Letter
to a Christian Young Man Regarding Joining the Military
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
The following
letter was sent to a Christian young man I know who was considering
joining the military. He hasn’t joined as of yet, and I hope and
pray that he doesn’t. I am posting this letter publicly in the hope
that it might persuade some Christian young men I don’t know from
joining the military.
Dear ______:
I have been
told that you are thinking about joining the military. I hope I
am misinformed. I understand that you are having trouble finding
a job, but think that, as a Christian young man, you are making
a big mistake if you join today’s military.
First of all,
you were raised in a Christian home and went to Christian schools
your whole life. You will be needlessly exposed to much wickedness
in the military. You will unnecessarily face temptations that you
have never been exposed to. Why put yourself in this position? It
is a fact that there is a network of brothels around the world to
service U.S. troops stationed overseas. I know that you are a clean
young man and have a girlfriend, but don’t deceive yourself into
thinking that you can remain clean in the military. Because I write
on war and military issues, I have scores of veterans, Christian
and otherwise, who have written me that will back up everything
I am saying.
Second, it
is one thing to join the military out of a sense of patriotism,
but how does joining the military for financial reasons make you
any different than a mercenary? I know that sounds harsh, but would
you consider joining the military if you had a good job right now?
Third, the
senseless wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have no end in sight. There
is no guarantee that you will not be sent to Iraq, Afghanistan,
or some other God-forsaken place where you could be in danger of
losing life or limb. And for what?
Fourth, you
can’t trust military recruiters. Like a car salesman, they are trying
to make their monthly quota. They have been caught on tape lying
to young men, even telling them that no troops were being sent to
Iraq anymore.
Fifth, I know
that you have a very low opinion of the new president, Barack Obama.
I share your opinion completely. As a member of the military, Obama
would be your commander in chief. You could be sent anywhere to
fight for Obama. Are you willing to fight and possibly die because
Obama thinks it necessary to send American troops into some other
war?
Sixth, in the
military, you will be expected to blindly follow the orders of your
officers. Independent thought is not tolerated. Please consider
the words of U.S. Marine Corps Major General Smedley Butler (1881–1940),
a two-time Congressional Medal of Honor winner: "Like all the
members of the military profession, I never had a thought of my
own until I left the service. My mental faculties remained in suspended
animation while I obeyed the orders of higher-ups. This is typical
with everyone in the military service." Major General Butler
became disillusioned with military service and wrote a famous book
called War
Is a Racket in which he said: "War is a racket. It
always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable,
surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope.
It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars
and the losses in lives."
Seventh, the
purpose of the U.S. military is to defend America. But not only
is the military not being used in defense of the country, it is
being used to guard the borders, patrol the coasts, and defend the
shores of other countries. The purpose of the military has been
perverted by the interventionist foreign policy of the United States.
There are American troops stationed in 147 countries and 10 territories.
I know this for a fact because I have researched this in official
Department of Defense documents and written about it on many occasions.
The current use of the military is contrary to the American Founding
Fathers’ policy of nonintervention in the affairs of other countries.
Eighth, joining
the military may have an adverse effect on your future family. I
know that you have a girlfriend that you are very serious about.
You should know that the breakup of marriages and relationships
because of soldiers being deployed to Iraq and elsewhere is epidemic.
Multiple duty tours and increased deployment terms are the death
knell for stable families. What makes you think that the military
will never send you away from your family for an extended period
of time? You know that the possibility exists, so why gamble with
your family? And then, as if being away from your family wasn’t
bad enough on you and them, some soldiers come home with such physical
and/or mental problems that they are unable to return to civilian
life. Debt, doctors, and divorce lawyers soon consume their finances.
Ninth, joining
the military means that you may be put into a position where you
will have to kill or be killed. What guarantee do you have that
you will be in a non-combat role? Can you in good conscience pull
the trigger against any "enemy" that the U.S. government
sends you thousands of miles away to kill?
And
finally, you would have problems even if you went into the military
as a chaplain. Taxpayer-supported chaplains have to serve two masters:
God and the state. Compromise is inevitable. He that pays the piper
calls the tune. To become a chaplain in the U.S. military, one must
obtain an ecclesiastical endorsement from an organization approved
by the Pentagon as an Endorsing Ecclesiastical Organization. According
to the chaplain requirements, one of the things that the endorsement
should certify is that a military chaplain should be "sensitive
to religious pluralism and able to provide for the free exercise
of religion by all military personnel, their family members and
civilians who work for the Army." I know that you are a conservative
Christian and are averse to compromising your religious convictions.
You will, however, be expected to do just that. As a chaplain, you
would be expected to ask God to bless the actions of U.S. troops
even if they were fighting in an unjust war. Can you in good conscience
do this?
Please remember
that if you join the military, there is no getting out until your
enlistment period is up. I hope and pray that you don’t make the
mistake of joining.
In Christ Jesus
our Savior,
Laurence Vance
If any readers
are veterans, consider themselves to be Christians, agree with the
sentiments expressed in this letter, and would be willing to let
me append their name, branch, and rank to any future use of this
letter, please contact me.
The fact that you "served" and I didn’t might be what
is needed to help persuade some young man (or woman) to not join
the military.
February
13, 2009
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from Pensacola, FL. His latest book is a new and greatly
expanded edition of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2009 LewRockwell.com
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