Wednesday, February 6, 2013


PCM-02-05.2013 The Four Chaplins



(CNN) Contributor Bob Greene-- By the end of the Super Bowl on Sunday night, one or more professional football players will be hailed for their valor, for their guts, for their devotion to their teammates.

They will be called heroes.

And more than 100 million people will be watching.

But because, predictably, those laudatory words will be thrown around so casually on Sunday, perhaps we can take a few minutes here to address an act of genuine valor that happened exactly 70 years ago today.

It wasn't televised. There were no sponsors.

On February 3, 1943, an Army transport ship called the Dorchester, carrying American soldiers through the icy North Atlantic on their way to serve in World War II, was about 100 miles off the coast of Greenland in rough sea. More than 900 people were on board.

Many of them were little more than boys -- young soldiers and sailors who had never been so far from home. The journey had been arduous already, with the men crammed into claustrophobic, all-but-airless sleeping quarters below deck, constantly ill from the violent lurching of the ship.

In the blackness of night, a German submarine fired torpedoes at the Dorchester.

One of the torpedoes hit the middle of the ship. There was pandemonium on board. The Dorchester swiftly began to sink.

The soldiers and sailors, many of them wakened from sleep by the attack, searched desperately in the dark for life jackets and lifeboats and a route to safety.

With them on the ship were four military chaplains, from four disparate religions.

They were Father John Washington, born in Newark, New Jersey, who was Catholic; the Rev. Clark Poling, born in Columbus, Ohio, who was ordained in the Reformed Church in America; Rabbi Alexander Goode, born in Brooklyn, New York, who was Jewish; and the Rev. George Fox, born in Lewistown, Pennsylvania, who was Methodist.


In the chaos onboard, according to multiple accounts by survivors of the attack, the four men tried to calm the soldiers and sailors and lead them to evacuation points. The chaplains were doing what chaplains do: providing comfort and guidance and hope.

"I could hear men crying, pleading, praying," a soldier named William B. Bednar would later recall. "I could also hear the chaplains preaching courage. Their voices were the only thing that kept me going."

With the Dorchester rapidly taking on water, there were not enough life jackets readily available for every man on the ship.

So, when the life jackets ran out, the four chaplains removed their own, and handed them to soldiers who didn't have them.

More than 600 men died that night in the frigid seas, but some 230 were rescued. And some of the survivors, in official accounts given to the Army, and in interviews after the war, reported what they saw as the ship went down:

Those four chaplains, men of different faiths but believing in the same God, their arms linked, standing on the deck together in prayer.




They had willingly given up their futures, their lives, to try to help the men who had been placed by the Army in their care.

The U.S. Army War College has in its records a narrative of what happened that night. One of the men who survived the sinking of the Dorchester, a Navy officer named John J. Mahoney, is quoted as recalling that before heading for the lifeboats, he hurried in the direction of his quarters.

Rabbi Goode, seeing him, asked where he was going. Mahoney said he had forgotten his gloves, and wanted to retrieve them before being dropped into the cold sea.

Rabbi Goode said that Mahoney should not waste fleeting time, and offered Mahoney his own gloves.

When Mahoney said he couldn't deprive Rabbi Goode of his gloves, the rabbi said it was all right, he had two pairs.

Only later, according to military historians, did Mahoney realize that of course, Rabbi Goode was not carrying an extra pair of gloves. He had already decided that he was going down with the ship.

According to the Army War College account, another survivor of the Dorchester, John Ladd, said of the four chaplains' selfless act:

"It was the finest thing I have seen or hope to see this side of heaven."

The story of the four chaplains was quite well known in America for a while; in 1948 a first-class 3-cent postage stamp was issued bearing their likenesses. There are still stained glass windows in some chapels across the U.S. that pay tribute to the four men, including at the Pentagon. But the national memory is short, and they are no longer much discussed. February 3 was, years ago, designated by Congress to be set aside annually as Four Chaplains Day, but it is not widely commemorated.

This Super Bowl Sunday, with its football heroes whose televised exploits are bracketed by commercials for beer and corn chips, will be no exception. The nation's attention, this February 3, will be focused on the game.

But perhaps, at some point in the day, we can pause for a moment to reflect upon what valor and courage and sacrifice really mean. How rare they truly are.

And to recall the four men who remain, in the words with which their grateful and humbled country honored them on the front of that long-ago postage stamp, "these immortal chaplains."

