WASHINGTON, D.C., October 11, 2005: The Air Force, facing a lawsuit over alleged proselytizing, has withdrawn a document that permitted chaplains to evangelize military personnel who were not affiliated with any faith, Pentagon officials said yesterday. The document was circulated at the Air Force Chaplain School until eight weeks ago. It was a “code of ethics” for chaplains that included the statement “I will not proselytize from other religious bodies, but I retain the right to evangelize those who are not affiliated.” The code was written by the National Conference on Ministry to the Armed Forces (NCMAF), a private association of religious bodies that provide chaplains to the military. It was never an official directive of the Defense Department, but the fact that it was handed out at the chaplains school at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Ala., “might have given the impression that it was Air Force policy,” said Rabbi Arnold Resnicoff, a retired Navy chaplain who is a special adviser to the secretary of the Air Force. The Air Force distanced itself from the code of ethics after complaints by Michael L. “Mikey” Weinstein, a 1977 Air Force Academy graduate who has accused the academy’s current leaders of fostering pressure on cadets to convert to evangelical Christianity.
“They say the bad guys we’re fighting, the jihadists, represent a theocratic, fascistic movement,” Weinstein said. “If the United States Air Force, probably the most technologically lethal organization ever assembled by man, has a policy of evangelizing ‘the unchurched,’ you tell me how that makes us look.” The Air Force has new guidelines on religious tolerance that discourage public prayers on all but rare occasions. They do not ban evangelizing but say chaplains “must be as sensitive to those who do not welcome offerings of faith as they are generous in sharing their faith with those who do.” Weinstein called the guidelines insufficient, but evangelical Christian groups attacked them as overly restrictive. “Mikey Weinstein might not like it, but it is the job of an evangelical Christian chaplain to evangelize,” said Tom Minnery, vice president of public policy for the Colorado-based Focus on the Family. “It’s protected by the First Amendment’s guarantee of free exercise of religion.” Resnicoff said the “amazing, positive thing that people are missing” about the NCMAF code of ethics is that “even the most evangelical chaplains are agreeing not to try to change the religion of a Jew, a Muslim, a Hindu — anyone who has a religious faith.”
