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U.S. officials destroy Afghan-language Bibles allegedly used in proselytizing Print E-mail
By Bob Allen   
Tuesday, May 05, 2009

WASHINGTON (ABP) -- The United States military says it has destroyed Afghan-language Bibles confiscated from soldiers in Afghanistan to ensure troops did not break regulations against proselytizing.

According to Reuters, officials denied that evangelical Christian soldiers seen in a video by the Arabic news network Al Jazeera tried to convert Afghans to Christianity. The video showed soldiers talking about giving away Bibles in two Afghan languages and a chaplain admonishing a congregation to "hunt people for Jesus."

Welton Gaddy, president of the Interfaith Alliance, called the video about military proselytizing by military personnel in a Muslim land "extremely troubling."

"The mission of U.S. military forces does not include armed evangelism for one particular religion," Gaddy said. "The U.S. military is present in Afghanistan to fight terrorism, not to spread religious doctrine."

Mikey Weinstein, president of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, wrote in an online column that unless steps are taken to prevent evangelical proselytizing in the armed forces, "America is dangerously tiptoeing closer to a modern-day reincarnation of the Crusade's Templar Knights."

"Every soldier has the right to pray or not in the manner they see fit," Weinstein said. "However, it is fundamentally wrong under any circumstance for that same soldier to directly or indirectly force his or her own religious traditions and beliefs on others under his or her command."

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Comments (2)Add Comment
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written by tj282828, May 06, 2009
So let me see if I understand this right. The military forbids Christians from proselytizing? Christians cannot do this, they must obey Christ and share the good news. Such a policy will mean that Christians cannot serve in the U.S. military. It is also very bad when believers do not have influence in the military. . . they have the guns.

I am afraid people do not see what is coming. Soon, if not already, Christians shall not be able to say "God bless America" because of our nation's GREAT sin. We, as believers, are going to be seen as America haters. Remember why Rome killed Christians? . . . they would not worship the emperor. . . which was the very essence of patriotism. The Supreme Court will soon be run by liberals who will make up law based on social consensus. . . or empathy. How much empathy will Christians receive? Will the Bill of Rights stand??? Well, that depends on how 9 people vote.
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written by Chytha, May 10, 2009
there is a difference between sharing your faith and proselytizing. It is vital that you share what you believe, but if you are in an official position representing your country be very careful about how you do it. How would you like it if when a cop pulls you over for speeding he gives you some religious literature and starts preaching at you? You would say he was out of line. Same here - soldiers represent their country, while they wear the uniform they cannot be preachers. They can and should live up to the standards of conduct that God requires - living out their faith. And if people around see the difference and ask "why?" they are free to explain. But their job is not to win converts. This is what was wrong about their conduct.
Just as if a person in a stateside job spent a large portion of their workday talking to people about God they would be wrong.

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