Thank God For Heros

02In the midst of World War II, the Dorchester, moving troops from America to Europe, was approaching Greenland when it was torpedoed by a German submarine just after midnight on February 3, 1943. Within twenty minutes of being struck, it plunged beneath the black and icy waters of the North Atlantic.

In those twenty minutes, with the pitch dark, the cries of the wounded coming from every direction, and the severe lurching of the ship as it filled with water, chaos and pandemonium reigned. But four chaplains (Lt. Alexander Goode, a Jewish Rabbi; Lt. Clark Poling, Dutch Reform; Lt. George Fox, Methodist; and Lt. John Washington, a Catholic priest) took charge and quickly brought a sense of calm and assurance to the soldiers aboard the sinking ship.

The chaplains moved among the soldiers, “calming the frightened, tending the wounded and guiding the disoriented toward safety.” One survivor testified, “I could hear men crying, pleading, praying. I could also hear the chaplains preaching courage. Their voices were the only thing that kept me

Goode
Goode

going.” They helped the men get into life jackets and off the boat. And when the life jackets finally ran out, these four Army chaplains took off their own vests and gave them to other soldiers to make sure they would be safe (only 230 of the 902 on board survived).

Poling

Poling

As the Dorchester finally slipped beneath the frigid Arctic waters, survivors in the lifeboats hat the last thing they saw was the four chaplains standing together on the submerging deck – a Jew, a Methodist, a Catholic, and a Dutch Reformed – their arms locked together and their voices raised in prayer and song as the ship forever slipped beneath the freezing waters.In 1948, President Harry Truman arranged for a special postage stamp to memorializethe four, and three years later in 1951, he spoke at the dedication of the Chapel of the Four Chaplains in Philadelphia, telling the nation:  This chapel commemorates something more than an act of bravery or courage. It commemorates a great act of faith in God. The four chaplains whose

Fox
Fox

memory this shrine was built to commemorate were not required to give their lives as they did. They gave their lives without being asked. When their ship was sinking, they handed out all the life preservers that were available and then took off their own and gave them away in order that four other men might be saved. Those four chaplains actually carried out the moral code which we are all supposed to live by. They obeyed the Divine commandment that men should love one another. They really lived up to the moral standard that declares: “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends” [John 15:13]. They were not afraid of death because they knew that the Word of God is stronger than death. Their belief, their faith, in His word enabled them to conquer death.WallBuilders recently obtained an original card signed by President Harry S. Truman with his declaration that the sacrifice of the four chaplains was “an heroic event without parallel.”

Washington

Washington

President Truman, throughout his administration, was outspoken about the importance of Biblical faith. A confirmation of this is evident in his oproclamation for a day of prayer and thanksgiving at the surrender of the German Army on V-E Day, May 8, 1945.
As part of that call to prayer, President Truman urged Americans:  “I call upon my countrymen to dedicate this day of prayer to the memory of those who have given their lives to make possible our victory.”We, too, should be grateful for the sacrifice of the valiant men and women from throughout our nation’s history who have been willing to lay down their lives to protect our nation and the God-given freedoms we enjoy.

Source:  WallBuilders

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