Editor's note: CNN Contributor Bob Greene is a bestselling author whose 25 books include "Late Edition: A Love Story"; "Duty: A Father, His Son, and the Man Who Won the War"; and "Once Upon a Town: The Miracle of the North Platte Canteen."





I love my job, last week I got a chance to meet a granddaughter of one of the Chaplins. She brought two "first day of issue" stamped envelopes in to be framed. I had the privilidge of working on these pieces and thanking her for the opportunity to learn of the true heroics of her granddad and his fellow chaplins.





Let's learn from their examples of true courage as we each face our own individual challenges.





Love for all, Bill Sullivan, the Physically Challenged ministry.





http://youtu.be/8ewJp8HhYzA
















Sunday, January 6, 2013

PCM-01-05-2013 Looking to God for help with physical, emotional or spiritual challenges


The Physically Challenged Ministry



PCM-01-05-2013 looking to God for help



Having a physical, emotional or spritual challenge is a prime opportunity to look for help from God.



I look at a 'challenge' as any issue that we face that causes us physical, emotional or spiritual pain. It can be a direct and concrete as a visible illness and as evasive and invisible as a mental illness that we personally or a loved one may be experiencing. I am sure that all of us can unfortunately relate and have personally experienced all or some combination of the above.



We have the Bible as a source to look into the heart and thinking of God. We can see some things from how Jesus interacted with the multitudes of sick or “challenged” [as we will refer to it] that lead us to conclude that God does not wish us to be inflicted and that all pain is contrary to how things are in Heaven. Otherwise Jesus would have been going against God and thus himself any time he was involved in healing even on a temporary basis. [Just a reminder that earthly bodies have their limits and are designed to expire.]



The issues arise when we want to take control ourselves of the timing, method and nature of the release from our 'challenges.' I prefer to take the faith approach and let God be incontrol of the details, seeing how little control I am able to exert.



We live in a world full of questions problems and issues, no one of us here have all the answers or solutions



Romans 4:5 [The Message Version] But if you see that the job is too big for you, that it's something only God can do, and you trust him to do it - you could never do it for yourself no matter how hard and long you worked - well, that trusting-him-to-do-it is what gets you set right with God, by God. Sheer gift.



This is a principal that can and should be applied to all that God is involved with. Whether it is eternal life or our release from our 'challenges'.



With this in mind, let's take the opportunity to act on the following verse found in Psalm 14:2 MSG

God sticks his head out of heaven. He looks around. He's looking for someone not stupid - one man, even, God-expectant, just one God-ready woman.



Or as it is translated in the new century version:




The Lord looked down from heaven on all people to see if anyone understood, if anyone was looking to God for help.



Let's be God expectant as we live out our days here on our temporary home, Earth. Be prepared to shed all the challenges we now face and to embrace life with God-expectant faith. The best is yet to come! Stop depending on yourself for all the solutions, you and I are just not equipped to take all the challenges on alone, we NEED God!



Bill Sullivan

As with all things I write for the Physically Challenged Ministry, they are free of charge and encouraged to be freely shared. It is my passion to help those of us with physical, emotional and spirituL challenges grow in our love and appreciation of God. Share in this by sharing this.

http://www.irish-gifts-blessings.com/PCM-01-05-2013.html

Sunday, December 9, 2012

PCM-12-09-2012 How did they do it...this believe thing???


The Physically Challenged Ministry



PCM-12-09-2012 How did they do it...this believe thing???



Santa, cell phones, microwaves Heaven and God. I personally can not really see or explain HOW they all work. It is a little... OK a lot above my intelligence level to know all the engineering details involved. However I still use my cell phone and microwave because I have seen them function for me and for others. I believe in God and Heaven because I know life is way too short and the universe is way too big and complex for this to be all that there is to our existence



How is always the key question when it comes to your own personal belief. I believe there is a reason for everything, a balance, justice and purpose for all that we go through in life. I believe that we go on beyond our lives on earth and God will be there in ways we just cannot comprehend given our fragile containers [bodies].



The scriptures are full of examples of people living by faith, the details of your journey fit you, the details of those that have gone before us can serve as examples but remember that we are all individuals and no two journeys are identical.



