Falling Out of Love: The Military & Marriage

“Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the Church & gave himself up for her

“οἱ ἄνδρες, ἀγαπᾶτε τὰς γυναῖκας ἑαυτῶν, καθὼς καὶ ὁ Χριστὸς ἠγάπησε τὴν ἐκκλησίαν, καὶ ἑαυτὸν παρέδωκεν ὑπὲρ αὐτῆς”

Paul to the Church in Ephesus, 62 CE

C4 Foundation Ranch Lodge
Family Retreat, near Julian, CA

One of the toughest sets of phone calls I ever received was from my best friend & his wife. He was deployed to Afghanistan with SPECWAR units doing HUMINT & counterinsurgency. They had been married a few years, and had an adorable little one. His wife was clearly shaken on the phone and in pain. She explained that my friend wanted a divorce. I had been in their wedding & grown up with him. They named a child after me. We were close. They were close. She had patched him back together and stayed by his side after traumatic injuries. She hoped I could talk to him & help.

I rang his phone, when we spoke, he was direct, “Kit, I fell out of love with Deb here in Kunar.”

C-130 on Mission, CENTCOM AOR. Thanks USAF.

Inside I was sad, stunned, grieved to my core. He had been honest, but I questioned his thinking. His emotions had shifted, but was love, & marriage itself, a feeling to be fallen out of?

Emotions can grow cold in relationships. Studies show that after about two years of marriage, the feeling of “newness” wears off. Physically the chemicals spiking our infatuation & all the butterflies recede. It is in this time that life with its dynamics, its “heavies” kicks in. It’s normal to ‘lose that lovin’ feeling’. But it’s not forever.

Another Day on the job. Marriage is dynamic. Nurturing it is harder and more rewarding than most of our work forward. CENTCOM AOR.

This is the moment to roll up our sleeves & really dig into the work -the wonder- of loving someone. The butterflies and excitement come back. A Team Guy recently told me, “the best part of marriage, Chaps, is companionship. I had to learn to give more of myself. I had to let myself depend on my wife—allowing that emotional closeness.”

They are twenty years into this adventure. You know what’s awesome? God cares a lot about the outcome, and is close in to help them, & all of us, to succeed.

The Carlson family connecting from Iraq to Virginia via FaceTime. Nurturing our love, one phone call , one letter, & email at a time.

Paul’s words to the Ephesian Church lift Christ’s supremacy above all competitors. He urges Christians to be different. In the early 60s CE, the Apostle wrote from a Roman prison to young believers in Ephesus. It was a wealthy, influential, west coast port city in Rome’s province of Asia—modern day Turkey. Home to the 7th Wonder of the World, the great Temple of Artemis was a bustling center of learning, which supported many outlying towns. The Ephesian theater seated 20,000!

Inspired by the Holy Spirit, Paul told them, “Husbands love your wives as Christ loved the Church & gave Himself up for her.” He laid out a way of relating that must have felt foreign to them. To the men, a challenging word, ‘your love should mirror Jesus Christ’s for the Church. For the church is His body. Love your wife as you love yourself. Sacrifice your will, your desires for her best. All the time, no matter what.’ He explained that wives were to respect their husbands & submit to their authority as husbands. For women, from a city dedicated to the feared goddess of the hunt, this was likely a hard pill to swallow.

‘Respect and submit to this man? How can I trust his decision-making & intentions?’

Honestly, this dynamic cannot work in the world. But among Christians it can. Why? Because both want what is best for the other. They both recognize they are equals made in God’s image. The wife, seeking to honor the Lord, yields place to her husband, to protect, honor & cherish her & the family, as Jesus would. The godly husband is locked-on to serve his family & seek his wife’s best & her counsel in all things. But he also ‘owns’ the moment with critical decisions affecting the family’s spiritual & physical well-being.

Think back to times you were deployed or separated from your partner due to operational requirements. Many of us were married, some engaged, many single. Today I share these thoughts with you, because I believe God wants each of us to elevate our belief about marriage, to align our covenantal promises with His truth. Ultimately He’s calling us to deepen our resolve to faithfully love our spouse for the long haul. The journey is an adventure, & the destination’s outcome: enduring love, trust, and half a century of memories & wins. Totally worth it.

Near Saipan en route to Arabian Gulf & 5th Fleet. We were 7 months pregnant with our child #1

For those considering marriage. I am excited for you. It’s also a great time to look UP, look ahead, & to God for discernment. Check in with wise older friends for counsel that’s specific to your life.

Marriage & family life is quite the Trip! With the Lord in the Center, you will make it!
Praying for you today. -Chaps KC

Follow On

• Go to a Marriage Retreat annually. Weekend to Remember does a great job. They hold retreats across the country. https://www.familylife.com/weekend-to-remember/

Most Pastors of churches would love a call or text asking them what local workshops or retreats might be good for you.

• Marriage coaching or counseling is a gamechanger! Check in with your Unit Chaplain, Family Life Chaplain (Army) or CREDO Chaplain (USMC, NAVY, Coast Guard), or Base Chaplain (USAF/Space Force). You can also look for a Christian Counselor with an LPC, LCSW, LMFT license or a Biblical Counselor via Focus on the Families Network: https://www.focusonthefamily.com/get-help/counseling-services-and-referrals/

• If you want to listen to podcasts check out material from the Gottman Institute https://www.gottman.com , Love & Respect, with Dr. Emerson Eggerichs has excellent webinars & regular content updates, https://www.loveandrespect.com also TWJ.org features a podcast with my sister and her husband a retired Marine, Nora White and LtCol. Danny White. They are a blended family who overcame the traumatic auto accident death of Danny’s previous spouse & two children: https://thewarriorsjourney.org/podcast/episode-75/

• 4 Book Recommendations:

The 5 Love Languages Military Edition

Sacred Marriage

His Needs, Her Needs: Building an Affair Proof Marriage

Daily Strength for the Battle (Vol. 3): Building Resilient Marriages & Families

**Names & Locations were altered to protect confidentiality

With my “Chilena”, Dámaris. Pray for us, 14 years, 7 months, 10 days married! We’re praying for y’all.

About Blog Author:

Kit Carlson has served alongside Marines, Sailors, Soldiers & Special Forces, and has completed three deployments. In 2020, the Navy assigned him to Duke University’s Divinity School to earn a specialized Master’s Degree, ThM, in Pastoral Care, where he focused his studies on challenges to Active Duty personnel, Veterans and their families. His specific areas of interest include care for persons with Complex Trauma, strategies for healing from PTSD, Moral Injury, & mild TBI. A key personal mission of his is to leverage the strengths of faith-based Veteran Service Organizations as strategic partners to chaplains, the VA, and the DoD in their ongoing resiliency & suicide prevention initiatives. He is married to his Chilean sweetheart, Damaris. They have two young children, who are the delight of their hearts.

