Religion

Army’s Prescription to Combat Soldier Suicides: Christianity

militarychristianityBy Jason Leopold

A recent edition of the U.S. Army’s suicide prevention manual advises military chaplains to promote “religiosity,” specifically Christianity, as a way to deter distraught soldiers from committing suicide, which in recent months, according to one veterans advocacy group, has reached epidemic proportions.

The Army Suicide Prevention Manual says “Chaplains… need to openly advocate behavioral health as a resource” to treat suicidal soldiers and instructs behavioral health providers “to openly advocate spirituality and religiosity as resiliency factors.”

“Spirituality looks outside of oneself for meaning and provides resiliency for failures in life experiences. Religiosity adds the dimension of a supportive community to help one deal with crises. Both embed themselves in a relationship with God, or a higher power, that provides an everlasting relationship. Bottom line, Soldiers should not base their reason for living in another human being!” says a slide included in the Army’s “Suicide Awareness for Soldiers 2008” PowerPoint presentation.

The inclusion of Christianity and spirituality a new addition to the Army’s 2008 suicide prevention manual. A Pentagon spokesman did not return calls for comment.

According to the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), the civil rights organization that sued Gates and the Defense Department over claims of rampant proselytizing in the military, the PowerPoint presentation “is not only an unconstitutional promotion of Christianity for the soldiers who are mandated to attend it, but for the behavioral health providers and non-Christian chaplains who must present it.”

MRFF president and founder Mikey Weinstein said his lawsuit clearly demonstrates “the noxiously unconstitutional pattern and practice of fundamentalist Christian oppression in our U.S. armed forces.”

The U.S. Military is barred from enacting or supporting policies that advance, promote or endorse religion.

During the presentation on combating suicides, a PowerPoint slide advised chaplains that “Soldiers need to take care of each other and rid any thoughts of survival of the fittest. Almost all religions adhere to some form of Christianity’s Golden Rule, or the Categorical Imperative of Immanuel Kant.”

This PowerPoint slide includes an image of a group of silhouetted soldiers with one soldier up in the clouds looking at a large cross. In 2007, during a similar presentation, the same image was used but it did not include the image of the cross.

Slides two through four state: “Connectivity to the Divine is fundamental to developing resiliency that allows one to deal with disappointments,” “Emphasize the importance of spiritual health, connectivity with a faith community, and a relationship with God,” and, for a slide that follows a DVD of former football star Terry Bradshaw talking about his battle with depression, “Terry is very open about his faith in God and his relationship with his church. Spirituality is an invaluable ingredient in his battle with this disease.”

In one of the presentation’s last slides, the presenter is instructed to have the audience adopt a word rooted in Christian scripture as a “motto or mantra.” The talking point for that slide is: “Emphasize the phrase ‘that you persevere, that you stay alive.’ This is derived from the Greek word ‘Hupomeno’ which is used in Christian scriptures, particularly in the Pauline epistles. It is also used by James, the bishop of Jerusalem, as Jerusalem was in devastation and about to be destroyed. He wanted all Christians, despite the persecutions and violent times, to not lose hope, to keep on enduring. Encourage the audience to repeat this word and use it as a motto or mantra when in difficult times.”

Last year, in a stunning admission, top officials at the Veterans Health Administration confirmed that the agency’s own statistics show that an average of 126 veterans per week — 6,552 veterans per year — commit suicide, according to an internal email distributed to several VA officials.

Brig. Gen. Michael J. Kussman, the undersecretary for health at the VA, sent the e-mail, dated Dec. 15, 2007. Kussman had inquired about the accuracy of a news report published that month claiming the suicide rate among veterans was 18 per day.

“McClatchy [Newspapers] alleges that 18 veterans kill themselves everyday and this is confirmed by the VA’s own statistics,” Kussman wrote. “Is that true? Sounds awful but if one is considering 24 million veterans.”

In an e-mail response to Kussman, Ira Katz, the head of mental health at the VA, confirmed the statistics and added “VA’s own data demonstrate 4-5 suicides per day among those who receive care from us.”

Weinstein has tried to reach out to President Obama in hopes of communicating the urgent nature of the matter, but he said administration officials are “unapproachable.”

“Let me make this damn, crystal clear to the currently unapproachable and disinterested Obama administration, the equally supine United States Congress, all Americans and the rest of the world: MRFF’s just amended, landmark Federal lawsuit is NOT trying to say, ‘Houston we have a problem.’ It’s NOT a ‘problem’. It’s NOT an ‘issue’. It’s NOT a ‘concern’. What MRFF’s lawsuit IS primal screaming to the aforementioned parties IS a blaring siren of immediate disaster wrought by nothing short of a wretched, out-of-control, national security threat,” Weinstein said.

“Why? Because the military command and control of our nation’s nuclear, biological, chemical, conventional and laser-guided weapons has been unconstitutionally compromised by a tsunami of unbridled fundamentalist Christian exceptionalism, triumphalism and proselytizing. All of the forgoing is massively exacerbated by the fact that we’re currently engaged in two wars with the Islamic fundamentalist mirror versions of these very same American forces of religious supremacy infamy.”

An Obama spokesperson did not return numerous phone calls or e-mails for comment.

Weinstein said he his organization has uncovered other recent cases of the military “illegally” endorsing religion.

