Book Jacket

 

rank 987
word count 39495
date submitted 10.05.2011
date updated 12.05.2011
genres: Christian
classification: moderate
complete

A Chaplain's War Diary: Afghanistan 2009-2011

Harold Ristau

This journal records the experiences of a Christian Chaplain during two deployments to Afghanistan, as well as functioning as a tribute to our fallen comrades.

 

The reflections recorded in this book are derived from the journal that I kept after spending approximately 300 days in theatre, working with both the Army and Air Force. As a chaplain I spent several months in the hospital on the main base on KAF, and also worked with medics on the front line. I have been deployed outside the wire to all sorts of bases: medium size FOBs consisting of anywhere between two to three hundred troops, to tiny little Strong Points in which approximately a dozen abide. As a Christian chaplain, I cannot but help to filter the world through the eyes of my faith, nor would I want to see it in any other way. Accordingly, these writings do not only offer insights into our Armed Forces' experience in Afghanistan, they also manifest the devotional reflections of a Lutheran pastor. I have discovered spiritual treasures tucked away in the lives and experiences of the common soldier. They are a priesthood, practising a vocation as holy and necessary as any other. Although some regard them as killers, I believe that they bring to us insights into a divine language that some lack the courage to hear.

 
rate the book

to rate this book please Register or Login

 

tags

afghanistan, armed forces, army, chaplain, christian, devotional, diary, journal, war

on 3 watchlists

8 comments

 

To leave comments on this or any book please Register or Login

subscribe to comments for this book
Ron Mitchell wrote 112 days ago

I revisited your book. I appreciate the message and the work you do. God's blessings with you.

Ron Mitchell wrote 294 days ago

Great Words--Great Writing Style--Great Testimony! Your thoughts have touched my heart. I truly hope you get this published in some form. God's blessings.

mrsdfwt wrote 358 days ago

Dear Chaplain Harold,
The soldiers in Afghanistan are blessed to have you as their pastor, and i feel blessed for having found this book. A touching journal that should be read by everyone, so we are reminded of all the sacrifices and won't take our freedom for granted.
God bless you. Starred.
Maria
Dark of the Moon

KatCannon wrote 362 days ago

I love this. I love how you make the battle of the Christian life so real by virtue of your experience. I love how you make me take seriously the faith I profess, and acknowledge the enemy that we face. I haven't had a chance to read this all the way through, yet, but I'm looking forward to continuing to read it. Thanks so much for sharing this.

JamesRevoir wrote 362 days ago

Most dearest Harold, beloved of the Father:

May God richly bless your brave service, my friend. Being in the presence of constant death and unimaginable stress can certainly take its toll on our faith, but know that God has amazing rewards for your faithfulness to Him and to His precious people-both those who embrace Him and those in darkness who have not yet encountered His amazing love.

By virtue of He who is in you, you carry His presence to the darkest of places-even when you are not aware. Like the bright, blue sky which is hidden from us on a gloomy, overcast day, His glory, His majesty and His kingdom transcend the ugliness our physical world.

May God give you words of life and hope to speak into every encounter, regardless of how overwhelming the circumstances may seem.

James

The Band Of Modern Brothers wrote 375 days ago

After a brief skim through. I am by far not a believer in God and did find the religious twist on everything quite heavy, but that does not take away the experiences you went through as you must have been really tested on your faith from time to time, as I was constantly quesioning my beliefs time and time again.
In your defence for the greater good you sometimes have to brave the world outside of your own bubble worlds to understand why humans stop other humans from doing wrong on the earth, regardless of any faith if by stopping an enemy soldier from killing innocent people then this is the greater good, not the blind view you have killed, but the open view you have saved. When I have had a proper read I will comment again.

You get my full support
Chris Roberts

Tom Kendall wrote 380 days ago

I have only read chapter 1. I actually found the writing to be a little too matter of fact, and it seemed to lack emotion. Perhaps that is a little unfair bearing in mind the basis of the story. I am a follower of Jehovah;s teachings. (My wife is a baptised Jehovah's Witness). I find it hard to reconcile God's teachings with war. I find it hard to understand how you can be a man of the cloth, and a soldier. Thou shalt not kill. I don't really understand why we are at war in Afghanistan, and Iraq. Thousands are dying, have died, will die. for what? You might care to look at the writings of Shah Wali, he is an Afghan, and writes of his experiences.

David Bortress wrote 380 days ago

Harold,

Thank you for sharing your fascinating experiences in Afghanistan. I, not only enjoyed reading these stories, but I was able to view the war from a new and different perspective. The war you describe is certainly different from what I have seen portrayed on television. And one of the best attributes of your war diary is its honesty.

You have at least on typo. The error I found is at the very end of the book (in the second to last sentence). You typed "think" instead of "thing." I would also leave out the "that" in this sentence: "One thing I know for sure..."

While what you have is very good, I believe it would be even better if it were pulled together more. You have so much excellent material, its impact would be amplified even more if it were written as part of a larger story. Take everything I write here with a healthy dose of skepticism, however. I'm a math teacher (not an English teacher). I just want to give you my honest impression.

Most of all -- thank you for your service. Really. Thank you.

David

1