How to Support a Military Spouse with Children after Service member’s Infidelity

Recently I was struck by Valencia Cagiano’s posts about her marriage breakup. She has video-blogged frequently about her life, marriage, and 4 kids, over the past 12 years.[i] Valencia, or “V”, is funny! She could be a stand-up comedian. She is a gifted singer who shares original Hip Hop and worship songs[ii]. While at times she shares her Christian beliefs, her profiles do not mention faith. Her video-blog is personal. Viewers watch her life change, to include pregnancy with twins, discovery of her Army spouse’s infidelity, and moving out to begin the journey of a single mom living with parents. She shares recipes, advice, insights into custody battles, and spoke about the challenge parenting during was during COVID19.[iii] She refers to viewers as “besties” and focuses on fellow mothers and women when addressing her 92.2K YouTube subscribers. Her vlogs have 22 million views.

The vlog episode I want to focus on was uploaded in 2015. V titled it, “True Story: Leaving My Husband.” In the vlog she tells about leaving her Army spouse, James (Jim), after his repeatedly cheating. [iv] She was 30 years old, and explains that she was faithful in the relationship. Now living with their children at her parents’ home in Jacksonville, FL, V is experiencing partial vision impairment in her left eye. V is black and her husband is white. Their children are young. They have 21 month-old twins–a boy and girl–and two older boys, age 7 & 10. Jim is an enlisted Soldier (E-4) who joined the Army at age 28. Valencia does not have a job outside full-time parenting.[v] Below is a redacted script from V’s 43 minute vlog.[vi]

“Girl, I’m telling you, he had a “Lord Voldemort” spirit. But when I said “I do,” I wanted it to mean something. My husband was white but what happened didn’t have to do with race, it could happen to anyone. The “Cheater Mate” will make it feel like it’s your fault, that you aren’t enough. Sisters, let me tell you that if you are married and the same religion, go to church together. Go to marriage counseling. Pray at nighttime together before bed, say grace together.” When you make vows, you are “saying ‘I Do’ to the human experience together, but some people don’t know how to honor those vows for better or worse. I was in a relationship in which I was always the fixer. He would let 3-4 days go by of not talking to me unless I broke the ice. I’m not the type of person that wants to take things from anyone…Would you believe it, when I drove home to pick up a few things—and took hardly anything, just a couple TVs and some clothes, he showed up to make his presence known with his Army friends…Thank God I left the kids with mom. He didn’t even ask to see them and acted like the two TVs were too much. He was cheating on lunch breaks. Parties were going on at the house. Our family pictures would be put away, my things shoved in the closet… You know I’m praying about a lot of things. I don’t want to claim anything negative over my life. But I had to go when I realized that it was ‘all about him’…never about me or the children. And I didn’t want the children to grow up with a father like that. I know I have post-partum issues. I’m gonna change my diet for the better. I want to focus on getting my Spirit back healthy. (At this point her voice trails off singing Janet Jackson’sLike a moth to a flame, burned by the fire, that’s the way love is.) You know to be well you have to be careful about how you think, not focusing on him. Stress can kill you! I know there were times I struggled to keep on living. At the end of the day, the only thing you can have sometimes is to have a peace about situations. I fear being solely responsible for my children. I’m a full-time parent. I’m so ready to be unafraid of the future. So now, what do I care about most? Family is first, and all that matters is not being afraid.”

PART 2: REFLECTIONS ABOUT “V’s” Life and Story. It would be hard to understand V and her family -as a Chaplain, or pastor- without considering some of the inherent challenges in her life at the time of her post, poverty, racial inequalities, and her status as a military dependent.

V’s family had been living on the poverty line. Her husband’s wages put them below the poverty level in 2015. In 2015 Jim was likely a Specialist (E-4) and earned $2,350 per month.[vii] The poverty level for a family of six in 2015 was $31,670. They earned $28,200. [viii] One factor which helped their finances was the Army’s additional Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH), which added $1479.00 to their monthly income. If they lived in military housing, they did not receive that BAH as potential additional income.[ix] Without doubt her decision to leave, with limited income and employment options as a single black mother, showed courage.

It is important to mention V’s race and inequality structures. As a black American, one of those issues relates to housing. Chanequa Walker-Barnes explains how the FHA “practice of undermining sales by under appraising homes in established neighborhoods” happens to people of color disproportionately.[x] V’s circumstances led to a hard question, where would she and the four children live? Would they get stuck in poverty? Would she be able to buy a home, or rent in a safe neighborhood with a good school district?

Pastoral theologian Walker-Barnes has written about the “StrongBlackWoman” (SBW) paradigm. V’s story demonstrates various beliefs, some likely unconsciously held, to include her expectations and society’s, reminiscent of dangerous aspects of the SBW. In a lecture, Bioethics and the Underserved, Dr. Richard Payne spoke about the ironic outcome of the SBW’s suffering, that “because of their great strength, they suffer enormously.”[xi] V demonstrates many of these tendencies. She works extremely hard as a vlogger to provide for her children, but it is a hard way to earn money. And painfully public. She manifests physical symptoms of pain due to the stress that she carries, her left eye no longer functions properly. Of being independent, she explains, “I’m not the type of person that wants to take things from anyone.” She leaves the home with hardly any belongings due her. In the relationship, she is the “Fixer.” Her husband will do the silent treatment for 3-4 days, until she breaks the ice. Ultimately it is for her children’s welfare that she leaves. The repeated infidelity signals to her, that ultimately he will not be the kind of father her children need, –one that puts their needs above his own.

Other characteristics of the SBW are V’s vibrant Christian spirituality, her empathetic advice-giving to other women—, and lastly that she does not show any tears in the 43 minute blog. This lack of emotion portrays the SBW who seems able to withstand anything.[xii] The result of acting out this myth is a “multi-tasking” and “overcommitment” that makes women like V into “a modern day Atlas bearing the weight of the world on her shoulders.” [xiii] Debilitating impacts on her physical health are likely to come without intervention. “Black women are experiencing epidemic rates of medical conditions such as… diabetes (&) hypertension…and they have higher morbidity and mortality rates than any other racial-gender group for nearly every major cause of death.” [xiv] Here we have a mother of 4 children, 2 of the babies under the age of two, who says “I fear being solely responsible for my children.” As a full-time parent she wonders how she will provide for them, but remains determined to make a way. There is not a hint of giving up.

Another challenge for V is that her support network is now threatened by the choice to leave her military husband. Her access to health care, base-housing, shopping at the Exchange, the Commissary, using on-post childcare (more reliable, less expensive and higher quality) and gaining legal support, counselors, chaplains and clinical social workers hinges on her status as a “military-dependent.” While she technically qualifies for these benefits while still married, once divorced, she will lose her base access, and her medical care. Meeting the needs of her children through the old-support network will be nearly impossible. Military spouses understand this, and it is a factor that makes it harder to leave. [xv] Were V receiving the benefit of on-post childcare, its cost is fixed. In 2015-16 it was $386 per month per child for CAT 3 income military families like the Cagianos. For $1158 a month[xvi], Valencia could put her youngest three into a safe childcare in order to work or pursue a degree. This benefit, available at military bases, would go away were she to divorce and gain 51% custody. [xvii] The costs savings are dramatic. The current cost of childcare in Virginia is $600-1200 per month per child. [xviii] During her marriage V was also likely at an employment disadvantage due to “long absences of the service member, childcare difficulties, and (spouses’ perception of) the stigmatization of military spouses by civilian employers.” A study found that military spouses were less likely to be employed and to earn less than their civilian counterparts. [xix]

I do not know if V’s husband ever deployed or had PTSD. This would be helpful to know as the presence of PTSD negatively impacts marital satisfaction.[xx] Even in the absence of PTSD, higher stress, and greater frequency of depression have been shown. We know that V experienced periods of job-related separation from Jim while with the four children.[xxi] Army deployments in 2012 were regulated to shift down to 9 months long, unlike the 12-18 month deployments of the first 10 years of the war on terror.[xxii] Living under the shadow of separation and deployment places a toll on military families, and pressurized the Cagianos.

