Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Faith connects US, Kyrgyz pastors
 
Photos 
Faith connects U.S., Kyrgyz pastors
Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Steven Thompson (left) poses for a photo with Pastor Anton Berdnikov (center) after a service Nov. 26, 2011, at the Transit Center at Manas, Kyrgyzstan. Berdnikov, a pastor in Bishkek, conducted two services at the Transit Center earlier in the day at the invitation of Thompson, the 376th Air Expeditionary Wing chaplain. Earlier in the month Thompson gave a sermon at the Bishkek church. (Courtesy photo)
Download HiRes
Faith connects US, Kyrgyz pastors

Posted 11/29/2011   Updated 11/28/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Tech. Sgt. Tammie Moore
376th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs


11/29/2011 - TRANSIT CENTER AT MANAS, Kyrgyzstan (AFNS) -- The simple thought, "What can I do at my level," led the 376th Air Expeditionary Wing chaplain to a Bishkek church to start a religious exchange program.

One of the four mission pillars of the Transit Center is to build relationships, and after contemplating how he could do this, Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Steven Thompson decided to reach out to his Kyrgyz Republic brethren.

He asked a few of the translators at the Transit Center if there was a Baptist church in town. They did some research and found one. So one Sunday, Thompson, Master Sgt. James Iaun, the superintendent of chapel operations, and a translator showed up for a service.

"We were greeted very well," Thompson said. "They asked where we were from, and then they asked me to address everyone and say hello, so I did. It was really nice."

The church pastor, Anton Berdnikov, asked Thompson if he would come back to give a sermon. Thompson agreed and offered the same opportunity to Berdnikov.

"When I preached at their church I shared a kind of bold message," Thompson said. "I told them I needed to begin by apologizing to them and their eyes got big."

Thompson shared a story from his youth with the congregation. As a child he grew up near Norfolk, Va., where the Navy docked its East Coast fleet. When he was in elementary school, every two weeks his class would practice nuclear bomb drills.

"We were sure the Soviet Union was going to blow up that whole place," he said. "We would turn our little desks over and put them next to the window and get ready for nuclear bombs. I never met an American who really wanted to blow up anybody in the Soviet Union and in talking to people my age here, I have not met anyone who wanted to blow up someone in America."

After Thompson shared this story he found out people here were doing the same thing.

"In my sermon I stressed that we grew up believing lies about each other," he said. "The truth is we were brothers and sisters in Christ, we were really never enemies. I had many people come up to me afterward and say 'I always thought the same thing'. It was really a neat exchange, and I think it brought down a lot of barriers."

When Berdnikov came to the Transit Center to preach, he brought his family and some of their close friends.

"He preached a message on love and the importance of loving one another," Thompson said. "Anybody could have taken his message and preached it in an American church."

After the service, Thompson took Berdnikov and his family on a tour of the Transit Center. The family received a tour of a KC-135 Stratotanker, visited a few offices around the installation and talked with Kyrgyz employees.

"I think they were surprised by the openness," Thompson said. "They were very excited about that. I think they were overwhelmed by the transparency -- I don't think it was anything like it he thought it would be."

The exchange will continue when the Transit Center Gospel Choir performs at the Bishkek church. Tech. Sgt. Shuana Flowers, the choir director and an 376th Expeditionary Medical Group emergency medical technician, is coordinating the upcoming performance.

"I'm excited about this experience; it is different than anything I have done here," Flowers said. "I'm looking forward to meeting people at the service and seeing how they worship."

Thompson said he received an email from Berdnikov thanking him for the opportunity to preach at the Transit Center.

"Many thanks for the invitation; it was a surprising experience," Berdnikov said in the letter. "Thank you for your big heart, you have set an example of hospitality and fraternal love. We impatiently wait for your chorus (to visit our church)."



tabComments
12/1/2011 9:25:59 AM ET
In respomse to Mark S from Ellsworth AFB comment -- "Let me get this straight, an Air Force officer is stating to a foreign audience that his country is a liar. And the Air Force is publishing this? I lived through the Cold War and like many others sat my share of nuclear alert. There was no lie about the Soviet's capabilities or intentions. I think the Air Force better clarify this statement by this officer." The chaplain was relating a story of his childhood prior to his service in the Air Force and did not say or intend to say the U.S. government lied. On another level, the politics and strategic environment during the Cold War drove the fear between both civilian populations. In retrospect, I believe the Chaplian's comments referred to both peoples having a sincere desire to live their lives in peace and were afraid their country. I commend him for reaching out to the local community to build relationships and doing his part to break down prejudices on both sides. That said
Roger G, Florida
 
12/1/2011 9:07:33 AM ET
Too much negativity. Look deeper into the story and understand.
Scott, Air Force Base
 
11/30/2011 4:23:36 PM ET
I don't believe the chaplain is even old enough to have ever taken part in an attack drill. He certainly doesn't describe anything I recognize from 1958 to 1965.
Ret MSgt, St. Paul MN
 
11/30/2011 2:03:15 PM ET
Unless the State Department's US Embassy to Kyrgyzstan requests otherwise, plus the 376 AEW Commander approves, Transit Center Chaplaincy outreach is best restricted within the wire of the base. I agree with Chaplain Thompson's own words that he shared a kind of bold message, one that expressed his personal beliefs and carried a strong political overtone.
Tell The Truth, U.S.
 
11/29/2011 10:25:52 PM ET
Too bad there isn't freedom from religion. Or can that not preached.
Mark Fox, Napoleons' Test Complex CA
 
11/29/2011 6:40:48 PM ET
"In my sermon I stressed that we grew up believing lies about each other." -- Let me get this straight, an Air Force officer is stating to a foreign audience that his country is a liar? And the Air Force is publishing this? I lived through the Cold War and, like many others, sat my share of nuclear alert. There was no lie about the Soviet's capabilities or intentions. I think the Air Force better clarify this statement by this officer.
Mark S, Ellsworth AFB
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
AF officials encourage Airmen to submit retraining packages before MilPDS upgrade

More than 900 rally to support wingman's cause

KC-46 enters critical design review phase

Slideshow: Fifth-generation formation  1

Air Force Week in Photos

Chaplains provide support and comfort for families

IDS agencies team up to teach life skills to new Airmen

ANG director discusses way forward

Carter: Sequestration would have effect of 'hidden tax'

CMSAF: 'Be the best, know your Airmen, tell your story'  1

Carter urges stepped up progress on cyber defense

Partnerships develop Air Force youth  1

Air Force leaders offer perspectives at four-star forum

Dempsey: Insider attacks won't affect NATO's Afghan strategy  1

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Sept. 17: A day for Constitutional conversation  2

Losing Your Future to Sexual Assault   24


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing