Secret Military plans under way to tear down Christian symbols

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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May 28, 2008, 5:24:40 AM5/28/08
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*Faith Under Fire

Secret Military plans under way to tear down Christian symbols*

Army says chapel crosses violate policy

Posted: May 27, 2008
9:06 pm Eastern

By Chelsea Schilling

Crosses at Peacekeeper's Chapel scheduled for removal.

U.S. soldiers stationed at Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo may be stunned to
find three wooden crosses stripped from the exterior grounds of their
chapel in coming weeks – and many never saw it coming.

Several high-ranking officers have met behind closed doors to discuss
plans for the crosses. They have decided to remove, and perhaps destroy,
the Christian symbols located outside Peacekeeper's Chapel in the name
of free exercise of religion.

Lt. Col. William Jenkins, 35th Infantry Division's Kosovo Force 9
command chaplain, told WND, "The removal of the crosses … is bringing
the chapel into line with long-standing regulations and policies that
apply to every U.S. Army chapel around the world and that are supported
by all faith groups in the U.S. Army."

Jenkins cited the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution as validation
for the cross removal, saying it guarantees every American the right to
the free exercise of religion. He also referenced an Army directive that
bans religious symbols from chapels:

Distinctive religious symbols, such as crosses, crucifixes, the Star of
David, menorah, and other religious symbols, will not be affixed or
displayed permanently on the chapel exterior or grounds. (Army Reg.
165-1, 13-3.d)

Army chapels are also required to be devoid of religious symbols on
furnishings, such as altars, pulpits and lecterns.

"This is not a new regulation and exists to protect the free exercise of
religion of all soldiers," Jenkins said. "Army chapels are for all
soldiers of all faith groups."

Following a secret vote, several officers decided to take down the
crosses as part of a "relandscaping" project. Only one person present at
the meeting voted against the measure.

Soldiers say high-ranking officers have been secretive about plans for
the crosses and have not made an official announcement to troops –
leaving most in the dark about plans until the crosses have been removed.


Chaplain Corps. crest states, "Pro deo et patria" or "For God and country."

The crosses will be replaced with a stone monument engraved with the
name of the chapel and the crest of U.S. Army Chaplain Corps, Jenkins
said. At the time of this report, there were no indications of plans to
notify soldiers of the decision.

Although the camp itself was named after Sgt. James Bondsteel, a soldier
who earned the Medal of Honor in Vietnam, high-ranking Army personnel
have also decided to remove a memorial plaque dedicated to fallen
Chaplain Gordon Oglesby, who served and died in Kosovo, because it
violates a policy against naming a chapel after a soldier.

One person stationed in Kosovo became concerned about freedom of
religious expression in the military after WND reported the Army
deliberately shut down a chaplain's Baptist service at Forward Operating
Base Loyalty in Iraq. The soldier expressed agitation at a perceived
double standard after an American sniper accused of shooting a Quran for
target practice faced disciplinary action and removal from Iraq for
desecrating the religious property.

"It is very discouraging as a Christian soldier to see our Army punish
him for destroying a Quran, but then it pays a private company to
destroy some crosses," the soldier said. "I feel it is a slap in the
face to me, my Lord and my freedom."

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