idea of Christians enlisting in the military poses a dilemma for some
people. After all, if Jesus Christ is the Prince of Peace, how can
anyone who claims to follow Him enter a profession in which killing
people is an obligation?
As a born-again believer in Christ for 24 years and the father of
two young Christian men who serve in the armed forces, I certainly
sympathize with those pondering this question. I know Jesus is the only
source of lasting peace. And as a believer I am sure God takes no
pleasure in war.
Yet the U.S. military is full of Christians. And the faith of
these warriors has been brightly displayed in recent conflicts in
Afghanistan and Iraq. You may not have heard their testimonies on the
evening news, but I can assure you that many people in the Army, Navy,
Air Force and Coast Guard have witnessed God's miraculous intervention
in recent days.
I have heard some of the miracles from my own two sons. David
is a Marine and Nathan is in the Army. David is a combat veteran of
both Iraq and Afghanistan. Nathan is still in training, but he will at
some point be called upon to fight in the current global war on terror.
David decided while in high school that he wanted to enlist.
Several times during his senior year, before June 2001, I felt prompted
by the Holy Spirit to encourage him to prepare for battle.
He was scheduled to leave for boot camp in August 2001. As our
family laid hands on him the night before he left, the Holy Spirit
spoke to him through me in prophecy. God said David would see combat
and that He would protect him and cause him to prosper in difficult
times if he followed the Lord fully. Little did we know how soon tragic
events would unfold.
The next month, the September 11 attacks made David's calling
clear: He and his fellow Marine recruits would be trained to wage war
against Osama bin Laden and those who supported his terrorist army.
David joined dozens of other Marines in April 2002 as they rotated into
one of America's more storied Marine battalions: the 2nd Battalion of
the 8th Marine Regiment, or 2/8 for short, based at Camp Lejeune, North
Carolina.
A Special Mission
The 2/8 is known as “America's Battalion.” Several of the
soldiers who became close friends with David were committed Christians
and represented a cross section of this country–coming from more than
seven states. We soon learned that almost every senior officer in this
battalion served Christ.
From the time Lt. Col. Royal Mortenson took command of 2/8 in
December 2001, he had a strong conviction that he would be leading the
battalion into combat. He helped pull together what would prove to be a
superb group of senior staff officers, company commanders, and senior
noncommissioned officers–the company and platoon sergeants who get the
job done. He developed a rigorous training schedule to prepare the 900
Marines under his command.
Amazingly, many of the Marines of 2/8 had been prepared for the
war against Saddam Hussein long before Operation Iraqi Freedom began in
March 2003. Col. Ronald Bailey was the commanding officer of the 2nd
Marine Regiment, under which 2/8 would be placed as part of Regimental
Combat Team 2 (RCT-2), a major ground unit during Operation Iraqi
Freedom. More than a year before taking command of the 2nd Marines in
July 2002, before the 9/11 attacks, the Holy Spirit showed Bailey that
he would be called to lead his unit into combat in Iraq.
Capt. Brian Ross, the commanding officer of Golf Rifle Company
within 2/8, had a similar experience. “I knew even before I checked
into 2/8 that the battalion would see combat,” he says.
By late 2002, David was receiving clear instructions from the
Holy Spirit. From his prayer time he sensed the Lord leading him to
mentally focus on three key skills during the training: fire and
movement, urban warfare skills and knowledge of his weapon system.
As 2002 came to an end, the political situation with Saddam
Hussein in Iraq was heating up. The Holy Spirit began leading my wife
and me to pray daily for the entire U.S. military, from President Bush
down to my son David and his buddies in 2/8. Protection, wisdom and
courage were our primary requests.
God also instructed us to pray for the protection of the Iraqi
people. We also asked God to help them understand that the United
States was there to help them by removing Saddam Hussein. Sure enough,
in early January 2003, the 2/8 battalion was alerted. They scrambled to
prepare for deployment.
As the American military assembled in allied Middle East
countries, the Holy Spirit continued to direct many churches to pray.
In our home church near Buffalo, New York, on February 9, 2003, more
than a month before hostilities started, two prophecies proved to be
accurate.
The first said there would be a war with Saddam Hussein,
believers would help bring about the will of God through prayer and
believers should not trust in military strength but in the power of
intercession. The second word said that in the coming weeks God would
wake up Christians in the night hours to pray and that He would cause
Iraqi terrorists to become confused, fearful and ineffective.
