend, for which they are willing to die.