Spiritandword
  • Profile
    • My Profile
    • Edit Profile
    • Edit Profile Picture
    • Customize Profile
    • Settings
  • Mail
    • View Messages
    • Compose
  • Friends
    • All Friends
    • Top Friends
    • Online Friends
    • Pending Requests
    • Birthday E-Cards
    • Friends Requests
    • Sent ECards
  • Browse
    • Who's Online
    • Featured Members
    • Top Rated Members
  • Invite
    • Invite Friends
    • Pending Invitations
  • Explore
    • Blogs
    • Photos
    • Forum
    • Polls
    • Groups
    • Videos
  • Contact Us
  • Bill Austin
  • From the Editor
  • In The News
  • Traditional Paths in Conversation
  • Beyond Religion
  • GLBTQ
  • 12 Step Spirituality
  • The Good Books
  • Relationships
  • Life Challenges and Loss
  • Meditations
  • Small Bites
  • Town Square
  • Register
  • Log In
Log In
:
  • Sign Up
  • Forgot Password?
Recently Viewed By
miumiu002
miumiu002
William Reed
William Reed
Chelsea Hue
Chelsea Hue
Ken Goodman
Ken Goodman
Herschel Weinstein
Herschel Weinstein
James Grayman
James Grayman
Blogs
» Spirituality: The unutterable prayer
Charlie Van Dyke
Posted May 3, 2012 by Charlie Van Dyke in Traditional Paths in Conversation
By Norris Burkes
From starpress.com

On Easter morning, 2009, I was the chaplain in the Air Force Field Hospital in Balad, Iraq, when three patients from a Black Hawk UH-60L were wheeled into our emergency room .

The first patient had shrapnel in her right eye and a broken left hand, but seemed OK.

Suddenly she blurts, "I couldn't save him! He's dead, isn't he?"

"Who?" someone asks.

"Our team leader," she says.

In the next few moments, the 98-pound-soldier recalled riding as a medic in a vehicle hit by an EFP (Explosively Formed Projectile) designed to penetrate an armored vehicle. When the half-blinded medic found that her team leader lost a leg, she reached into his hip cavity to pinch the femoral artery closed.

"You did the right thing," our trauma czar told her. "That's what we would have done."

"He kept talking about his wife and unborn child," she added. "But I couldn't maintain my hold."

"Just relax, now. You're safe," said the anesthetist prepping her for surgery. "There's no way to close a hemorrhage that close to the groin."

Soon, after she'd been sedated, I made my way to another soldier with shrapnel injuries to his left leg. As quickly as I offered my help, he voiced a request.

"I want you to pray, chaplain." But there was something in his voice that implied an incomplete sentence. It was as if he was saying, "It's your turn to pray now."

He'd been praying ever since the explosion and, now, with the spent fury of a relay runner he was stretching his prayer baton to me. "I want you to pray that the insurgents will understand that we are trying to make their country better."

"I can do that," I said, giving the naivete of his battlefield spirituality an assenting nod. "The Bible does say 'Pray for your enemies.' "

"Yes," he said, "but it says more."

With that cryptic remark, I felt my eyebrows furrow and my neck stiffen as he offered further guidance. "I want you to pray that God will forgive the insurgents that killed my friend."

"What would that kind of prayer sound like?" I asked, reversing our naive roles.

"You know the prayer Jesus said on the cross?" he coaxed as if trying to remind me of a forgotten password, " 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.' "

Of course I knew it. It was the prayer Jesus prayed as he, too, bled out.

The prayer wasn't for himself; it was for the mob who unjustly crucified him. Jesus had seen his killers not as evil people, but as ignorant ones -- ignorant of their complicity in their own downfall. In fact, his prayer echoes through the eons, for me, for the wounded squad, and for the insurgents and for you.

"I think that's a great prayer, Private," I said, still a little unsure of whether I was placating his battlefield shock or mine.

Then, after I said the prayer, but before I allowed my eyes to open, I saw something -- the flash of a bloodied collage. I saw the insurgents planting the bomb, the explosion, the medic struggling to treat her squad, the team leader bleeding out, and the private praying for them all.

At that moment, I understood. Our world will remain an unending circle of revenge until we learn, as did this simple and wise soldier, to continually repeat Jesus' prayer. And, as we pray it with all our hearts and souls, it will be answered. If not in this world, then in the next when we hear the promised words of Jesus, "Well done, good and faithful servant."

Norris Burkes is a syndicated columnist, national speaker and the author of No Small Miracles. He also serves as an Air National Guard chaplain and is board certified in the Association of Professional Chaplains.
  • Share
  • Favorite
  • Report
Comments
Your comment has successfully added.
Ken Goodman wrote at May 4, 2012
0 Votes
I think these are the best stories to be told. This idea of forgiving those who have wronged you is so crucial for us to understand and mimic.
Ken Goodman
Your comment has successfully added.
Chelsea Hue wrote at May 4, 2012
0 Votes
I agree. Forgiveness I believe to be the most challenging action for us as humans to show. Our ego prompts us to be revengeful, but we must fight it.
Chelsea Hue
Your comment has successfully added.
Herschel Weinstein wrote at May 4, 2012
0 Votes
Until we learn, we cannot get rid of ourselves of this endless cycle of violence.
Herschel Weinstein
Your comment has successfully added.
James Grayman wrote at May 4, 2012
0 Votes
I always wondered about the advice the chaplains would give when they were in times like this.
James Grayman
Your comment has successfully added.
Allen Jones wrote at May 4, 2012
0 Votes
What a touching story from our own military. And he does give a good view about faith and spiritualism / spirituality in the military and in times of combat.
Allen Jones
  • Privacy
  • |Terms
  • |Contact Us
  • |Mobile
  • |English (US) English (US)