The how is really the simplest part of it all, just believe. How did they do it? They saw it way off in the distance, waved their greeting, and accepted the fact that they were transients in this world. [Hebrews 11 last verse]



Hebrews 11:10 Abraham did it by keeping his eye on an unseen city with real, eternal foundations - the City designed and built by God.






My purpose in writing is simply this: that you who believe in God's Son will know beyond the shadow of a doubt that you have eternal life, the reality and not the illusion.



As we get ready to celebrate the birth of Jesus, let us remember the WHY, God's eternal love feeling deeply for each of us we are the WHO that goes with the HOW.



Now about the WHEN and WHERE.... that is where YOUR FAITH lets God fills in all the blanks, even the ones you cannot even imagine....YET....


As for Santa..... As my official title of “Grampy” to my three grandchildren... and on behalf of all us children in heart.... I believe there is a bit of him that lives with everyone who gives.



Just imagine, eternity is a really really really really, great, awesome and “believable”. Hold on to Him who hold you with his heart forever, your peace will overflow beyond your understanding and your peace will calm the storms.



Love, Joy and Peace this day and everyday forever.



Bill Sullivan, the Physically Challenged Ministry

http://www.irish-gifts-blessings.com/PCM-12-09-2012.html

Thursday, November 29, 2012

PCM-11-20-2012 Pictures from home

Here is a snapshot of Heaven from someone who has been there. A moment in time when all things that are temporary are GONE. Let it lift the eyes of your heart to see, your ears to hear. Feel the true love God has for us.

Revelations 21: 1-4 I saw Heaven and earth new-created. Gone the first Heaven, gone the first earth, gone the sea. 2 I saw Holy Jerusalem, new-created, descending resplendent out of Heaven, as ready for God as a bride for her husband. 3 I heard a voice thunder from the Throne: "Look! Look! God has moved into the neighborhood, making his home with men and women! They're his people, he's their God. 4 He'll wipe every tear from their eyes. Death is gone for good - tears gone, crying gone, pain gone - all the first order of things gone."
...

Revelations 5:13 Then I heard every creature in Heaven and earth, in underworld and sea, join in, all voices in all places, singing: To the One on the Throne! To the Lamb! The blessing, the honor, the glory, the strength, For age after age after age.

As the words wash over you, let them replace the temporary weight your life is currently feeling.

Cathy, my Bride is recovering from yet another couple of kidney stones that had to be surgically removed, this being the third time I had to leave for work and felt guilty. I just got a part time job to help make ends meet. My second customer that night was the ER Dr. who diagnosed my wife earlier in the day at a hospital almost an hour away from where I work. No minor coincidence, just God's way of letting me know all is under control, in His capable hands.

Just remember that Romans 8 is a place of refuge in the storms. Like an "armored home" it will keep your heart and mind safe from the winds and waves this life blows your way.

We need each other. May God's love surround us all through each other.

Bill Sullivan The Physically Challenged Ministry
 

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

The Physically Challenged Ministry

PCM 10-30-2012 From the bottom of my heart I thank you



We always win when we trust God, regardless of the temporary appearance of momentary circumstances. For what today is considered a miracle will eventually fade from our minds when the next physical, emotional or spiritual challenge rears it's head our way. [remember Romans 8 and John 8]

The eternally important fact is we live forever spiritually despite the frailty of the human container. The spiritual component of each of us is what ultimately matters forever. Be forever, eternally grateful, faithful and thankful for God and His love. Live your days giving and receiving love with every fiber of your true inner you.

Psalm 86:12-17 From the bottom of my heart I thank you, dear Lord; I've never kept secret what you're up to. 13 You've always been great toward me - what love! You snatched me from the brink of disaster! 14 God, these bullies have reared their heads! A gang of thugs is after me - and they don't care a thing about you. 15 But you, O God, are both tender and kind, not easily angered, immense in love, and you never, never quit. 16 So look me in the eye and show kindness, give your servant the strength to go on, save your dear, dear child! 17 Make a show of how much you love me so the bullies who hate me will stand there slack-jawed, As you, God, gently and powerfully put me back on my feet.

Josh Sullivan is back at his house grateful in his heart for God. He shows it through his love as a father, husband, son and friend. I forever love my son.



As my silly sense of humor pops up, It would have been easier I suppose to say that Joshua is home, but I did not want to give the impression that he had yet arrived at the final destination we all anticipate. He is miraculously recovering from the latest bout with man and motorcycle vs tree. Hopefully he will NOW purchase a full sized helmet....