V’s marriage was to a man who was White. A 2009 study on divorce among interracial couples showed that such marriage did not translate to higher divorce rates than other pairings in society. [xxiii] V says that she did not view her husband’s choice of infidelity to relate to race. According to the study mentioned, interracial marriages involving blacks were less stable than other interracial marriages.[xxiv] V was a Black military spouse and mother who was dependent on her husband’s income and military benefits for her family’s welfare. Why did he break trust with her? Was it mere failure of integrity, or was there abuse that grew from a deeper level of bias?

A final factor relates to V’s recent birth of twins. Multiple births have been shown to put parents at greater risk of postpartum depression. V acknowledges postpartum struggles with anxiety in her vlog.[xxv] Pastoral caregivers might ask, did V or Jim ever get help for anxiety, and depression? They added, to already full lives, two more babies at the same time. This is not to excuse Jim’s infidelity, or to oversimplify V’s struggles but it is to recognize a a factor putting their mental health at risk. Postpartum parenting likely strained Jim’s life,[xxvi] and his being an older active-duty junior enlisted Soldier (31-years-old at the time of their split), probably contributed to depression and poor decision making. [xxvii] Psychologists researching postpartum have recommended giving special focused care to affected parents.

Part 3: Hypothetical Context for Support: In this section, I want to imagine what care for Valencia and her husband could look like, and then apply that to how a chaplain or caregiver could support them.

“V” and her husband attend the military chapel that I pastor in Fort Eustis, VA. I am not the chaplain of her husband’s unit, but I am the deputy-post chaplain with monthly contact with the Post’s Command Leaders. She asks to meet on Monday afternoon at the chapel, the day she returns to pick up her things and complete her move-out from Jim.  During a lengthy phone call from her parents’ home in Jacksonville, FL, she has explained that she is leaving Jim due to his repeated cheating. The presenting issue with V is marital separation due to infidelity. As a pastoral giver, my response to V is important. She has opened up sacred space to speak to me as a minister and as the first military authority made aware of the situation. After our phone call, I prioritize my concerns for her: 1. Safety 2. Material welfare of her and the children, 3. Her spiritual welfare, 4. Navigating the military support system 5. Her husband’s safety. (In real-life I do not know Jim or Valencia.)

Physical Safety.  I want to ensure that when V returns to pick up her belongings, she is physically safe. To protect the service member, and out of fear, many spouses avoid speaking to a Soldier’s command about infidelity and marital problems. But by failing to do so, they may unnecessarily endanger themselves. In her initial phone call to me, I did not address the safety concern, but the following day I call to ask if she had considered contacting Jim’s leadership.  While doing so might inflame Jim’s anger, it brings the situation to the command’s awareness and allows them to support V and Jim individually. It might also lead to a military protective order (MPO) to keep him from the home, while V collects items that Monday morning. [xxviii]

Material Welfare. V shared her fear of becoming “solely responsible for my children.” Many practical issues confront her. Does she have money? Does she need legal support? Does she need childcare? I would plan to call and explain to her before our meeting that as an Army Spouse she and the children are entitled to resources in Jacksonville at the Naval Air Station: medical care, counseling, chaplain, commissary, clinical social workers, and some legal support.[xxix]  V has shared about her incapacitating anxiety and blurred vision.  Due to these acute concerns I want her to access care soonest.[xxx]

Church Solidarity. When V arrives to the office, my focus is to listen well. My hope is to assess her spiritual and emotional welfare, and build her up. I want to affirm the courage and rightness behind her decision to leave. I do not want her to blame herself for what has happened. I may tell her that the Christian community at the chapel, while not aware of the details, have expressed that they are praying for her, and miss her family. It could fortify her to know that her church family loves and stands beside her. 

Spiritual Welfare. In the case study text, V brings up strong feelings about her sense of worth being wounded by Jim’s cheating and treatment of her. She wants to stop feeling so afraid about the future. V’s feeling of betrayal[xxxi] could lead to strong bitterness toward Jim. She has referred to him as a “Cheater” and as a “Lord Voldemort.” Voldemort is known in the Harry Potter series for cruelty, torture, being a liar and sadist.[xxxii] It may be too early to talk to V in depth about forgiveness, or overcoming bitterness, and other aspects of divorce recovery. [xxxiii] But I do want to listen to how she is responding to the grief and anger and point her to God’s unfailing love and protection. Aware that her vlog is public, V’s sharing the private issues in her life might have unintended consequences on her children, her heart and on Jim. This medium could become a vehicle for bitterness, attack and triangulation (should she hope that Jim will view it) that would hurt her soul. Asking her what might be life-giving vs. life-limiting regarding vlog content might be a helpful lens to help her consider how she uses it. A delicate issue that might come up is marriage restoration. I have not heard Jim’s story[xxxiv], and although he attends the chapel, V is my priority. She has reached out to me and she is in the vulnerable position. If she asks whether they should meet alone together, I would recommend their meeting, instead, with me at the chapel.

CONCLUSION. As I look to help V consider her hope, I will ask her how she envisions her future story in a best case scenario.[xxxv] In the midst of pain she spoke of God’s goodness and said she was grateful for her children, parents and the safe place they’ve provided her to live. Asking her to share more about this gratitude might be another avenue to hear about her story. I hope she will feel safe to speak about the feelings of pain and betrayal too, and theological struggles she might have glossed over in the Vlog. While V wants to be strong and independent, it might help to bring to her attention the dangers of uncritically requiring of herself the SBW paradigm. V is deserving of justice, of grace and self-compassion. With this in mind, I would encourage V to allow her family, the body of Christ, and God to help carry her in this heartbreaking season. [xxxvi]

It is possible that I may still not understand what V needs most. Perhaps she will express anger at the church or at God. She might “no-show” the scheduled Monday meeting. She could reveal something unexpected–that she wants to mend the marriage. I need to rely on the Holy Spirit. While I deeply want to help her, what I bring will not be enough. But God who cares much more, can sustain her. I think of the paralytic’s friends who lower him through the roof to Jesus. For all V has been through, she should be laid out flat: daily care for twin babies, undeserved infidelity, losing her home, having to move 600 miles, her lost years of professional progress; and the coming challenges of single parenthood, legal adjudications and loss of community. But God is the burden bearer. Jesus bore the cross for her and is Healer. God’s eye is on V and on her children. God will never fail, leave or forsake her. With this in my heart, I would ask Valencia if she would like to pray, and then together ask God to provide, to keep V in peace and to fill her future with the fearlessness that she seeks. In God’s perfect Love her fear can be cast aside again and again.

