By Mark Tooley on 8.6.07 @ 12:07AM
The United Church of Christ's left-wing leadership is staunchly anti-Iraq War. Yet the UCC's chaplains are among the war's unsung heroes.
The United Church of Christ (UCC) has the most left-wing curia
of any major denomination in America. Predictably, the UCC is also
among the fastest declining churches in America. Seemingly more
often concerned with politics du jour than affairs of the soul, UCC
officials denounce the Iraq War, for example, about as often as
Muslims pray towards Mecca.
In one recent blast, UCC prelates "repented" for not being even
more militant against the war: "We confess that too often the
church has been little more than a silent witness to evil deeds,"
the clerics bewailed. "We have prayed without protest." They went
on to bemoan the war's "arrogance and folly," the "deceptions," the
confusion of "patriotism with self-interest," and the complicity in
the "bloodshed and the cries."
UCC officials usually are not subtle in their rush to be more
politically holier than thou. But as in the case of many mainline
denominations, the pronouncements from a national church
bureaucracy do not always reflect the reality of many local
ministries.
To its credit, the UCC's news service recently carried a
report from Carol Pavlik about the UCC's
chaplains in the U.S. military, of whom there are about 60. Far
from being political activists, the chaplains reassuringly seem
focused on the Lord's work in adverse circumstances.
"In spite of the cost, there are joys in this ministry,"
reported retired U.S. Navy Chaplain John Gundlach, who heads the
UCC's ministry for government chaplains. "Being in there with
others in some of the most extreme circumstances any person can
endure, and helping to remind them of their humanity as well as the
humanity of the enemy, being there to offer the assurance of God's
grace, to comfort the wounded and the bereaved, is a tremendous
privilege." Gundlach called the military chaplaincy a "truly high
calling."
The UCC report carried the stories of several UCC military
chaplains. Army Chaplain Tony Ciomperlik, now assigned to an army
hospital in San Antonio, served in Iraq in 2003 and 2004. He
recounted ministering to over 700 combat soldiers in Tikrit. "My
faith definition has changed since my return from Iraq," said
Ciomperlik. "I define faith as believing in God for what I cannot
provide for myself. Faith took me through many mortar attacks and
fire fights that broke out in the middle of the night."
Ciomperlik remembered one ambush in the night. "I slipped out of
my bunk onto my knees and began to pray, knowing that my soldiers
were on patrol that night and now they were in harm's way," he
said. "The fight lasted for about and hour and the next day a
couple of the soldiers came in and told me how they were ambushed
and almost lost one of their soldiers. We talked about the power of
prayer and God's protection for them and we prayed together."
Later, Ciomperlik recalled, a military policeman named Matt
teared up while seeking his counsel. "During a time when a convoy
was coming in, several Iraqi terrorists fired upon the convoy and
one individual fired a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) at Matt and
his humvee," the chaplain remembered. The rocket bounced off the
humvee and instead killed a 10-year old boy standing on the road.
"Matt...said to me that he was prepared to see grown men with guns
die but not a small boy," Ciomperlik recounted. "I led Matt to
Christ and baptized him a week later in the Tigris River."
Connecticut Army National Guard Chaplain David Nutt was called
into active duty last year. "The high points [of this ministry]
come when a soldier 'gets it' that he or she can actually rely on
Jesus Christ to help carry their burden when it gets too heavy,"
Nutt reported. "I know that sounds trite, but it is true." The
chaplain said his military experiences had not caused him to
question his faith at all but instead strengthened his reliance on
God. "Too often as pastors we are prone to dip into hyper
intellectual Jesus psycho-babble when all we have to do is merely
arrange the meeting between Christ and his estranged children," he
said.
Army Chaplain Colonel Daniel M. Parker serves at Fort Leonard
Wood in Missouri. "I'm the kind of person who likes to get out and
about where the troops are, because I want to be with them, hear
their stories, listen to their concerns, laugh with them, pray with
them, hold worship wherever they are and help them in their
pilgrimage as the multitude of others have for me, especially my
God," he told the UCC reporter.
"The high point of working with these dedicated women and men,
brings me to reevaluate my own faith commitment." Parker said.
During the "summer surge season" the chaplains works 14 hour days,
each covering as many as 2,000 soldiers. ""Surprisingly, they don't
complain," he remarked. "But I see and hear their pain, their
groans."
Navy Chaplain Rob Heckathorne is currently on active duty with
the U.S. Coast Guard. "I strongly believe that God places his
faithful where Christ's ministry can be realized," he recounted.
"Though significantly older than the sailors whom I have counseled
and loved (in most cases twice their age), my life experiences, my
longevity in the parish, being a parent of similarly aged children,
has proved to help me provide more effective ministry." He told of
the "blessing" of service during the tsunami and several
hurricanes, observing the "exceptional integration" of the military
and civilian communities, along with the "collegiality" among the
military chaplains of different traditions. "I realize that for
many young people with whom I connect, I am of the very first
Minister of the Word and Sacrament that they have ever met," the
chaplain noted. "That is a great responsibility and
opportunity."
UCC Minister of Government Chaplaincy Gundlach noted that the
military chaplains are often on deployment up to 15 months at a
time. Last year, as reported the UCC's website, and at the request of the UCC's
chaplains, he offered "prayers of intercession" for the
chaplaincy.
"We pray for all of our chaplains, but especially for those who
are deployed in harm's way," Gundlach said. "Surround them with
your love in times of loneliness. Strengthen them to endure
hardship. Give them courage in the face of danger. Help them to
bear a faithful witness to you among those they serve. And when
their duty is done, bring them safely home."
To which all may say, "Amen."
topics:
Military, Iraq