The Special Forces Prayer

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The Special Forces Prayer

Postby holysoldier5000 » Fri Apr 22, 2005 8:02 am

Disclaimer: You may not agree with me on this post and that is your right to do so, but I am posting this thread as a tribute to the brave men of the US Special Forces who valiantly give their lives to preserve human freedom, who defend the defenseless, and fight to free the enslaved.

The Special Forces Prayer

Almighty God Who art the Author of Liberty and the Champion of the oppressed hear our prayer.

We the men of Special Forces, acknowledge our dependence upon Thee in the preservation of human freedom. Go with us as we seek to defend the defenseless and to free the enslaved.

May we ever remember that our nation, whose oath "in God We Trust," expects that we shall acquit ourselves with honor, that we may never bring shame upon our faith, our families, or our fellow men.

Grant us wisdom from Thy mind, courage from Thine heart, and protection by Thine hand. It is for Thee that we do battle, and to thee belongs the victor's crown. For Thine is the kingdom, and the power and glory forever,

Amen



The Special Forces Prayer a History
Carried from Vietnam to Afghanistan


Small teams of U.S. Army Special Forces troops in Afghanistan are playing a big role in the fight against terrorism: they're training the anti-Taliban rebels, organizing supply lines and spotting targets for American warplanes.

The elite corps of commandos is lightly armed but highly trained in the language and culture of whatever region they are deployed to. Among their sparse Army-issued equipment, a powerful message goes with them — the Special Forces prayer, written 40 years ago by Dayton Veterans Affairs chaplain John Stevey.

"The prayer has been a very important part of our culture here," said Lt. Col. Tim Willoughby, command chaplain for the U.S. Army Special Forces based at Ft. Bragg, N.C. "Just about all of our chaplains have put together various resources that we give to our soldiers when they're deployed, and just about everything we give the soldiers has that prayer in it."

The prayer also is inscribed in a stained glass window above the entry to the Special Forces chapel at Ft. Bragg. More recently, it has found its way onto T-shirts and sweatshirts sold at the fort's JFK Museum.

John Stevey was a 30-year-old Army chaplain at Ft. Bragg back in 1961 when Gen. William Yarborough, then the commanding officer of the Special Forces, asked him to compose a prayer for the Green Berets who were about to be sent to Laos to train the Royal Laotian army for repelling the Communists.

Stevey's orders were to write something brief (it had to fit on a wallet-sized card the troops could carry) that would serve all religious backgrounds and remind the soldiers "of the spiritual nature of what they were doing," Stevey recalled in his office at the Dayton VA Medical Center. He came out of retirement four years ago to join the VA staff.

Stevey was careful to leave out references to specific religions ("I guess it could be used even by Muslims," he said.) but he also wanted to remind the soldiers of their dependence on God and their higher mission as Special Forces members.

"I'm a conservative theologically," he said. "But if I had talked about the cross, or had talked about Jesus, it wouldn't have passed muster . . . Instead, it's a prayer asking for God's guidance and protection in what we do."

He said its intent also "is to remind the soldiers that they are not just brutes, that there is a higher project they are working on — to defend the defenseless and free the oppressed."

Which is exactly what the Special Forces are trying to do now in Afghanistan, Stevey said. "I certainly hope this is of value to them."

Willoughby, himself a native of Tipp City, said the prayer's simple humility accounts for its lasting appeal. "It strikes a chord with Special Forces soldiers who acknowledge God as their source of strength," he said.

Stevey said nothing in his background while growing up in a small town outside of Pittsburgh would have marked him as a chaplain. "I didn't take the church seriously," he said. "In fact, a girlfriend I had in high school later wrote to me and said, 'How did this happen?'"

Soon after graduating from high school, where he lettered in seven different sports, Stevey was nearly killed in a construction site accident and later in a car crash — both in the same week.

"I got to thinking about changing my life," he said.

He went on to Bob Jones University, where a religious vocation called to him — but so did the U.S. Army. He went off to Korea as a chaplain in 1960.

"It was a good fit for me," he said. "I'm not the holy guy who walks around and looks pious. I felt that to be a man among men was my calling."

In 1977, Stevey retired as a full colonel from the Army, where he spent four years training with, and ministering to, the Special Forces. He went through its officer training school, completed all the requirements at Panama's Jungle Warfare Center and earned his credentials as a master parachutist.

"You got to be there with the soldiers," he said. "You have to understand what they're going through in order to help them."
Live your life, love the Lord, and don't forget to laugh...
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Postby Stephen » Fri Apr 22, 2005 10:12 am

I'm gonna go ahead and lock this before it degrades. Politics folks, remember this is an anime board and not a politics board.
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