Appendix:  Pictures of Valencia and Family


[i] Valencia has uploaded 1337 videos on YouTube (approximately 2-3 posts per week) and has 16.6K followers on Instagram.  https://socialblade.com/youtube/user/productjunkiexoxo/monthly. Accessed 6 NOV 2020. Valencia’s monthly earnings on YouTube range from 20-320 dollars. Over 10 years her total earnings are somewhere between $5k to 80K https://www.celeb-networth.com/productjunkiexoxo The point is that she has not earned a living wage, despite having 20 million views. Accessed 6 NOV 2020.

[ii] Cagiano, Valencia. Published, 23 JUN 2016.  “Hard Way” is the story of her breakup in song form. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZMHz8-nINQ Accessed 6 NOV 2020.

 

[iii] She describes herself as a “funny mommy vlogger” who shares her ‘unfiltered life.” And explains that she is “a very spirited person” sometimes “a tad bit dramatic.”

 

[iv] Valencia has 4 children, the twins were born @ DEC 2013 and in 2020, will soon be 7, the older boys are 10 and 13. Names from oldest to youngest: Jordan, Israel, Jullian and Max.

 

[v] In a different episode, before their marital problems, the couple shared how they first met. Both were waiting in line to buy food at “Chick Fil A.” At the time Jim was doing entry-level marketing for a company contracted by Disney.

 

[vi] Cagiano, Valencia. Published 22 OCT 2015. “True Story: Leaving My Husband.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4wI5WxjeBo Accessed 6 NOV.

 

[vii] As an E-4 with 3 years in service, this is what Jim would have earned in 2015. https://www.militaryrates.com/military-pay-charts-e1_e5_2015  Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

 

[viii]  https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/income-poverty/historical-poverty-thresholds.html Accessed 6 NOV 2020. Jim was a Sergeant (E-5) when he separated from the Army in 2018.

 

[ix] https://www.militaryrates.com/military-pay-bah-rates_2015?state=VIRGINIA&mha=VA297

Accessed 6 NOV 2020.

 

[x] Walker-Barnes, Chanequa. I Bring The Voices of My People: A Womanist Vision for Racial Reconciliation. (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2019), p. 45.

 

[xi] Payne, Richard. In a 4 NOV 2020 Class Lecture at Duke Divinity School, Dr. Patrick Smith shared a 2011 clip of Dr. Payne’s Flanigan Lecture address to Physicians, Ethicists and Theologians at the Center for Practical Bioethics in Kansas City. In the lecture he brought up the StrongBlackWoman and the counterpart myth, John Henry, and their suffering at the end of life.  

 

[xii] Walker-Barnes, Chanequa. Too Heavy a Yoke: Black Women and the Burden of Strength. (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock Publishers, 2014), p. 4. In her text she defines the archetype the StrongBlackWoman. It is “a particular, and fixed, way of being in the world. It is a racialized gender performance, a scripted role into which Black women are socialized, usually beginning in childhood. Rather than being a genuine expression of personality, it is a mask that stifles authenticity, subsuming multifaceted selves behind a singular wall of self-sacrifice and emotional stoicism. The StrongBlackWoman is at once an archetype, a performance, and an ideology. It is, in effect, the hegemonic black femininity.”

 

[xiii] Ibid. p. 4.

[xiv][xiv] Ibid. p. 5.

 

[xv] Van Slyke, Ryan D., and Nicholas J. Armstrong. “Communities Serve: A Systematic Review of Need Assessments on U.S. Veteran and Military-Connected Populations.” Armed Forces & Society 46, no. 4 (October 2020): 564–94. https://doi.org/10.1177/0095327X19845030.

[xvi] MyArmyOneSource.com file:///C:/Users/Kristian%20Carlson/Downloads/Final_SY15-16_FeeCharts_Oct15V2.pdf Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xvii]  See Military.com https://www.military.com/spouse/military-benefits/questions-benefits-getting-divorced-what-military-benefits-kids.html Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xviii] Economic Policy Institute “The Cost of Childcare in Virginia” https://www.epi.org/child-care-costs-in-the-united-states/#/VA Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xix] Ross, S.M. 21st Century American Military Families: A Review in the Context of the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Sociology Compass, (2014) 8: 888-902. doi:10.1111/soc4.12168

 

[xx] Ibid. pg. 894.

 

[xxi]  According to one Vlog post, Jim was away for military duties from 16 SEP to 16 OCT 2014.  https://youtu.be/zG3ksrrwxcc Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xxii] Typical Army deployments during V’s marriage to her husband had shifted to 9 months. It is unknown if he deployed while they were at Fort Eustis, VA. https://www.army.mil/article/63073/soldiers_to_begin_2012_with_nine_month_deployments

[xxiii]  Zhang, Y., & Van Hook, J. Marital dissolution among interracial couples. Journal of Marriage and the Family, (2009), 71(1), 95-107. Retrieved from https://login.proxy.lib.duke.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/docview/1826600783?accountid=10598 pg. 104.

 

[xxiv] Ibid. “Research in communication and cultural studies found that social pressures tend to increase social isolation of Black-White unions, especially from the White community, and consequently negatively impact the survival of these marriages.”  

[xxv] Landau, Elizabeth. “Multiple births increase risk of postpartum depression.” CNN.com March 31, 2009. https://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/03/31/depression.multiple.births/index.html?iref=nextin Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

 

[xxvi]  Wenze, S. J., Battle, C. L., & Tezanos, K. M. Raising multiples: mental health of mothers and fathers in early parenthood. Archives of women’s mental health, 18(2), (2015) 163–176. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00737-014-0484-x “Due to a multitude of factors, including increased demands of caring for multiple (often preterm) infants, greater sleep deprivation and sleep interruption, higher financial burden, social isolation, more prenatal medical involvement and physical discomfort, and greater role disruption for both parents, one might anticipate higher risk for perinatal depression, anxiety, and other mental health problems for parents of multiples as compared with parents of single births.”

[xxvii] Ibid. pg. 12.

[xxviii] Article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Adultery is punishable by commanders as “conduct (which brings) discredit upon the armed forces.” https://www.sapr.mil/public/docs/ucmj/UCMJ_Article134_General_Article.pdf

 Accessed November 8th, 2020. Sadly, infidelity is common. In my experience, it is rare for a Commander to bring these charges against a service member for two reasons. There is frequently a positive bias towards the story that the service member has told. Secondly, servicemembers are contributing members of commands, and each one’s welfare and attitude affects morale, to charge the Soldier with this offense could negatively affect morale.  If the unit has had a rash of cases of adultery, or if Jim’s performance has already been lacking, then it is more likely he would face Nonjudicial punishment (NJP).  At its most severe, if he is convicted by the commander of Article 134, he could lose rank, forfeit a half a month’s pay for two months, and be administratively separated with a dishonorable discharge. Should the commander not send him to NJP, his profile will be raised, and he will potentially suffer in his upcoming evaluation, and lose some of the confidence of his leadership.