What many of the Marines of 2/8 had believed for a long time
was now becoming clear to us at home: The United States would fight a
war against Saddam Hussein, and it would be a just cause.
Spirit-Directed Intercession
With the deployment, 2/8 Marines and their wives, families and
friends began praying in earnest. God almost immediately began
answering prayers while leading believers into deeper and bolder
petitions.
The battalion had not been selected to have an embedded news
reporter, so communications with the families back home would be
infrequent at best. But several wives of 2/8 Marines launched an
organized prayer effort and asked God to provide a way for the families
to receive news and to remove the barriers preventing regular
communications. These prayers were answered in mid-March, shortly
before the start of the offensive, when Kerry Sanders of NBC News
hooked up with Mortenson.
Sanders' team had the necessary satellite communications
equipment to work with a forward unit, but they had not yet been
assigned to a battalion. From their position with the 2/8, he and his
crew provided daily reports and some of the best news coverage of the
war.
Prayers also affected the commander. Don Rogers, the chaplain
for 2/8, requested one-on-one time with Mortenson in his stateroom to
pray for him. “I've never done this before, but I am your chaplain,”
Rogers told Mortenson. They met about once a week and continued this
practice later while in Kuwait until combat began.
At home, people began to post the names and pictures of their
loved ones in 2/8 on prayer boards. It was not uncommon for service
personnel to have four or five different churches praying for them by
name.
My son David's picture was on the prayer boards and lists of at
least five churches in western New York. The senior pastor of Lovejoy
Gospel Church, Ron Burgio, added David's name and those of the other
deployed military personnel from the church to his prayer list–which
was prayed over by 70 intercessors. These people prayed for David's
protection daily.
At the 2/8 base in Kuwait, chaplains from RCT-2 and 2/8
improvised to create a church for worship services. Using a large
chow-hall tent, chaplains ran two Sunday services, both Catholic and
Protestant. More than 600 Marines attended the packed meetings.
As war became imminent, Marines penned what they thought might
be their final letters to their families. In a letter dated March 7,
David wrote us: “Not everyone is given the opportunity to do what we
are doing for our country. … I'm so thankful to be part of this. The
Lord is consuming me with joy and happiness. May He do the same in your
lives.”
As parents, we remembered the prophetic words spoken over David
in August 2001. This gave us amazing confidence. We knew God would
protect him.
The Lord added another important prayer to our requests. He led
us to ask Him to give David, his buddies, and the men of his battalion
supernatural strength and endurance just as the prophet Elijah received
in 1 Kings 18 when he outran Ahab's chariot.
The implication for the men of 2/8 was clear. They would need
supernatural endurance in order to succeed in this conflict. This bold
“Elijah prayer” became our daily request.
Miracles in War
Operation Iraqi Freedom began on March 19, 2003, and 2/8 was
scheduled to launch into Iraq the next morning. Shortly before launch,
Capt. Seth MacCutcheon, a Christian and commander of the Combined
Anti-Armor Tank platoon (or CAAT platoon)–which consisted of 16
Humvees loaded with rockets, grenade launchers and heavy machine
guns–asked Chaplain Rogers to pray over his vehicles.
The job of the CAAT platoon was to find and destroy enemy armor
before the enemy could attack the battalion. Rogers understood the
seriousness of MacCutcheon's request.
“When Seth asked me to pray, I laid hands on every vehicle in
2/8–more than 70 Humvees and trucks–praying that the vehicles would
not be hit and for safety of the men who would ride in them,” Rogers
says. “I prayed about 20 seconds over each one.”
The start of the conflict unified Christians across the nation
with an urgency to pray. Echo Rifle Company Capt. Kevin Yeo's family
was one example of this. Yeo's wife, Andrea, and seven other women
began to intercede.
Andrea prayed every night. During the course of the war she
became the focal point within Echo Company for numerous prayers for the
wives and families of her husband's Marines. Of roughly 150 men in
Echo, Andrea was in direct contact with more than 50 families. Parents
and wives called her or sent e-mails to say, “Our church is praying for
Kevin, Echo and 2/8.”
