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Chaplains' Prayers ARE Definitely Allowed On Military Bases: In Fact, Military Commanders Are FORBIDDEN From "Censoring or Prohibiting Such Invocations"

News Staff : Mar 15, 2017
PRNewswire/First Liberty Institute

"We hope our Commander in Chief will reverse this trend toward religious hostility so that America's military can remain strong and resilient." -Mike Berry, First Liberty Institute

(Portsmouth, NH)—[PRNewswire] Today, First Liberty Institute sent a letter to the commander of a New Hampshire Air Force base, advising him that federal law, military regulations, and the Constitution all allow prayer and Bible readings by chaplains at military events. (Photo via Eagle Commission)

On February 6, a special interest group sent a letter to Pease Air National Guard Base, demanding that the base commander forbid military chaplains from performing invocations at military events held on the base.

The Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty, an organization of chaplain endorsers that speaks for nearly half of all chaplains in the military, asked First Liberty Institute, a national religious freedom law firm, to advise the Air Force base on the constitutionality of the practice.

"The Constitution, federal law, and Department of Defense regulations all support your practice of permitting uniformed chaplains to offer invocations at command functions," First Liberty attorneys says in an advisory letter to the commanding base officer. "Moreover, those legal authorities actually forbid military commanders from censoring or prohibiting such invocations."

"It is perfectly constitutional for military chaplains to offer prayers and Bible readings during ceremonies," Mike Berry, a former Marine Corps judge advocate, now Senior Counsel and Director of Military Affairs for First Liberty Institute, says.

"Military chaplains exist to ensure all service members have the right to free exercise of their religion," Chaplain (Colonel) Ron Crews, U.S. Army (Retired), Executive Director for the Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty, says. "The prayers and Bible readings they offer at Pease Air National Guard Base are one of many ways they faithfully discharge that duty. Their faithful service should be respected, not attacked."

"We hope our Commander in Chief will reverse this trend toward religious hostility so that America's military can remain strong and resilient," Berry says.