On paper, Lieutenant Commander Brian K. Waite, a United States
Navy chaplain, appears to be one of the nation's foremost
scholars on a wide range of topics such as traumatology, theology,
and Biblical history.
According to the July 2005 issue of "Tower Notes,"
the newsletter of the Graduate Theological Foundation, where
Waite is the Father Francis Duffy Professor of Military Chaplaincy,
the Navy chaplain's official biography states that he holds
two doctorates, a Ph.D. in Historical Theology from Georgia's
Covington Theological Seminary, and a doctorate in Religious
Studies from American Christian College and Seminary in Oklahoma.
But a closer look at Waite's credentials shows that the chaplain,
who serves tens of thousands of military personnel, may not
be as scholarly as he holds himself out to be.
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Indeed, Covington Theological Seminary is just one of the
religious institutions on Waite's lengthy resume that has
been identified as a "diploma mill," and has been
found to award degrees to students through "correspondence"
studies. Covington had received its accreditation status by
The International Accrediting Commission for Schools, Colleges
and Theological Seminaries (IAC) of Missouri, which was caught
up in a federal investigation more than a decade ago for accrediting
more than 150 higher learning institutions that failed to
meet the most basic standards under the US Department of Education,
the Generally Accepted Accrediting Principles, and the Council
on Higher Education (CHEA).
In 1989, Missouri's attorney general launched an investigation
to determine the ease of which IAC awarded accreditation to
schools, particularly Bible colleges, as long as the educational
institutions had the cash. The attorney general set up a fictitious
college, the East Missouri Business College, and rented a
one-room office in St. Louis and issued a typewritten catalog
with such school executives as "Peelsburi Doughboy"
and "Wonarmmd Mann."
"Their marine biology text was The Little Green Book
of Fishes. The school's motto, translated from Latin, was
"Education is for the birds," according to Bears'
Guide to Earning Degrees by Distance Learning, written by
John and Mariah Bear. "Nonetheless, Dr. George Reuter,
Director of the IAC, visited the school, accepted their money,
and duly accredited them. Soon after, the IAC was enjoined
from operating and slapped with a substantial fine, and the
good Dr. Reuter decided to retire."
In a article on "Degree Mills," John Bear, who
worked as a consultant with the FBI on the issue from 1979
to 1992, addressed the specific problems that arise in dealing
with religious schools.
"Because constitutional safeguards in the United States
guarantee separation of church and state, most states have
been reluctant to pass any laws restricting the activities
of churches -- including their right to grant degrees to all
who make an appropriately large donation," John Baer
wrote. "In many states, religious schools are not regulated
but are restricted to granting religious degrees. But in some,
like Louisiana and Hawaii, if you established your own one-person
church yesterday, you could start your university today and
award a Ph.D. in nuclear physics tomorrow. Many states say
that religious schools can only grant religious degrees. A
diploma mill in Louisiana took that argument to new limits,
when they announced that because God created everything, no
matter what you studied, it was the study of the work of God,
and therefore a religious degree. Twice, the Louisiana courts
upheld this argument."
Waite's other alma mater', American Christian College and
Seminary, formerly American Bible College and Seminary, which
itself was formerly the University of Biblical Studies &
Seminary, permanently shut down in 2005 after losing their
accreditation with the Transnational Association of Christian
Colleges and Schools (TRACS).
TRACS is a recognized accrediting association that also approved
accreditation for Liberty University, Bob Jones University,
and Patrick Henry College. American Christian College and
Seminary, however, apparently didn't meet TRACS's rigorous
standards. At the association's April 2003 meeting officials
refused to reaffirm the school's accreditation because it
failed to comply with numerous educational standards.
On the website for St. John's church, a civilian Anglican
church near the military station where Waite is stationed,
he is listed as a Former Priest Associate and Chaplain-in-Residence.
Waite's bio on the church's website contains additional information
about his background that could not be verified with state
officials. The bio states, "Chaplain Waite is also recognized
as one of the foremost traumatologists in the nation, holding
certification as a Field Traumatologist with the International
Traumatology Institute at the University of South Florida.
He holds 'Diplomat' [sic] status with the American Academy
of Experts in Traumatic Stress, and has served as point person
for Harvard University’s Crisis Response portion of
the Kennedy School of Government’s National Securities
Program."
"Field Traumatologist" appears to be the lowest
level of certification issued by the University of South Florida's
International Traumatology Institute. The American Academy
of Experts in Traumatic Stress provides applicants with certification
in traumatology by simply filling out an application for a
fee of $375, according to its website.
Military chaplains have come under fire from civil rights
groups over the past several years for allegedly force-feeding
soldiers on the battlefield a form of fundamentalist Christianity
origination from highly controversial, apocalyptic "End
Times" evangelists and their mega-churches. Evangelical
Christians have become such a dominating presence in the military’s
chaplain corps that the Air Force held a four-day Spiritual
Fitness Conference at the Hilton Hotel in Colorado Springs
in 2005 for chaplains and their families. The Air Force picked
up the $300,000 tab it cost to stage the event.
