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?We need UCC chaplains in the military, ? says Navy captain


From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Tue, 01 Jun 2010 09:58:21 -0700

?We need UCC chaplains in the military,? says Navy captain

Written by J. Bennett Guess
June 1, 2010

"We need UCC chaplains in the military," insists the Rev. Donald P. Troast, a U.S. Navy 
captain and commander of U.S. submarine force chaplains, offering his own "commercial" at 
the outset of his sermon at the UCC's Amistad Chapel on May 26.

"We need the diversity that they bring. We need the openness that they bring. We 
need the sense of mainline tradition that they bring."

Preaching to about 100 worshipers in advance of Memorial Day weekend, Troast 
recounted moving moments when military chaplains have been both mediators and 
recipients of God's grace during war, loneliness, suffering, death and survival.

Speaking with tears in his eyes, Troast recalled a time recently ? during a 
tour in Afghanistan ? that he returned to his quarters and found a handwritten 
note from an officer requesting a few minutes of his time.

The officer, an Episcopalian, wanted to receive Holy Communion on the night 
before his troops were being sent into battle, yet the officer's unit chaplain 
? a Missouri Synod Lutheran ? was not comfortable serving him because of their 
denominational differences.

But, because of the UCC's open-table approach to the Eucharist, Troast ? unlike 
some chaplains that come from more-restrictive traditions ? was able to oblige.

"He was afraid of making wrong decisions in combat that might result in the loss of life," recalled Troast, who reassured the officer of his intellect, training, and support of his soldiers. "And then we had Holy Communion," said Troast, who used the Book of Common Prayer to prepare and consecrate the holy meal "in the tradition he was accustomed to."

"You see why we need UCC chaplains?" he said.

Troast, who has served 19 years in military ministry and was selected last year 
to lead the Navy's submarine chaplains, was one of 15 military chaplains who 
gathered last week for a retreat at the UCC's Church House in Cleveland.

"It feels like we've come home," said Troast, speaking of his first visit to 
the UCC's national offices.

The UCC has 55 chaplains serving throughout the U.S. military and another 25 
chaplains serving veterans and their families with the Department of Veterans 
Affairs.

While it is presumed that chaplains exist primarily to provide worship services for 
service members and their families, "we do so much more," Troast said.

"Every day a service member approaches a chaplain and says, 'Hey Chap, you got a 
minute,' and we always do," he said.

According to the Geneva Convention, chaplains ? who do not carry weapons ? are 
classified as non-combatants. Yet they train and work alongside military 
personnel in every respect. The constitutionality of chaplains has been upheld 
repeatedly by U.S. courts, because the establishment clause ensures that 
citizens have
"free exercise" of religion ? something that might prove impossible in the 
military, given tours of duty, isolating locations and restrictive conditions, without 
the presence of chaplains.

"Imagine if your minister showed up with you at work everyday," Troast said. "That's 
exactly what we do."

The Rev. John Gundlach, a retired Navy Chaplain of 27 years who now serves as 
the UCC's minister for government chaplaincy, hosted the retreat in Cleveland.

"It has been our privilege this week to have 15 of our finest clergy with us, our 
military chaplains," said Gundlach, in introducing the chaplains to Church House 
staff and visitors.

While in Cleveland, chaplains met with church officers and called for UCC 
churches to reach out to military families, especially those returning from 
tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"We need to take care of our returning warriors who are hurting mentally, physically 
and spiritually," Troast said.

Participating in the chaplain retreat were Lt. Cmdr. Peter E. Bauer, USAR 
(Southern Conference); Capt. Heather A. Bodwell, USAF (Northern Plains 
Conference); Col. Stephen B. Boyd, USAR (CA-NV Southern Conference); Capt. 
Countess C. Cooper
(Central Atlantic Conference); Capt. Aristides Fokas (Penn Central Conference); 
Lt. Cmdr. Leila H. Gomulka, USN (Calvin Synod); Capt. N. Charlene Johnson, USAF 
(Minnesota Conference); Maj. R. Michael Lake (Kansas-Oklahoma Conference); 
Cmdr. Luis A. Perez, USN (Florida Conference); Capt. Deris L. Rice, USAR 
(Wisconsin Conference); Lt. Cdr. Leticia P.J. Rouser, USN (Hawaii Conference); 
Lt. Col. Grant W. Speece, ARNG
(Minnesota Conference); Lt. Cmdr. Beth A. Stallinga, USN (Minnesota 
Conference); CDR Ronald C. Sturgis, USN (South Central Conference); Capt. 
Donald P. Troast, USN (Massachusetts Conference); and Col. John L. Trout, ARNG 
(Penn Central Conference).


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