RECENT BLOG

How Worship Looks When You Are 7,000 Miles From Home
Worship during deployment is not polished. It is raw and real. Sometimes it happens in a converted storage room, a tent, or a dusty corner of a hangar. Yet, it becomes holy ground.
One Christmas Eve in Bahrain, we packed into our small chapel.
Some stood by the walls. Others sat on the floor. The choir was made up of whoever could sing. Tears flowed as we sang "Silent Night." Amid war zone alerts and family separation, that night reminded us of peace.
As a Christian chaplain, I am grounded in my own faith in Jesus Christ. At the same time, my role is to ensure that every service member, regardless of their beliefs, is supported. That does not mean I abandon or blend my faith. It means I honor theirs by listening, journeying with them, and standing beside them in their times of need.
Chaplains make worship happen, for all faiths. We lead services, set up prayer rooms, and find ways to connect people to God. We also ensure that Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and other service members can practice their faith with dignity and support. In doing so, we affirm the God-given dignity of each person.
Spiritual life does not stop during war. It deepens. Chaplains make sure that no matter where our people are, they can find sacred space to breathe, believe, and belong.
Scripture Reflection:
“For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.” (Matthew 18:20)
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