Evangelistic Tracts to flood Pentagon.
The American Tract Society has developed a closer relationship with
the Pentagon, and according to the Religion News Service, has plans to
supply its chaplains' office with hundreds of thousands of
evangelistic pamphlets in the next year.
"My general goal is to get as many tracts in circulation as I
can," Dan Southern, president of the Dallas-based society, told
RNS. "Wherever I have the opportunity, I take advantage of it. It
could be any place. This happens to be an opportunity that the Lord has
given us."
The American Tract Society was invited by a Pentagon chaplain to
send tracts to fill racks in several locations, including just outside a
memorial for Sept. 11 victims who died when a plane crashed into the
building. Pentagon officials say the relationship with the society is
just one way the military works to meet the religious needs of its
people.
Pentagon Chaplain (Col.) Ralph Benson contacted the society,
founded in 1825, about providing evangelistic materials to supplement
literature already displayed from Jewish, Muslim and other Christian
sources. Tracts and booklets are displayed in large racks, such as one
outside a prayer room on a third-floor corridor, as well as smaller
racks in areas where "chaplain liaisons" conduct studies of
the Bible, Torah and Koran, he said.
Southern spoke at a Pentagon prayer breakfast last October, adding
his name to a list of visiting religious dignitaries that includes
evangelist Franklin Graham, evangelical author Rick Warren, rabbis,
imams and a representative of the Hindu faith.
"I know you live in an environment that's very structured
and there are rules that you have to follow, but there are opportunities
in your life where you can articulate the gospel," Southern told 50
people gathered in the Pentagon's executive dining room for the
prayer breakfast, which was hosted by the Christian Embassy, a
Washington-based evangelical organization.
He told Religion News Service that his ministry is raising $25,000
to supply the Pentagon with about 250,000 tracts annually. The pamphlets
feature inspirational messages with a variety of themes, ranging from
former pro football player Reggie White to the late President Ronald
Reagan to "The Star-Spangled Banner."
Although the tract society plans a year-round effort, Benson said
one particular tract packet has received lots of attention. The packet
featured a voter registration application, a "God Bless
America" flag and a message that reads "The Choice is
Yours."
"All it did was encourage people (about) the importance of
voting and making a decision to vote," said Benson, a colonel in
the U.S. Army. "It had absolutely nothing political in it
whatsoever."
The tract discussed the importance of voting but turns to an
evangelistic message that ends with an encouragement for readers to say
"I have voted for Jesus as my Savior today."
He said hundreds of people--out of a total of some 25,000 civilian
and active-duty employees in the building--registered to vote as a
result of the packets and he has seen some Pentagon employees with the
small American flags.
"Some of the people ... taking them were our cleaning
personnel," he said. "They'd have them on their
carts."