One News Now - At Issue: Free Speech, Military Chaplains

May 23, 2011

2 min read

ACLJ

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May 06, 2008
Chad Groening, OneNewsNow.com

A free-speech rights group says there have been increasing reports from military chaplains claiming that military commanders are unjustly suppressing their worship services.

The American Center for Law & Justice (ACLJ) has been working with Congressman Walter Jones (R-North Carolina) in urging President Bush to issue an executive order to protect the right of military chaplains to pray and worship according to their faith. ACLJ spokesman Colby May says unfortunately there are numerous reports of chaplains being ordered to restrict their prayers while on the front lines in Iraq.
 
"The forum of worship that they may learn from their tradition -- Baptist, Catholic, whatever -- are [sic] essentially being suppressed," says May. "[C]ommanders are asking that prayers not be in, for example, Jesus' name and that they otherwise sort of be 'non-denominational or not sectarian.'"
 
May contends that in many of these instances, chaplains believe this is infringing on their expression faith through their "ordaining body." He says chaplains, unlike regular soldiers, are assigned through their "ordaining agency," which means they bring their traditional worship practices with them.
 
"When the military says you can't do it, you can't pray in Jesus' name or whatever, these problems surface," the attorney explains. "So that's the kind of reports we're getting from members of the military as well as from members of Congress."
 
The ACLJ spokesman says the president needs to take action to put a stop to this government hostility against religion.