I Prayed have prayed
Father, give us wisdom and discernment with this vaccine and thank You for this exemption.
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The Department of Defense (DOD) Instruction 1300.17, “Religious Liberties in the Military Services,” conveys support for religious beliefs in the following statement:

“In accordance with Section 533(a)(1) of Public Law 112-239, as amended, the DOD components will accommodate individual expressions of sincerely held beliefs (conscience, moral principles or religious beliefs) which do not have an adverse impact on military readiness, unit cohesion, good order and discipline, or health and safety. A service member’s expression of such beliefs may not, in so far as practicable, be used as the basis of any adverse personnel action, discrimination, or denial of promotion, schooling, training, or assignment.”

All of the components in the military have a similar process for various religious accommodations, including vaccine exemptions. The Army’s religious accommodation request process, which takes 30 – 60 days, is outlined step-by-step in Army Regulation 600-20 (AR600-20) Appendix P-2:

“Immunizations. Immunization requirements for Soldiers are described in AR 40–562. Soldiers whose religious practices conflict with immunization requirements may request an exemption through command channels, from company or immediate commander through battalion, brigade, division and General Court-Martial Convening Authority (GCMCA) commanders to the surgeon general (TSG). TSG is the only approval or disapproval authority for immunization accommodation requests.”

To apply for a religious exemption, the service member must complete four documents. The first is a personal memorandum that includes identity information, establishes the religious belief that is contrary to immunization and lists the specific vaccines requested for exemption.

An additional letter from a supportive religious leader is optional, but the service member is not required to prove the tenets of his religion.  . . .

The second required document is a DA4856 counseling form summarizing an interview between the chaplain, unit commander and service member on the request for religious accommodation. This counseling form documents the reasons for the religious exemption, the lack of burden on military readiness and acknowledgement of the terms of revocation under imminent risk conditions. According to AR600-20:

“(2) The commander will arrange an in-person or telephonic interview between the requestor and the assigned unit chaplain or other chaplain determined by the senior chaplain present. The chaplain must provide a memorandum that summarizes this interview and addresses the religious basis and sincerity of the soldier’s request. The chaplain is not required to recommend approval or disapproval, but may do so. Memorandums from other chaplains or religious leaders may accompany the request as optional attachments, but do not meet the requirement for interview by the assigned unit chaplain or one determined by the senior chaplain present.”

The third required document is a counseling form documenting a discussion with a healthcare provider and the service member on the risks of disease, and benefits and risks of vaccines. According to AR600-20:

“(3) A licensed healthcare provider must counsel the applicant. The healthcare provider should ensure that the applicant is making an informed decision and should address, at a minimum, the following: (a) specific information about the diseases concerned; (b) specific vaccine information including benefits and risks; and (c) potential risks of infection incurred by unimmunized individuals.”

The fourth required document is a DA4856 counseling form on which the commander and service member explain the career impact of a religious exemption to vaccines, with a recommendation in favor or denial of the request. According to AR600-20:

“(4) The applicant’s immediate commander must counsel the applicant and recommend approval or denial of the exemption request. The commander must counsel that noncompliance with immunization requirements may adversely impact deployability, assignment or international travel, and that the exemption may be revoked under imminent risk conditions. The commander’s recommendation will address the factors of military necessity described in paragraph 5–6a.”

Once the packet containing all of the forms is submitted, the review process will include the following. . . .

If the process results in a denial of request, the service member has right to appeal, right to legal counsel, options to file a complaint with Equal Opportunity or Inspector General for discrimination based on religious beliefs and freedom to contact their elected representatives or senators for an inquiry. If the request for exemption is ultimately denied, and the service member refuses vaccination, the soldier may face Uniform Code of Military Justice disciplinary action or request separation from the military.

(Excerpt from The Defender. Article by Pam Long. Photo Credit: Getty Images.)

What do you think about this service member exemption? Let us know in the comments!

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Dan Newton
November 9, 2022

As a retired service member, I wholly recognize the health of our soldiers/sailors/airmen/ Coast Guard as being paramount to our readiness. Those who refuse vaccination don’t have the moral imperative to operate outside the scope of their mission, which is readiness to serve.
That is to say, they cannot place their personal agendas over their sworn duty.
It appears the lengthy exemption request process and multi-dimensional inquiry would likely filter out those who are hiding behind the pretext of religious beliefs to avoid vaccination. Further, it’s encouraging to see that the request alone doesn’t ensure approval.It’s my sincere hope that approving commanders will keep in mind their foremost duty is to the health of unit members and, by extension, unit mission readiness vs. a soft-hearted, weak-willed wokeness.
Anything else would be an abrogation of duty.

Daphne
December 12, 2020

Definitely need exemptions for vaccines for our military. Let it be so for them, Lord.

Exemptions should not only be for religious freedom, it should be the ability to maintain the freedom to not be injected with anything against their will. Religious freedom in this matter is vitally important as well and should be honored too of course.

Believers have been far too passive in issues for far too long, including regarding vaccines. Thus giving ground to the enemy with us losing freedoms such as medical ones. We must and those in the military must stand firm for their religious freedom to refuse all vaccines especially since several of them contain cell proteins and DNA from aborted babies in them. You can look up the abominable testimony online of Dr. Poltkin, an atheist, speaking of the development of the rubella vaccine and all the aborted (murdered) babies they used to develop it. The silence from a great many leaders in the church regarding this fact is evil in itself. Yes, evil, for they are called to love and care for their sheep. Vaccines containing the remnants of murdered babies being used by believers SHOULD be unthinkable. This has been going on since at least the early 70s. What has the wicked silence of the church allowed? For their to continue to be a demand for vaccines and other scientific research to be conducted using organs and cells from aborted babies. Should we have all fought this together, all research using aborted babies would have stopped years ago.

We know now of course that the rubella vaccine is a part of the MMR (measles mumps rubella) and is injected into millions of our children, including Christian ones, every year. This is an abomination in the eyes of the Lord. I’ve seen believers misapply the words, “Oh, we can’t be legalistic about vaccines.” But those are the words of the deceived by satan, for we cannot use the words “don’t be legalistic” to apply to things that are LITERALLY a sin, even worse an abomination in the eyes of God.

Bring these truths up and you can clear the room of many believers. They just don’t want to hear it. They want to pretend it’s not true. Lord, wake up Your people from their slumber and apathy.

So much prayer needed for the body of Christ. A good prayer to pray daily is for spiritual discernment by the very Spirit in every matter.

Any believer who thinks he/she is above demonic deception is already deceived. We each need to pray for ourselves too. Put on that armor etc.

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Susan Buehler
December 12, 2020

They absolutely should be exempt

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