The presence of evangelical Christian chaplains in the military
is certainly nothing new, but it comes at what some believe
are widespread constitutional violations with the full knowledge
and support of Pentagon brass.
Chaplains and their evangelist counterparts who lead mega
churches across the country have been invited to US military
installations throughout the world and have been openly proselytizing
military personnel, in violation of the basic tenets of the
United States Constitution. Under federal law, chaplains are
only authorized to offer “spiritual guidance”
to soldiers. They are strictly prohibited from using government
resources to proselytize or convert soldiers.
Last year, Col. William Broome, the Pentagon chaplain, and
his deputy, Maj. Alan Pomaville, invited David Kistler, president
of Hickory, North Carolina-based H.O.P.E. Ministries International,
to speak to DoD employees at a Pentagon prayer breakfast June
6 and in the Pentagon auditorium June 7, according to a copy
of a recent newsletter published by H.O.P.E Ministries. Kistler,
according to written statements made to his congregation,
spent a considerable amount of his time at the Pentagon proselytizing
DoD employees in violation of federal law.
Kistler is a somewhat controversial figure whose sermons
contain apocalyptic messages and bizarre prophecies. He believes
certain Democratic lawmakers will burn in hell while "good
Christians," such as President Bush, will be swept up
into the heavens.
The Rapture will soon vacuum up good Christians, including
George W. Bush, to Heaven, he said in a past sermon to his
congregation. Ted Kennedy, Joe Biden, and Hillary Clinton
will not be Raptured up to Heaven. Following The Rapture,
the Anti-Christ will appear and children will be "micro-chipped."
Last August, the Pentagon's inspector general (IG), acting
on a complaint filed by the nonprofit government watchdog
group rhw Military Religious Freedom Foundation, issued a
47-page report that concluded that high-ranking Army and Air
Force personnel violated long-standing military policy by
appearing in a promotional video for an evangelical Christian
organization while in uniform and on active duty.
The IG report recommended Air Force Maj. Gen. Jack Catton,
Army Brig. Gen. Bob Caslen, Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks, Maj.
Gen. Peter Sutton, and a colonel and lieutenant colonel "improperly
endorsed and participated with a non-Federal entity while
in uniform" and the men should be disciplined for misconduct.
Caslen was formerly the deputy director for political-military
affairs for the war on terrorism, directorate for strategic
plans and policy, joint staff. He now oversees the cadets
at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Caslen
told DoD investigators he agreed to appear in the video upon
learning other senior Pentagon officials had been interviewed
for the promotional video.
The report singled out former Pentagon Chaplain Col. Ralph
G. Benson, whom the inspector general said knowingly mislead
the Department of Defense when he requested permission from
DoD officials to film a video inside the Pentagon claiming
he was interested in gathering information about the Pentagon's
"own ministry." In fact, the report says, Benson
was determined to use the video to "attract new supporters"
to the Christian Embassy, an evangelical organization that
evangelizes members of the military and politicians in Washington,
DC, via daily Bible studies and outreach events. The group
holds prayer breakfasts on Wednesdays in the Pentagon's executive
dining room, according to the organization's web site. Bill
Bright, the founder of Campus Crusade for Christ, founded
the Christian Embassy 30 years ago.
Mikey Weinstein, the founder and president of the Military
Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), discovered the video
on the Christian Embassy web site. Weinstein drafted a letter
to the inspector general alleging misconduct by the officers,
citing the military's strict policy that prohibits military
personnel from appearing in uniform and participating in "speeches,
interviews, picket lines, marches, rallies or any public demonstration
. . . which may imply Service sanction of the cause for which
the demonstration or activity is conducted."
Weinstein said the military brass who participated in the
video "were clearly identified by their positions within
the Defense Department, however, the video did not include
any disclaimers indicating that the views expressed were not
those of the Defense Department."
Recently, President Bush nominated Brig. Gen. Cecil R. Richardson,
the Deputy Air Force Chief of Chaplains, to replace the outgoing
Air Force Chief of Chaplains, and Richardson is in line to
be promoted to Major General. Richardson was quoted in a front
page, July 12, 2005, New York Times story saying the Air Force
reserves the right "to evangelize the unchurched."
The distinction, Richardson said at the time, "is that
proselytizing is trying to convert someone in an aggressive
way, while evangelizing is more gently sharing the gospel."
Weinstein filed a federal lawsuit against the Air Force in
October 2005 after Richardson's comments were published alleging
"severe, systemic and pervasive" religious discrimination
within the Air Force. Weinstein is a 1977 graduate of the
academy. His sons and a daughter-in-law are also academy graduates.