For example, Weinstein said the U.S. Air Force was an official sponsor of the Evangelical Christian Motocross Ministry known as “Team Faith,” who says their mission is “to infiltrate professional racing circuits and other Action Sports events all over the US and Canada” and “lead extreme sports athletes to Christ and disciple them so that they will in-turn, lead others involved in or interested in the sport to Christ.”

“Team Faith’s” uniforms contained a logo that was a combination of the U.S. Air Force and Team Faith logos, and the U.S. Air Force logos was also visible on team members motorcycles and on ramps.

Article Tools:  Print   Email

3 Responses for “Army’s Prescription to Combat Soldier Suicides: Christianity”

  1. John James Walker says:

    “Human evolution could easily take a quantum leap into the distant future the day after mankind realizes that — God does not choose sides” J J Walker, 2004

  2. zambino10 says:

    shine a little light on the soldiers.

    Ezekiel 34:11 For thus says the Lord GOD, “Behold, I Myself will search for My sheep and seek them out.
    Ezekiel 34:23 “Then I will set over them one shepherd, My servant David, and he will feed them; he will feed them himself and be their shepherd.
    John 10:11 “I am the good shepherd; the good shepherd lays down His life for the sheep.
    John 10:14 “I am the good shepherd, and I know My own and My own know Me,
    John 10:15 even as the Father knows Me and I know the Father; and I lay down My life for the sheep.
    John 10:17 “For this reason the Father loves Me, because I lay down My life so that I may take it again.
    John 15:13 “Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends.
    -1 John 3:16 We know love by this, that He laid down His life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren
    1 Peter 5:4 And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory.

    ——————————————————————————–
    Interesting Fact.That the disciple Peter is packing a sword and is armed,

    Matthew 26:51 And behold, one of those who were with Jesus reached and drew out his sword, and struck the slave of the high priest and cut off his ear.
    ——
    Mark 14:47 But one of those who stood by drew his sword, and struck the slave of the high priest and cut off his ear.

    Lk 22,36
    He said to them, “But now let the one who has a moneybag take it, and likewise a knapsack. And let the one who has no sword sell his cloak and buy one.
    Jesus taught that ‘those who take up the sword’, in rebellion against lawful authority, ‘will perish by the sword.’ This He said in rebuke to the Apostle Peter who was interfering in God’s plan of redemption. (Jesus pretty much told peter to stand down and holster his weapon)
    Lawful authority,
    Some say Jesus broke the old laws. and brought in new commandments. to replace the old laws but Jesus says He did not,

    I have kept my Father’s commandments” (John 15:10).

    Also in response to the young man who asked Him what to do to inherit eternal life, Jesus said,
    “If you want to enter into life, keep the commandments ” (Matthew 19:17).

    you know love thy neighbor comes from the old testament, He is saying all the commandments of God should be obeyed. On another occasion, Jesus said,

    “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God.” (Matthew 4:4).

    He also commanded his disciples to be:
    . . . teaching them [new converts] to observe all things I have commanded you . . . ” (Matthew 28:20).

    “Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets” (Matthew 5:17).

    The Bible is pretty simple. the Bible establishes laws and guide lines for a nation,( The Ten Commandments) 1-4 are for the believers and the rest of the Bible is for the believer that want a relationship with God and partake in a personal relationship with Him,which calls for a higher standard, like helping others,,but the moral standards are legitimate for any culture.
    Love is a process. and Evil is a progressive bad behavior,(in Mind,and body) From bad to worse, whether thats in a life time,or is in a segment of time

    What separates us from the animal, is that we are thinking human beings…

    Honor thy parents(that watch out and protect)
    Command 5:
    Deuteronomy 5:16 (Respect parents) Matthew 15:3-4;Ephesians 6:1-3
    Command 6:
    Deuteronomy 5:17 ( No premeditated murder) 1 John 3:15
    Command 7:
    Deuteronomy 5:18 ( No adultery ) Matthew 5:27-28;1 Cor. 6:18-20
    Command 8:
    Deuteronomy 5:19 ( No stealing ) Ephesians 4:28
    Command 9:
    Deuteronomy 5:20 ( No false witness ) Colossians 3:9-10
    Command 10:
    Deuteronomy 5:21 (No coveting) Ephesians, 5:3

    the Ten Commandments,is a set of mandates that established both spiritual and cultural order within a nation.

  3. Robert D. Burgener says:

    26 years in the Army, starting back in Vietnam and ending with two tours in Iraq packs a lot of emotional baggage. 17 years as a German, then Missouri Synod Lutheran parochial school student dragged me through adolescence with heavy servings of guilt. 41 years of marriage into the Orthodox faith (think Greek, Rusian or American, not Jewish) gave me an appreciation of the smells and spirituality of Christ’s home.
    Ongoing political and financial scandals within the Orthodox Church in America are prompting me to leave that brand and move on -or back to some spiritual roots.
    Trading a set of military regs for a bible doesn’t make the bad guys in your head behave. The belief in something bigger than you, to whom you are accountable for your actions, does make a difference. Believe. Just leave the labels and salesmen (preachers, chaplains, etc.) out of it.

Leave a Reply

Spam protection by WP Captcha-Free

Article Tools:  Print   Email
Copyright © 2008 The Public Record. All rights reserved. Branding services provided by www.AndrewToschi.com Quantcast