
A colonel’s column was removed from an Air National Guard newsletter because the writer violated military policy by including references to Jesus Christ and God, an Ohio National Guard spokesman said.
Col. Florencio Marquinez, the medical group commander of the 180th  Fighter Wing, wrote an essay in the September edition of the “Stinger.”  It was titled, “A Spiritual Journey as a Commander.”
 
 He wrote about how his mother’s faith in Jesus Christ influenced  his life and he referenced a Bible verse from the New Testament, “With  God all things are possible.”
 
 “So no matter how stressful your life can be with juggling family  issues, relationships, career advancement, work, school, or any burden  that life throws your way, cast it upon the Lord and He will sustain  you,” the colonel wrote.
 
 It wasn’t too longer after the newsletter was posted online before  someone filed a complaint – lamenting that the colonel’s words had  caused great angst and offense.
 
 The Military Religious Freedom Foundation’s Mikey Weinstein  reached out to Air Force officials at the Pentagon, the Air National  Guard is governed by Air Force rules, as well as the 180th Fighter Wing  demanding they remove what he called “that odious and offending  proselytizing commentary.”
 
 Before you could say God bless America, the military ordered the  colonel’s remarks stricken from the newsletter. Ohio National Guard  spokesman James Sims told me the column was a clear violation of  military policy.
 
 “It’s very clear what you can and cannot say in an Air Force  publication,” Sims said. “Once it was brought to our attention and we  compared it with the regulation, we found it was in violation of the  regulation.”
 
 So what rules did Col. Marquinez violate by referencing the  Almighty? I want to quote from the official statement provided by the  Ohio National Guard:
 
 “The article violated AFI 1-1, Sections 2.11 and 2.12.1, and the  Revised Interim Guidelines Concerning Free Exercise of Religion in the  Air Force guidance, and finally, ‘The Air Force Military Commander and  the Law’ book.”
 
 A bit much, don’t you think? All that for mentioning that “With God all things are possible.” 
 
 I’m surprised the Air Force didn’t convene a court martial. For  the record, Sims told me that to his knowledge the colonel was not  reprimanded for writing about Jesus – just censored.
 
 But the Air Force wasn’t content with just removing the colonel’s  column. No sir. They had to publically shame and humiliate this officer  and gentleman.
 
 As Sims noted in his statement, after the article was removed from  the newsletter, it was “followed up with a base-wide email, with  updated link for the Singer, stating: ‘The 180th FW Public Affairs  office has removed the article ‘A Spiritual Journey as a Commander’ from  The Stinger, Volume 52, Issue 09, September 2014 due to sensitivities.”
 
 Sensitivities?
 
 I’ve included a link to the colonel’s “offensive” column. Please note the “sensitive” nature.
 
 Here’s one of the sections that violated the “godless” standards of the Air Force.
 
 “I would not be the man I am today if it wasn’t for my mother  leading our whole family to Jesus Christ,” Col. Marquinez wrote. “Her  creed to us five children growing up is God first in your life, then  comes family and third work.”
 
 The Air Force regulations that were allegedly violated regard “government neutrality regarding religion.”
 
 “Leaders at all levels must balance constitutional protections for  an individual’s free exercise of religion or other personal beliefs and  the constitutional prohibition against governmental establishment of  religion,” the regulation states. “For example, they must avoid the  actual or apparent use of their position to promote their personal  religious beliefs to their subordinates or to extend preferential  treatment for any religion.”
 
 Think of it as a sort-of religious version of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”
 
 As you might imagine, the Air Force’s censorship rubbed religious liberty advocates the wrong way.
 
 “Not only did you publicly humiliate him by your actions, but you  have sent a chilling message to other members of the Air Force, that  they need to keep their faith to themselves or else rise the judgment of  the command,” wrote Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty executive  director Ron Crews in a letter to the wing commander. 
 
 “Your actions violated his rights under the First Amendment – both  his free exercise of religion and his free speech,” Crews added.
 
 Chaplain Alliance is calling on the Air Force to reverse its censorship and repost the colonel’s column.
 
 “The Ohio National Guard is not free to censor the protected  speech of one of its members based on the content that speech,” he said.
 
 As Crews pointed out in his letter, just last year a Moody Air  Force Base publication posted a column entitled, “Atheist Ponders  Spiritual Fitness.”
 
 So if the Air Force can make an accommodation for atheists, why can’t they make one for Christians?