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As Injured Vets Return Home, Churches Reach Out

Veterans Church

First Posted: 11/ 9/2011 10:35 pm Updated: 01/ 9/2012 5:12 am

By G. Jeffrey MacDonald
Religion News Service

NEWTON, Mass. (RNS) Some wounds of war are all too visible -- a missing leg, a shattered arm. The invisible wounds of mind and soul are often more difficult to spot, and equally hard to treat.

But those who know where to look can help them heal, and it's a message that is hitting home for U.S. congregations as more than 1.35 million veterans adjust to civilian life after deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan.

With symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) affecting an estimated one-in-six returning service members, congregations are coming face-to-face with the tolls of war. Experts say faith groups have much to offer, even when the wounds include PTSD and traumatic brain injury.

"Churches are kind of in the dark about how to help, unfortunately," said Peter Bauer, an ordained minister and clinical social worker with the Veterans Administration in San Antonio. "But they don't have to stay there. There are some very easy things that churches can do to be proactive and help with this population."

Bauer, a former Navy chaplain, recently convened workshops on PTSD and traumatic brain injury for pastors and seminarians at Andover Newton Theological School in Newton, Mass. His educational outreach builds on other small-scale initiatives that have gained momentum in recent years.

Since forming in 2009, the non-profit group Care for the Troops has equipped 37 Georgia congregations to convene peer groups, identify local clinicians with military experience and otherwise support soldiers' families. The project is now adding congregations in Tennessee, California and other states.

Illinois-based Wheat Ridge Ministries has been circulating Lutheran liturgies and other resources to help churches build bonds with military families. Point Man Ministries in New York has partnered with about 250 U.S. congregations to host veteran-led, peer support groups for those dealing with PTSD.

Last year, Army Chaplain Jeremy Pickens launched the Massachusetts Military Spiritual Strength Network, where clergy and laypeople receive training in how to make religious programs more military-friendly. The network now includes 60 local churches.

"Sometimes we hear people say, 'We don't have the training to deal with PTSD,'" Pickens said. "But (to minister effectively), I don't need to know what it means to have PTSD. I just need to know how to listen. It's a matter of providing open space where people can talk."

In his presentation, Bauer shared sobering facts about struggles faced by those returning from war. Example: in 2010, the military had more suicides (468) than deaths in combat (462).

The roots of trauma often go back to childhood, Bauer said, where 60 percent of veterans experienced physical abuse and 40 percent experienced sexual abuse. Such psychological wounds can get re-opened in combat, and by the time a soldier comes home, mental and emotional patterns can be habitual and difficult to overcome.

Hidden wounds can be tricky to manage, Bauer said, in part because they're not easy to diagnose. Depression is common in the 3.2 million Americans who've suffered traumatic brain injury, he said. He urged members of faith communities to take note when someone seems overwhelmed by normal levels of light or sound, and make referrals for medical evaluations.

Congregations, however, can do much more than refer. Bauer suggested helping veterans find contemplative or more traditional worship services as an alternative to contemporary services where loud bands and bright lights can trigger anxious reactions.

Churches can show ongoing care in simple ways, Bauer said, such as hosting a monthly support dinner for military family members. They should also appoint a volunteer sponsor to check in monthly with a deployed serviceman or woman, and a second sponsor for his or her loved ones at home, during deployments.

"It's unforgiveable in 2011 that someone (who belongs to a church) would be deployed to Afghanistan, and no one from that church would be willing to step up to the plate, be a sponsor and make sure they're OK," Bauer said. "That is a crime."

Veterans say churches are finding their way in a new ministry landscape, though not always with success. James Knudsen, a Vietnam War veteran and PTSD sufferer in Marion, Iowa, says churches in his area have resisted requests for them to host support groups for veterans.

"I have not heard of any churches in my area that are helping veterans," Knudsen said. "They have other interests."

But in western Massachusetts, 29-year-old Robert Henry Hyde, an Air Force veteran who served from 2000 to 2004 and deployed to Iraq, helped raise awareness in local churches before he left the area to attend seminary.

"Ministers, though they might not have served in the military and might not understand it, have the tools to help people handle PTSD or brain trauma, or at least refer people to the right professionals to get help," Hyde said. "So in that sense, churches need to be a part of this" healing effort.

Even churches with a history of ministry to veterans see new opportunities now to branch out. The Rev. Jeremi Colvin, assistant rector for mission in homeless ministry at the (Episcopal) Church of the Holy Spirit in Fall River, Mass., hopes her church will soon begin hosting peer support groups for veterans.

"There could be more outreach," Colvin said at Bauer's workshop. "We have a ministry of outreach to veterans and military families, but we need to spread out, talk to people, talk to hospitals, and make it more known that we're there."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST RELIGION

By G. Jeffrey MacDonald Religion News Service NEWTON, Mass. (RNS) Some wounds of war are all too visible -- a missing leg, a shattered arm. The invisible wounds of mind and soul are often more dif...
By G. Jeffrey MacDonald Religion News Service NEWTON, Mass. (RNS) Some wounds of war are all too visible -- a missing leg, a shattered arm. The invisible wounds of mind and soul are often more dif...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brinniewales
04:23 PM on 11/14/2011
If churches and other organizations are at a loss about how to help returning veterans, they might turn to the veterans of Vietnam and ask what would have helped them upon their return to the U.S. We failed those men and women miserably. Let's not make the same mistake twice.
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freedom1947
sarcasm, cynicism
03:26 PM on 11/25/2011
This war was willed by god,ask Bush. All Volunteers forever or until no longer needed. Our war drafted only those they had no use for. Minorities and the poor whites. Watch, what the repubs are willing to do for these well indoctrinated troops coming home. It will be nothing, to expensive.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brinniewales
11:34 PM on 11/25/2011
My brother-in-law, a pilot, was neither a minority or poor white yet he served in "our" war and was shot down. He was treated poorly when he finally returned after multiple reconstructive surgeries. I have stories of many friends who were non minority and not poor who were drafted, and either died or they returned and were treated as second class citizens. Regardless of enlisting, our military members may or may not be sent to Afghanistan or Iraq. They may be sent to other countries or remain stateside. Regardless of party affiliation or where they serve or are stationed, they deserve our respect.
tamazul
Badges? What Badges?
11:16 AM on 11/14/2011
Oxymorons: army chaplain, navy chaplain
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Veritas is Pro Life
Follower of Christ, Family Man and Marine
04:51 PM on 11/14/2011
In what way? Out of the dozens of Chaplains I have met, the vast majority have been both military and devout to their faith. The service they provide to the troops is irreplaceable. I thanked God each time I was able to receive the Sacrament of Penance and participate in Mass while deployed to Afghanistan. Please explain your comment. Thanks, Veritas.
tamazul
Badges? What Badges?
07:36 PM on 11/14/2011
God has not gotten involved with the wars of mankind since the end of the Jewish System in 70 AD.
Jesus, himself, said to the Roman Gov, Pontius Pilot in JOHN 18:36:
"My kingdom is no part of this world. If my kingdom were part of this world, my followers would have fought that I should not be delivered up to the Jews.
But as it is, my kingdom is not from this source."
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Veritas is Pro Life
Follower of Christ, Family Man and Marine
11:33 AM on 11/16/2011
In response to your below comment:

"I'll let the Book do the talking:

"At this Peter opened his mouth and said: "For a certainty I percieve that God IS NOT PARTIAL, but IN EVERY NATION the man that fears Him and works righteousn­ess IS ACCEPTABLE TO HIM." (ACTS OF THE APOSTLES10­:34-35) "

I note that you take this out of context by not emphasizing the Peter says that "the man that fears Him..." is who God is not partial to. Any person of any nation, not any nation, and the person must fear God, right? Veritas.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
soma77
Author, Speaker, Retreat Facilitator
03:14 PM on 11/13/2011
Those that support veterans need to exercise their right to vote support the candidates that are going to protect veterans' benefits rather than the Republican Party, which slashes VA budgets.

The Republican Party has vowed to cut non-military federal spending, including veterans benefits, in order to pay for new tax breaks for the very rich and for corporations that move jobs overseas. We need to support and pay to help these brave men and women.
02:56 PM on 11/13/2011
It's the least they can do after feeding them false and dangerous propaganda about inilisting to keep their country free.
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Veritas is Pro Life
Follower of Christ, Family Man and Marine
04:52 PM on 11/14/2011
The least who could do? You honestly don't think that our troops are keeping us free? Amazing. Veritas.
11:13 PM on 11/14/2011
The churches. No, I don't believe the troops are sent to fight to keep us free, but I think a majority of the soldiers think so.
06:33 PM on 11/12/2011
We have to be told to reach out to vets.
Why?
We are in another Vietnam.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mrld20
07:12 PM on 11/11/2011
Good for Churches! It's nice to see at least some groups still give a damn...
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AZLibDem
If you're speeding, you're an "illegal"
11:29 AM on 11/11/2011
While I applaud the the work these churches are doing for our veterans, we should not be relying on them to do so.

These people are our collective responsibility, and we need to live up to it; they should not have to turn to religious organizations for the support they need.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
demcratville
Science makes you think.
03:26 AM on 11/11/2011
The key to praying is talking to yourself and pretending someone intelligent is listening.
02:31 AM on 11/11/2011
I think more than churches should reach out to our servicemen/women; we all should try to do something to help them with their problems. so many have put their lives on the line for us and in return we expect others such as churches and foundations to take care of them; how about asking them if there is anything we can do to help and constantly following up on them; yet if a church becomes involved regardless of the religion all we can do is gripe that a religious order is in control of them now; they need so much and yet we give such little to them; we think we are so great if we thank them and then go on our merry way; they still have to deal with the nightmares and memories of war
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
methodman
09:09 PM on 11/10/2011
This is Absurd shame. A group of people who don't believe in half of the material that is in "The Right Use of Will series ("Original Cause "CeAnne De Rohan and series of books describing traumatic experience and how to come to terms to sort through their motley combinations would never be allowed as fodder for discussion. " These books helped me understand a friend's strangulation experience. The church folk are blinded to so many legitimate experiences. Why are they specially tagged why we would never be allowed to be involved through their filter. Unless we Lie on an application notice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
demcratville
Science makes you think.
02:42 PM on 11/10/2011
please don't let the church manipulate our return vets into that foolishness organized religion. you killed for Christ. your friend were murder as gods plan. we all know thats crap
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Veritas is Pro Life
Follower of Christ, Family Man and Marine
04:56 PM on 11/14/2011
Your dis-jointed words are not easy to comprehend. The Church is able to provide great comfort to returning veterans, thank God for this. Who specifically are you accusing of killing for Christ? I don't believe anyone is doing that today. Yes, people die in God's plan, but if we live our lives according to His will, we will be with Him in heaven. All of this is true. Hope this helps, Veritas.
12:05 PM on 11/10/2011
I read the article then I read the posts and the latter reads like a bad and poorly produced late-night informational.

