¶ … Jesus' Name
John D. Laing asks an important question when he raises the question of what military chaplains can do in Jesus' name. He focuses particularly upon evangelicals. To answer the larger theological question of whether or not evangelicals can serve as military chaplains while still remaining true to their conservative biblical beliefs/evangelistic commitments, this essay will examine specifically the issues raised in chapters six and seven.
Both chapters six and seven both speak to tandem issues, namely the War on Terror and the ability of military chaplains to minister to the needs of troops affected by their wartime experiences.
Certainly, no one who has experienced the trauma of living (and surviving) in a combat environment can return home the as same person who left home. Whether physically, mentally, or even spiritually wounded, their grief and loss are profound. The have lost their innocence, their previous sense of self, and the loss of what they felt previously to be their spiritual "compass." They now feel spiritual confusion and the lost sheep seek their shepherds in the chaplaincy. Indeed,...
A favorite target for conspiracists today as well as in the past, a group of European intellectuals created the Order of the Illuminati in May 1776, in Bavaria, Germany, under the leadership of Adam Weishaupt (Atkins, 2002). In this regard, Stewart (2002) reports that, "The 'great' conspiracy organized in the last half of the eighteenth century through the efforts of a number of secret societies that were striving for
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