 

[xxix]  Perhaps anything related to the military will be a stress trigger for her, but knowing she has a lot of local support for the months ahead, may alleviate some of the pressure she faces. https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrse/installations/nas_jacksonville.html Accessed 8 NOV 2020.

 

[xxx] Commands usually have a spouse liaison who represents the commander to the families, called the Ombudsman or Family Readiness Officer. This could be a great resource to V, and lessen the pastoral caregiver’s task of resource finding.

[xxxi]  V references Janet Jackson’s 1993 hit song, ‘That’s The Way Love Goes.’ The lyrics she references are, “Like a moth to a flame, burned by the fire.”

 

[xxxii] Lis, Eric, and Maria Tuineag. Development and Dark Wizards: Teaching Psychopathology with Lord Voldemort. Academic Psychiatry. 2017. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40596-017-0676-6. The authors share that “Lord Voldemort is the series’ personification of darkness, cruelty, racism, and various other unlikeable characteristics. His story is an elegant reflection of the ways in which modern psychiatry and psychology have conceptualized the development of antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) Given that the Harry Potter series establishes that Voldemort is a murderer, liar, torturer, and sadist.

 

[xxxiii] In the future I hope V would consider attending a divorce care group at a local church. Jacksonville, FL, her new location, does have local chapters available. https://www.divorcecare.org/ Accessed 8 NOV 2020.

[xxxiv] I will ask V in a phone call before our meeting if she would like me to contact Jim.  He may be at risk to self-harm, or harm to others, and may simply need pastoral support. If provide pastoral care to both, it would be wise for me to meet with a mentor to debrief, and ensure my spiritual welfare and clarity of sight.

 

[xxxv] Lester, Andrew D. Hope in Pastoral Care and Counseling. (Louisville, Ky: Westminster John Knox) 1995. pg. 103.

My aim would be to build up her vision for her future, that might be life-sustaining. See Lester’s Future Story paradigm, “Future has been identified as the primary dimension of time consciousness in which the struggle between hope and despair plays itself out during the human pilgrimage. Within the future that is coming toward us we find possibilities and potentialities for our journey”

[xxxvi] The Apostle exhorts us to “share your burdens one with another and fulfill the law of Christ.” Galatians 6:2.

he identifies as a Christian, and shares about her faith, although her public profiles do not mention her religious preference. The vlog is highly personal. Viewers watch her life change, to include pregnancy with twins, discovery of her Army spouse’s infidelity, and her moving out to begin the journey of a single mom living with parents. She shares recipes, hard-won advice, insights into custody battles, and lately has spoken to the challenges of parenting during a Pandemic.[iii]  She refers to viewers as her “besties” (virtual best friends) and focuses on fellow mothers and women when addressing her 84,000 YouTube subscribers. Her vlogs have garnered 21 million views.

The vlog episode we will consider was uploaded in 2015. She titled it, “True Story: Leaving My Husband.” In the vlog she tells about leaving her Army spouse, James (Jim), after his repeatedly cheating on her. [iv]  She was 30 years old, and explains that she was faithful in the relationship.  Now living with their children at her parents’ home in Jacksonville, FL, V is experiencing partial vision impairment in her left eye. V is black and her husband is white.  Their children are young. They have 21 month-old twins–a boy and girl–and two older boys, age 7 & 10.  Jim is an enlisted Soldier (E-4) who joined the Army at age 28. Valencia does not have a job outside full-time parenting.[v] The case study text below is redacted from V’s 43 minute vlog.[vi]

“Girl, I’m telling you, he had a “Lord Voldemort” spirit. But when I said “I do,” I wanted it to mean something. My husband was white but what happened didn’t have to do with race, it could happen to anyone. The “Cheater Mate” will make it feel like it’s your fault, that you aren’t enough.  Sisters, let me tell you that if you are married and the same religion, go to church together. Go to marriage counseling. Pray at nighttime together before bed, say grace together.” When you make vows, you are “saying ‘I Do’ to the human experience together, but some people don’t know how to honor those vows for better or worse. I was in a relationship in which I was always the fixer. He would let 3-4 days would go by of not talking to me unless I broke the ice.  I’m not the type of person that wants to take things from anyone…Would you believe it, when I drove home to pick up a few things—and took hardly anything, just a couple TVs and some clothes, he showed up to make his presence known with his Army friends…Thank God I left the kids with mom. He didn’t even ask to see them and acted like the two TVs were too much. He was cheating on lunch breaks. Parties were going on at the house. Our family pictures would be put away, my things shoved in the closet… You know I’m praying about a lot of things. I don’t want to claim anything negative over my life. But I had to go when I realized that it was ‘all about him’…never about me or the children. And I didn’t want the children to grow up with a father like that. I know I have post-partum issues. I’m gonna change my diet for the better. I want to focus on getting my Spirit back healthy.  (At this point her voice trails off singing Janet Jackson’sLike a moth to a flame, burned by the fire, that’s the way love is.)  You know to be well you have to be careful about how you think, not focusing on him. Stress can kill you! I know there were times I struggled to keep on living. At the end of the day, the only thing you can have sometimes is to have a peace about situations. I fear being solely responsible for my children. I’m a full-time parent. I’m so ready to be unafraid of the future.  So now, what do I care about most? Family is first, and all that matters is not being afraid.”

PART 2: THEORY AND REFLECTION.  It is impossible to effectively minister to Valencia and her family without considering key factors in her life: poverty, race, and status as a military dependent. 

V is on the poverty line. Her husband’s wages put them below the poverty level in 2015.  In 2015 Jim was likely a Specialist (E-4) and earned $2,350 per month.[vii]  The poverty level according for a family of six in 2015 was $31,670. They earned $28,200. [viii]  One factor which helped their finances was the Army’s additional Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH), which added $ 1479.00 to their monthly income. It is unknown if they lived in military housing. From vlog posts it appeared that they did. If so, they would not have received any of this BAH.[ix]  Without doubt her decision to leave, with limited income and employment options as a single black mother, shows courage.

It is important to mention V’s race and the oppressive inequality structures which challenge her opportunities.  As a black American, one of those issues relates to housing.  Chanequa Walker-Barnes explains how the FHA “practice of undermining sales by under appraising homes in established neighborhoods” happens to people of color disproportionately.[x]  V’s circumstances confront her with a hard question, where will she and the four children live?  Will they become entrapped in poverty? Will she be able to buy a home, or rent in a safe neighborhood with a good school district? Various forces seem against her.