Weinstein's book, "With God On Our Side: One Man's War
Against An Evangelical Coup in America's Military," details
the virulent anti-Semitism he was subjected to while he attended
the academy and the religious intolerance that has permeated
throughout the halls over the past several years.
The federal lawsuit Weinstein filed was dismissed, but the
Air Force agreed to withdraw a document that authorized chaplains
to evangelize members of the military. The Senate Armed Services
Committee has endorsed Richardson’s promotion. Still,
Weinstein said MRFF would lobby senators to oppose Richardson's
nomination because of past statements Richardson has refused
to retract.
Neither Chaplain Waite, who is not currently assigned to
the U.S. Navy Operational Ministries Center in Norfolk, Virginia,
nor a Pentagon spokesperson returned calls for comment. A
spokeswoman for the Graduate Theological Foundation, where
Waite is listed as a faculty member, also did not return calls
or emails for comment.
Waite, who was formerly the pastor of a 3,600 member mega-church
in Oklahoma City, first came under scrutiny last year when
MRFF senior research director Chris Rodda noticed Waite’s
photograph on a website for Revival Fire Ministries, a fundamentalist
Christian organization. Waite was photographed in his Navy
uniform which is prominently displayed on the Revival Fires
website and was featured in a brochure for a 2006 camp meeting
that advertised Waite as having "distributed thousands
of Bibles provided by Revival Fires" in Iraq. He believes
the organization has played an integral part in the war on
terror.
"I believe Revival Fires truly became a genuine hero
in the war on terror," Waite says in a statement that
appears under his photograph on Revival Fires’ website.
"Not knowing where I was going to get a sufficient number
of God's Word for my men, I began to inquire from others about
the possibility of securing bibles. The immediate response
I received was that Revival Fires had provided literally thousands
of copies of the Word of God for the U.S. Military. Needless
to say, I could not pass them out fast enough."
In an article in Oklahoma’s Ponca City News last August,
Waite said that the distribution of Bibles to US troops in
2003 resulted in several dozen troops asking to be baptized.
“I personally saw 60 men come to a saving knowledge
of Jesus Christ. I baptized 44 of them at midnight (for security
reasons) in the Tigris River on Easter Sunday, with another
16 following shortly thereafter," Waite said, according
to the report in the Ponca City News.
However, photographs of the baptism, which were featured
on the Baptist Press website show that the ceremony took place
in broad daylight. Moreover, Waite said that 20 members of
the military who asked to be baptized were turned away because
they “did not seem ready to make such a commitment.”
Last October, Waite appeared in an advertisement published
in Time magazine using his Navy chaplaincy position to promote
another fundamentalist Christian organization. That too would
be a violation of Military regulations.
Weinstein excoriated Waite for exaggerating his educational
background as well as Waite’s alleged constitutional
violations conducted in the name of religion.
“Chaplain Waite is to the United States Navy’s
military chaplaincy what doctor Joseph Mengele was to Nazi
concentration camp medicine," Weinstein said in an interview.
“Chaplain Waite’s educational credentials are
rivaled only by Ronald McDonald and his stellar job at Hamburger
College. Sadly, this man’s constitutional violations
are far more typical of the military chaplaincy today than
being an exception to the rule.”
Weinstein's organization also discovered that Chaplain Waite
is the author of an anti-Islamic book that calls in to question
whether he can provide religious support to all faiths. Details
about Waite's book, which was first published in January on
the website Military.com led to further investigation into
Waite's tenure as a chaplain in the US Navy.
Waite is the author of "Islam Uncovered," which
holds that the Muslim faith is itself culpable for the Sept.
11, 2001, attacks, Military.com reported.
"Undoubtedly our world will experience additional terrorist
attempts or strikes all in the name of Allah. Some of these
attacks may occur within the borders of our own nation by
the remaining cell groups interspersed and hiding among the
Muslim population of the United States. My words may make
a number of Muslims in this country and abroad very uncomfortable.
To them I would say, 'Deal with it!' The suspicion that you
encounter is merely a consequence to your own belief system.
. . . ," Waite's book says. " . . . Should Islam
be immune from attack because it calls itself a religion?
If Adolf Hitler called Nazism a religion, would we be speaking
German today? Evil is evil, no matter what nomenclature it
hides under."
The book was removed from bookstore shelves after it was
discovered that Waite had plagiarized much of the material
and that the supporting blurbs on the back cover of the book
from prominent members of the religious community had been
fabricated.
Waite is also the author of "For God & Country:
One Chaplain's Perspective of War and the Life Lessons Learned,"
published in 2005. Waite portrays himself in the book as one
of the many Americans who felt compelled to serve in the military
in the wake of the 9/11. According to the book, Waite was
the command chaplain for an Air Force Reserve unit when he
got "the overwhelming urge that God had something else"
for him to do, and then contradicts himself later in the book
by writing that his return to active duty "had nothing
to do with external circumstances in [his] life at the time."