Hello people!

These "vets" are human beings like you like me. The article is simply about trying to comfort another fellow human being who is suffering.

Thats it.

And what I see are 30 posts or more spouting this spouting that blaming X blaming Y and all the time that human being who went to war is sitting there hurting...........
09:53 AM on 11/10/2011
I find it interesting that an article about churches doing something to help our returning vets is met with such disdain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
el sistema
10:02 AM on 11/10/2011
The churches could help by giving back the money they fleece from their flock. I would think supporting vets monetarily would bring better benefits than preying on their weaknesses.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Just say no to gasoline
11:33 AM on 11/10/2011
Money is not the answer to every problem.
These people voluntarily give their money to these churches.
Just the same way political zeolots freely give their responsibilities to their sacred political leaders. Government workers are not suppose to be our leaders (like kings), but to be our Representatives and do our will. Instead Democratic and Republican puppetmasters tell us what we need and We The People say, Amen." We are all sheep in bigoted flocks. "Our flock is the True flock. The other flocks are evil."
10:48 AM on 11/10/2011
you do realize that without religious conflict we wouldnt be at war right now and the vets would not have these problems?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Just say no to gasoline
11:19 AM on 11/10/2011
That is something the Democrats and Republicans want us to believe as they increasingly mix Church and State. It is actually governments manipulating religions that convine people to go to war. Politicians use religion as their excuses for or against the political agenda they are foisting upon the people in order to control them. The Democrat and Republican Parties have become religions in their own right. Their disciples sound like religious zealots anymore. The people have forgotten that this country is suppose to be controlled by We The People and the people we send to the government are suppose to be our Representatives. They have faith in their politicians and believe that these politicians are their saviors and will provide them with all that they desire. People religiously believe political lies as truth. Then the people lie to themselves and say, "I'm not religious." But they are willing to religiously follow those in their own belief system and declare those not in their belief system to be less than human, evil even. They are only deserving of pejorative name calling. This may come from Americans tendency to fight fire with fire, fight bigotry with bigotry, fight discrimination with discrimination. There is no rhyme or reason to our actions. We have even converted Science into a religion. All at the bequest of our politicians. We must have need of a shepherd. We no longer think for ourselves. We vomit sound bites.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blizzard man robot voice
Mark 13:13
03:40 PM on 11/15/2011
It has a lot more to do with 20th Century economic and political policies in the Middle East than it has to do with religion. If we didn't prop up dictatorships or ruin our relations with Iran, a lot of these fundamentalist groups wouldn't have surged in the 60's thus causing these issues. We make the bed that our children must sleep in.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:29 AM on 11/10/2011
Why are there automatic weapons sitting next to this guy? I think he needs professional assistance rather than hoping one of the many afterlife faeries is going to help.
01:49 PM on 11/10/2011
I think this is a chapel in either Afghanistan or Iraq.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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07:49 AM on 11/11/2011
roger, the fact that he's wearing multi-cam, means by definition he's in Afghanistan. You aren't authorized to wear it anywhere else, i.e. Iraq or America... Secondly, you have to have your weapon on you at all times (with very few exceptions) which means, if you go to the PX, Church or go play ping pong, you have to have your weapon on you. So by one photo, I can extrapolate, he's in Afghanistan. No offense, but you obviously have never served in the military, or don't know anyone personally.
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Veritas is Pro Life
Follower of Christ, Family Man and Marine
04:58 PM on 11/14/2011
You are correct. Because this soldier is in the combat zone, he has his weapon. Semper Fi, Veritas.
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Reg Corleonis
Life is ending one minute at a time
09:19 AM on 11/10/2011
Another way churches can help is to dial back the right wing, pro-war, pro-Israel rhetoric and make sure the troops don't end up fighting useless wars thousands of miles from their homeland.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Just say no to gasoline
11:23 AM on 11/10/2011
Churches have zero power with the government. The government controls them. We The People are suppose to be the government, but we give that responsibility away.
Every single war in history was fought over land, money and power. We rewrite the truth and call it History.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Ruthless
I can smell your BS
12:45 PM on 11/10/2011
"Churches have zero power with the government­"

Is that why a canadidate's religion is so important to the voting public?

"The government controls them."

I would love to know how that happens

"Every single war in history was fought over land, money and power."

But religion was used to motivate the troops. Take out the religion and nobody wants to fight.