Pastoral theologian Walker-Barnes in a different text shares about the StrongBlackWoman (SBW) paradigm.  V’s story demonstrates various embedded beliefs, to include her expectations and society’s, which might drive her toward pathological aspects of the SBW. In a lecture, Bioethics and the Underserved, Dr. Richard Payne spoke about the ironic outcome of the SBW’s suffering, that “because of their great strength, they suffer enormously.”[xi]  V demonstrates many of these tendencies. I will point out a few. She works extremely hard as a vlogger to provide for her children, but it is a hard way to earn money. And painfully public.  She manifests physical symptoms of pain due to the stress that she carries, her left eye no longer functions properly.  Of being independent, she explains, “I’m not the type of person that wants to take things from anyone.” She leaves the home with hardly any belongings due her.  In the relationship, she is the “Fixer.” Her husband will do the silent treatment for 3-4 days, until she breaks the ice. Ultimately it is for her children’s welfare that she leaves. The repeated infidelity signals to her, that ultimately he will not be the kind of father her children need, –one that puts their needs above his own.

              Other characteristics reminiscent of the SBW are V’s vibrant Christian spirituality, her empathetic advice-giving to other women—even in the depths of her crisis, and lastly that she does not show any tears in the 43 minutes blog. This lack of emotion portrays the SBW who seems able to withstand anything.[xii] The result of acting out this myth is a “multi-tasking” and “overcommitment” that makes women like V  into “a modern day Atlas bearing the weight of the world on her shoulders.” [xiii]  Debilitating impacts on her physical health are likely to come without intervention. “Black women are experiencing epidemic rates of medical conditions such as… diabetes (&) hypertension…and they have higher morbidity and mortality rates than any other racial-gender group for nearly every major cause of death.” [xiv] Here we have a mother of 4 children, 2 of the babies under the age of two, who says “I fear being solely responsible for my children.” As a full-time parent she wonders how she will provide for them, but remains determined to make a way. There is not a hint of giving up.

              Another factor challenging V is that her support network is now threatened by the choice to leave her military husband. Her access to health care, base-housing, shopping at the Exchange, the Commissary, using on-post childcare (more reliable, less expensive and higher quality) and gaining legal support, counselors, chaplains and clinical social workers hinges on her status as a “military-dependent.” While she technically qualifies for these benefits while still married, once divorced, she will lose her base access, and her medical care. Meeting the needs of her children through the old-support network will be nearly impossible. Military spouses understand this, and it is a factor that makes it harder to leave. [xv]  Were V receiving the benefit of on-post childcare, its cost is fixed. In 2015-16 it was $386 per month per child for CAT 3 income military families like the Cagianos.  For $1158 a month[xvi], Valencia could put her youngest three into a safe childcare in order to work or pursue a degree.  This benefit, available at military bases, would go away were she to divorce and gain 51% custody. [xvii] The costs savings are dramatic. The current cost of childcare in Virginia is $600-1200 per month per child. [xviii] During her marriage V was also at a potential employment disadvantage as military spouse due to “long absences of the service member, childcare difficulties, and (spouses’ perception of) the stigmatization of military spouses by civilian employers.” A study found that military spouses were less likely to be employed and to earn less than their civilian counterparts. [xix]

              It is unknown if V’s husband ever deployed or had a diagnosis of PTSD.  This would be helpful to know as the presence of PTSD negatively impacts marital satisfaction.[xx]  Even in the absence of PTSD, higher stress, and greater frequency of depression have been shown. We know that V experienced periods of job related separation from Jim while with the four children.[xxi] Army deployments in 2012 were regulated to shift down to 9 months long, unlike the 12-18 month deployments of the first 10 years of the war on terror.[xxii]  Living under the shadow of separation and deployment place a toll on military families, and pressurized the Cagianos.

              Another aspect of V’s marriage was that her husband was White and she was Black. A 2009 study on divorce among interracial couples showed that such marriage did not translate to higher divorce rates than other pairings in society. [xxiii] V says that she did not view her husband’s choice of infidelity to relate to race. According to the study mentioned, interracial marriages involving blacks were less stable than other interracial marriages.[xxiv]  The discerning Pastoral Caregiver will consider cultural factors, both the caregiver’s own bias, and whether cross-cultural communication problems may exist in the Cagiano’s relationship, or abuses of power. V was a Black military spouse and mother who was dependent on her husband’s income and military benefits for her family’s welfare.  Why did he break trust with her? Was it mere failure of integrity, or was there abuse that grew from a deeper level of bias?

A final factor relates to V’s recent birth of twins. Multiple births have been shown to put parents at greater risk of postpartum depression. V acknowledges postpartum struggles with anxiety in her vlog.[xxv]  Pastoral caregivers might ask, did V or Jim ever get help for anxiety, and depression?  They added to already full lives, two more babies at the same time.  This is not to excuse Jim’s infidelity, or to oversimplify V’s struggles but it is to recognize a a factor putting their mental health at risk. Postpartum parenting likely strained Jim’s life,[xxvi] as an older active duty lower enlisted Soldier (31-years-old at the time of their split), and may have contributed to depression and poor decision making. [xxvii] Psychologists researching postpartum recommended increasing psychosocial interventions and treatments available to affected parents.

Part 3: APPLICATION.  Notional Context of Care:  Valencia and her husband attend the military chapel that I pastor in Fort Eustis, VA. I am not the chaplain of her husband’s unit, but I am the deputy-post chaplain with monthly contact with the Post’s Command Leaders. She asks to meet on Monday afternoon at the chapel, the day she returns to pick up her things and complete her move-out from Jim.  During a lengthy phone call from her parents’ home in Jacksonville, FL, she has explained that she is leaving Jim due to his repeated cheating. The presenting issue with V is marital separation due to infidelity. As a pastoral giver, my response to V is important. She has opened up sacred space to speak to me as a minister and as the first military authority made aware of the situation. After our phone call, I prioritize my concerns for her: 1. Safety 2. Material welfare of her and the children, 3. Her spiritual welfare, 4. Navigating the military support system 5. Her husband’s safety. (In real-life I do not know Jim or Valencia.)

Physical Safety.  I want to ensure that when V returns to pick up her belongings, she is physically safe. To protect the service member, and out of fear, many spouses avoid speaking to a Soldier’s command about infidelity and marital problems. But by failing to do so, they may unnecessarily endanger themselves. In her initial phone call to me, I did not address the safety concern, but the following day I call to ask if she had considered contacting Jim’s leadership.  While doing so might inflame Jim’s anger, it brings the situation to the command’s awareness and allows them to support V and Jim individually. It might also lead to a military protective order (MPO) to keep him from the home, while V collects items that Monday morning. [xxviii]

Material Welfare. V shared her fear of becoming “solely responsible for my children.” Many practical issues confront her. Does she have money? Does she need legal support? Does she need childcare? I would plan to call and explain to her before our meeting that as an Army Spouse she and the children are entitled to resources in Jacksonville at the Naval Air Station: medical care, counseling, chaplain, commissary, clinical social workers, and some legal support.[xxix]  V has shared about her incapacitating anxiety and blurred vision.  Due to these acute concerns I want her to access care soonest.[xxx]

Church Solidarity. When V arrives to the office, my focus is to listen well. My hope is to assess her spiritual and emotional welfare, and build her up. I want to affirm the courage and rightness behind her decision to leave. I do not want her to blame herself for what has happened. I may tell her that the Christian community at the chapel, while not aware of the details, have expressed that they are praying for her, and miss her family. It could fortify her to know that her church family loves and stands beside her. 