Bill Sullivan, The Physically Challenged Ministry

Sunday, October 21, 2012

The Physically Challenged Ministry

 

PCM 10-21-2012 How do you explain God, illness, and death.


 
http://www.irish-gifts-blessings.com/PCM-10-21-2012.html

It has been a rough period of time recently. Funerals for Dorothy Killea and Lillian Kimball. Also the deaths of Betty Sullivan [sister of Carol Hare, our beach friend], a stepfather in law of another beach friend Pete. Mary Flowers a fellow ms sufferer lost her life at 56. Also the assisted suicide of an online multiple sclerosis friend Anne......


Personally I have to defer to God in how to approach all this because it is all too much to comprehend and process all on my own. I could rely on what I see, feel, touch and understand or I can believe what Jesus has said.….. Call me a simpleton if you must, I choose to rely on the one who created it all...It is the only logical way to explain all of what we do not know. [The more I learn, the more I learn I do not know]. To those humans who are all knowing...have fun explaining yourself to God WHEN you see him...



John 8:12 MSG Jesus once again addressed them: "I am the world's Light. No one who follows me stumbles around in the darkness. I provide plenty of light to live in."



John 8:15-16 MSG You decide according to what you can see and touch. I don't make judgments like that. But even if I did, my judgment would be true because I wouldn't make it out of the narrowness of my experience but in the largeness of the One who sent me, the Father.





John 8:50b–51 MSG God intends something gloriously grand here and is making the decisions that will bring it about. I say this with absolute confidence. If you practice what I'm telling you, you'll never have to look death in the face."


Much of my thinking was shaped by experiences and the views of those I grew up with. It is important for me to differentiate between others opinions and the reality of who EXACTLY God is to me as well as who I am to him.

I view God as perfect, good, loving, caring and a lot lot lot smarter than I am. I see him as all powerful, all knowing and eternal. I know enough to know that I am limited in knowledge, power and time spent in the current state of life as we know it.

I know enough to perceive and know that there is a lot beyond the less than 120 years we may get here on earth with the temporary, fragile bodies we dwell in.

I have seen people die and can attest that their bodies stop working as much as a flashlight does when the batteries are taken out. It is just the container, not the contents. As useless as a Dunkin Donuts cup without your favorite beverage in it. Not even worth the nickle that an empty soda can is....



You however, the very contents of your heart and soul are invaluable to God who created you.



Something to ponder as you go about your day to day life.



See you all someday!



Love in Christ, Bill Sullivan The Physically Challenged Ministry.

Monday, October 1, 2012


PCM 09-30-2012 That is so unfair...

Fresh off the real battle field where all this took place two days ago and will continue...sometime in the future.

It is a dire situation pitting the sharp, dark cold claws of despair against the fragile membranes of our minds, bodies and souls weakened by prolonged multiple hardships and illnesses.

As hope fades away and it seems the overwhelming, inevitable forces will shred our weakening remnants of faith and sanity.

It is so unfair....

Every situation we face seems worse than the one before and it always seems to me like the odds are stacked so much against the balances of justice and fairness.

What I almost always seem to forget is that God has been battling for us, the circumstances that are so beyond our control. I have to trust

Of course I should have remembered, time after time, hardship after hardship, He always wins, gets the last word and has never lost a battle.

The unfair advantage then shifts to us when we rely His words. Read the entire chapter when you need it. [they should have copies of Romans 8 everywhere like fire alarms...in case of crisis read this]

Romans 8:31 [NIV] What, then, shall we say in response to this? If God is for us, who can be against us?

Romans 8:31 [The Message version] So, what do you think? With God on our side like this, how can we lose?

Talk about who should be fearful! In all of eternity God ALWAYS wins. No matter what it looks like to our uninformed eyes....GOD ALWAYS WINS.

I'll tell you today that we should not be in fear, just remember to remind me again when I face my moments of forgetfulness and tremble once again in fear. It will happen and I will need your help at that time. Let us bring a smile to God's heart as we encourage each other to and beyond the finish line.

It is always a daring rescue, keep Romans 8 handy ALWAYS.

If you think about it, it is so unfair that God wins every time < grin > ;~)

Bill Sullivan

The Physically Challenged Ministry

www.pc-min.com

http://www.irish-gifts-blessings.com/PCM-09-30-2012.html