A Catholic, Andrea found comfort in asking God to send a
guardian angel to protect her husband. Another woman, Patricia
Williams, enlisted business associates and even a group of nuns to
pray. Andrea and Patricia contacted two cousins who are priests in
Argentina who reported back that they had coordinated prayers at many
churches.
We now believe that, by a conservative estimate, more than 50
churches and 2,000 believers prayed for these soldiers regularly. And
we know God answered!
God's answers began almost as soon as the offensive started. I
am aware of more than 40 specific answers to prayers and 35 miracles of
protection. The Marines of 2/8 readily credit God with sparing lives.
In each case Marines would normally have died.
Amazingly, not one 2/8 Marine died during the offensive,
despite the fact that they saw some of the heaviest fighting of the
war. Furthermore, not one Marine lost an eye, limb, finger or toe, or
was otherwise disabled.
A total of 40 Marines from 2/8 were wounded during Operation
Iraqi Freedom–mostly from shrapnel. But all of them recovered. Here's
a small sampling of other testimonies of God's miraculous protection
that members of the battalion witnessed:
in Iraq), Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld announced during a press
conference that the Iraqi leaders were becoming increasingly
“confused.” This was the first reported confirmation of an answer to
specific prayers that God had led His people to pray.
suffered no casualties. This was miraculous because my son David's
squad had rushed across a distance of two football fields while exposed
to Iraqi machine-gun fire. The Iraqis fired at the Marines at
point-blank range yet always missed their targets.
attack on March 24. Five Marines were blown up to 30 feet through the
air from enemy rounds, yet they walked away. An incoming mortar round
hit and broke an overhead power line instead of landing on a four-man
mortar crew situated directly beneath the line.
war who provided the first evidence of missing U.S. Army Pfc. Jessica
Lynch's whereabouts. These Marines went on to provide much of the
intelligence that led to her rescue.
Meanwhile the family of Marine John Cain prayed fervently back in
Oklahoma and Arizona for hours throughout the day of March 25. Just in
time, God provided a sandstorm to cover the attack of Fox Company that
captured the hospital. The company had to cross a huge open field into
the face of Iraqi fire, but no Marines were hit crossing the field
because of the unusual weather pattern.
downpour the night of March 25. The rain turned hard, sunbaked ground
into soft mud. The next
night, Iraqis attacked the logistical rear area of 2/8, which contained
ammunition, fuel and food. Instead of Iraqi mortar rounds exploding on
contact–which would have sent a lot of deadly shrapnel flying
everywhere–the rounds sunk into the mud and exploded underground,
preventing dozens of injuries and saving lives.
days in An-Nasiriyah, from March 23-26, the remaining Iraqis ran and
hid in fear. The battalion began to capture scores of Iraqis who
otherwise would have been killed or wounded.
vehicle. Furthermore, no CAAT platoon Humvee was lost because of enemy
fire. God answered Chaplain Rogers' prayers.
My son David slept only 45 hours over the 31 days of the heaviest
fighting. That's an average of 1-1/2 hours per night. Later he
testified: “It was weird. I always had energy, and I knew it was from
the Lord. I was always volunteering for patrols and guard duty. Just
like Elijah in 1 Kings, the Spirit of the Lord came upon me. I got so
used to it, I didn't think about it.”
I realize that these testimonies are only a fraction of the
amazing stories that are emerging from the Iraq war. The same miracles
that happened among the soldiers of the 2/8 battalion were repeated in
countless other regiments.
One of the greatest miracles, of course, became obvious in late
January 2005 when the world watched Iraqi citizens participate in a
free election. I am sure that many American soldiers gave thanks to God
that day when they saw these liberated people brave the threats of
terrorism to move one step closer to democracy.
I hope all Christians in the United States will continue to
pray for our men and women in uniform. If we will allow the Holy Spirit
to energize and direct our intercession, we will see fewer casualties
of American soldiers and civilians and a swifter end to this conflict.
“The calming effect of prayer and faith works wonders for your nerves.
It is as if the Lord provides a shield of protection. During the
fighting God looked out for me and dozens of other Marines by
preventing some artillery shells from bursting near our fighting
positions.”
Glenn Thomas is the author of God Saw Them Through
(Creation House), an account of the 2nd Marine Battalion's experiences
in Iraq. He lives in Buffalo, New York. For more information about his
ministry, e-mail him at [email protected].