Spiritual Welfare. In the case study text, V brings up strong feelings about her sense of worth being wounded by Jim’s cheating and treatment of her. She wants to stop feeling so afraid about the future. V’s feeling of betrayal[xxxi] could lead to strong bitterness toward Jim. She has referred to him as a “Cheater” and as a “Lord Voldemort.” Voldemort is known in the Harry Potter series for cruelty, torture, being a liar and sadist.[xxxii]  It is too early to talk to V in depth about forgiveness, or overcoming bitterness, and other aspects of divorce recovery. [xxxiii]  But I do want to listen to how she is responding to the grief and anger and point her to God’s unfailing love and protection.  Aware that her vlog is public, V’s sharing the private issues in her life might have unintended consequences on her children, her heart and on Jim.  This medium could become a vehicle for bitterness, attack and triangulation (should she hope that Jim will view it) that would hurt her soul.  Asking her what might be life-giving vs. life-limiting regarding vlog content might be a helpful lens to help her consider how she uses it.  A delicate issue that might come up is marriage restoration.  I have not heard Jim’s story[xxxiv], and although he attends the chapel, V is my priority.  She has reached out to me and she is in the vulnerable position. If she asks whether they should meet together, I will not encourage reconciliation at this time. But I would be open to their meeting with me at the chapel.

CONCLUSION. As I look to help V consider her hope, I will ask her how she envisions her future story in a best case scenario.[xxxv] In the midst of pain she spoke of God’s goodness and said she was grateful for her children, parents and the safe place they’ve provided her to live. Asking her to share more about this gratitude might be another avenue to hear about her story. I hope she will feel safe to speak about the feelings of pain and betrayal too, and theological struggles she might have glossed over in the Vlog. While V wants to be strong and independent, it might help to bring to her attention the dangers of uncritically requiring of herself the SBW paradigm. V is deserving of justice, of grace and self-compassion. With this context, I would encourage V to allow her family, the body of Christ, and God to help carry her in this heartbreaking season. [xxxvi]

It is possible that I may still not understand what V needs most. Perhaps she will express anger at the church or at God. She might “no-show” the scheduled Monday meeting.  She could reveal something unexpected–that she wants to mend the marriage.  I need to rely on the Holy Spirit.  While I deeply want to help her, what I bring will not be enough.  But God who cares much more, can sustain her. I think of the paralytic’s friends who lower him through the roof to Jesus.  For all V has been through, she should be laid out flat: daily care for twin babies, undeserved infidelity, losing her home, having to move 600 miles, her lost years of professional progress; and the coming challenges of single parenthood, legal adjudications and loss of community.  But God is the burden bearer. Jesus bore the cross for her and is Healer. God’s eye is on V and on her children.  God will never fail, leave or forsake her.  With this in my heart, I would ask Valencia if she would like to pray, and then together ask God to provide, to keep V in peace and to fill her future with the fearlessness she seeks.  In God’s perfect Love her fear can be cast aside again and again.

Appendix:  Pictures of Valencia and Family


[i] Valencia has uploaded 1337 videos on YouTube (approximately 2-3 posts per week) and has 16.6K followers on Instagram.  https://socialblade.com/youtube/user/productjunkiexoxo/monthly. Accessed 6 NOV 2020. Valencia’s monthly earnings on YouTube range from 20-320 dollars. Over 10 years her total earnings are somewhere between $5k to 80K https://www.celeb-networth.com/productjunkiexoxo The point is that she has not earned a living wage, despite having 20 million views. Accessed 6 NOV 2020.

[ii] Cagiano, Valencia. Published, 23 JUN 2016.  “Hard Way” is the story of her breakup in song form. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZMHz8-nINQ Accessed 6 NOV 2020.

 

[iii] She describes herself as a “funny mommy vlogger” who shares her ‘unfiltered life.” And explains that she is “a very spirited person” sometimes “a tad bit dramatic.”

 

[iv] Valencia has 4 children, the twins were born @ DEC 2013 and in 2020, will soon be 7, the older boys are 10 and 13. Names from oldest to youngest: Jordan, Israel, Jullian and Max.

 

[v] In a different episode, before their marital problems, the couple shared how they first met. Both were waiting in line to buy food at “Chick Fil A.” At the time Jim was doing entry-level marketing for a company contracted by Disney.

 

[vi] Cagiano, Valencia. Published 22 OCT 2015. “True Story: Leaving My Husband.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4wI5WxjeBo Accessed 6 NOV.

 

[vii] As an E-4 with 3 years in service, this is what Jim would have earned in 2015. https://www.militaryrates.com/military-pay-charts-e1_e5_2015  Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

 

[viii]  https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/income-poverty/historical-poverty-thresholds.html Accessed 6 NOV 2020. Jim was a Sergeant (E-5) when he separated from the Army in 2018.

 

[ix] https://www.militaryrates.com/military-pay-bah-rates_2015?state=VIRGINIA&mha=VA297

Accessed 6 NOV 2020.

 

[x] Walker-Barnes, Chanequa. I Bring The Voices of My People: A Womanist Vision for Racial Reconciliation. (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2019), p. 45.

 

[xi] Payne, Richard. In a 4 NOV 2020 Class Lecture at Duke Divinity School, Dr. Patrick Smith shared a 2011 clip of Dr. Payne’s Flanigan Lecture address to Physicians, Ethicists and Theologians at the Center for Practical Bioethics in Kansas City. In the lecture he brought up the StrongBlackWoman and the counterpart myth, John Henry, and their suffering at the end of life.  

 

[xii] Walker-Barnes, Chanequa. Too Heavy a Yoke: Black Women and the Burden of Strength. (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock Publishers, 2014), p. 4. In her text she defines the archetype the StrongBlackWoman. It is “a particular, and fixed, way of being in the world. It is a racialized gender performance, a scripted role into which Black women are socialized, usually beginning in childhood. Rather than being a genuine expression of personality, it is a mask that stifles authenticity, subsuming multifaceted selves behind a singular wall of self-sacrifice and emotional stoicism. The StrongBlackWoman is at once an archetype, a performance, and an ideology. It is, in effect, the hegemonic black femininity.”

 

[xiii] Ibid. p. 4.

[xiv][xiv] Ibid. p. 5.

 

[xv] Van Slyke, Ryan D., and Nicholas J. Armstrong. “Communities Serve: A Systematic Review of Need Assessments on U.S. Veteran and Military-Connected Populations.” Armed Forces & Society 46, no. 4 (October 2020): 564–94. https://doi.org/10.1177/0095327X19845030.

[xvi] MyArmyOneSource.com file:///C:/Users/Kristian%20Carlson/Downloads/Final_SY15-16_FeeCharts_Oct15V2.pdf Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xvii]  See Military.com https://www.military.com/spouse/military-benefits/questions-benefits-getting-divorced-what-military-benefits-kids.html Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xviii] Economic Policy Institute “The Cost of Childcare in Virginia” https://www.epi.org/child-care-costs-in-the-united-states/#/VA Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xix] Ross, S.M. 21st Century American Military Families: A Review in the Context of the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Sociology Compass, (2014) 8: 888-902. doi:10.1111/soc4.12168

 

[xx] Ibid. pg. 894.

 

[xxi]  According to one Vlog post, Jim was away for military duties from 16 SEP to 16 OCT 2014.  https://youtu.be/zG3ksrrwxcc Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

[xxii] Typical Army deployments during V’s marriage to her husband had shifted to 9 months. It is unknown if he deployed while they were at Fort Eustis, VA. https://www.army.mil/article/63073/soldiers_to_begin_2012_with_nine_month_deployments

[xxiii]  Zhang, Y., & Van Hook, J. Marital dissolution among interracial couples. Journal of Marriage and the Family, (2009), 71(1), 95-107. Retrieved from https://login.proxy.lib.duke.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/docview/1826600783?accountid=10598 pg. 104.

 

[xxiv] Ibid. “Research in communication and cultural studies found that social pressures tend to increase social isolation of Black-White unions, especially from the White community, and consequently negatively impact the survival of these marriages.”  

[xxv] Landau, Elizabeth. “Multiple births increase risk of postpartum depression.” CNN.com March 31, 2009. https://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/03/31/depression.multiple.births/index.html?iref=nextin Accessed 7 NOV 2020.

 

[xxvi]  Wenze, S. J., Battle, C. L., & Tezanos, K. M. Raising multiples: mental health of mothers and fathers in early parenthood. Archives of women’s mental health, 18(2), (2015) 163–176. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00737-014-0484-x “Due to a multitude of factors, including increased demands of caring for multiple (often preterm) infants, greater sleep deprivation and sleep interruption, higher financial burden, social isolation, more prenatal medical involvement and physical discomfort, and greater role disruption for both parents, one might anticipate higher risk for perinatal depression, anxiety, and other mental health problems for parents of multiples as compared with parents of single births.”

[xxvii] Ibid. pg. 12.

[xxviii] Article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Adultery is punishable by commanders as “conduct (which brings) discredit upon the armed forces.” https://www.sapr.mil/public/docs/ucmj/UCMJ_Article134_General_Article.pdf

 Accessed November 8th, 2020. Sadly, infidelity is common. In my experience, it is rare for a Commander to bring these charges against a service member for two reasons. There is frequently a positive bias towards the story that the service member has told. Secondly, servicemembers are contributing members of commands, and each one’s welfare and attitude affects morale, to charge the Soldier with this offense could negatively affect morale.  If the unit has had a rash of cases of adultery, or if Jim’s performance has already been lacking, then it is more likely he would face Nonjudicial punishment (NJP).  At its most severe, if he is convicted by the commander of Article 134, he could lose rank, forfeit a half a month’s pay for two months, and be administratively separated with a dishonorable discharge. Should the commander not send him to NJP, his profile will be raised, and he will potentially suffer in his upcoming evaluation, and lose some of the confidence of his leadership.

 

[xxix]  Perhaps anything related to the military will be a stress trigger for her, but knowing she has a lot of local support for the months ahead, may alleviate some of the pressure she faces. https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnrse/installations/nas_jacksonville.html Accessed 8 NOV 2020.

 

[xxx] Commands usually have a spouse liaison who represents the commander to the families, called the Ombudsman or Family Readiness Officer. This could be a great resource to V, and lessen the pastoral caregiver’s task of resource finding.

[xxxi]  V references Janet Jackson’s 1993 hit song, ‘That’s The Way Love Goes.’ The lyrics she references are, “Like a moth to a flame, burned by the fire.”

 

[xxxii] Lis, Eric, and Maria Tuineag. Development and Dark Wizards: Teaching Psychopathology with Lord Voldemort. Academic Psychiatry. 2017. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40596-017-0676-6. The authors share that “Lord Voldemort is the series’ personification of darkness, cruelty, racism, and various other unlikeable characteristics. His story is an elegant reflection of the ways in which modern psychiatry and psychology have conceptualized the development of antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) Given that the Harry Potter series establishes that Voldemort is a murderer, liar, torturer, and sadist.

 

[xxxiii] In the future I hope V would consider attending a divorce care group at a local church. Jacksonville, FL, her new location, does have local chapters available. https://www.divorcecare.org/ Accessed 8 NOV 2020.

[xxxiv] I will ask V in a phone call before our meeting if she would like me to contact Jim.  He may be at risk to self-harm, or harm to others, and may simply need pastoral support. If provide pastoral care to both, it would be wise for me to meet with a mentor to debrief, and ensure my spiritual welfare and clarity of sight.

 

[xxxv] Lester, Andrew D. Hope in Pastoral Care and Counseling. (Louisville, Ky: Westminster John Knox) 1995. pg. 103.

My aim would be to build up her vision for her future, that might be life-sustaining. See Lester’s Future Story paradigm, “Future has been identified as the primary dimension of time consciousness in which the struggle between hope and despair plays itself out during the human pilgrimage. Within the future that is coming toward us we find possibilities and potentialities for our journey”

[xxxvi] The Apostle exhorts us to “share your burdens one with another and fulfill the law of Christ.” Galatians 6:2.

Holy Interruptions

 

As we began Week 4 of our 2017 WESTPAC Deployment, we dug into Mark’s Gospel in a sermon series called Surprised by Jesus. We were challenged to see interruptions in life, in a new Kingdom Way, as something that may be even holy. Designed by God for our Good.

***
Today’s Replenishment at Sea (RAS) and Vertical Replenishment (VERTREP) were a  surprise for all of us. Not originally scheduled for Sunday, our “Holiday Routine” as we call it, Somehow they also coincided with the exact hours we normally have worship services on the ship. Causing us to reschedule.  Last night XO even said, “Chaps, I’m sorry, I think we’re throwing a hand grenade into your Sunday Worship Schedule.”

It was a challenge for the Command Religious Program Specialist (RP2) and I! Kinda broke to pieces our plans a, b and c for potential worship times, as schedule kept shifting.

But, I think the VERTREP AND RAS underscore a message, friends, that God wants us to hear, “How do we respond when the unexpected happens?”

Do we think,

“God may be at work!” , “This is a person, I may be blessed by or need to bless” or do you charge on stressed and annoyed?

Honestly, how does it feel when we’re already busy and something else gets added to the plate? Someone comes and says I need “this” now! Or the Facebook message comes from home, “the car broke down”

Payment’s late ‘cause credit card expired. “Your child’s misbehaving, and is considered being expelled!”

It’s that feeling that too many days are being crammed into one hour? Maybe even at times like God is into trashing our perfectly good plan. A cosmic “recalculating” reverberates just when you thought you were getting in the groove.

So what do we do? Throw an adult tantrum?

Go drink hard that weekend.
Smoke a pack of cigarettes in an hour or two.
Cuss out a subordinate for their failure—you know crap just travels downhill right?
Save up frustration to expend in compromising ways at a port visit?
Or maybe even suspend COMMs with God for an undetermined amount of time until we’re ready –nurse a grudge.

OR do we take it in, then gulp down some big exhilarating, wild-breath-of life-kind-of-air, and in FAITH say, “God you are up to something in this, it’s a DIVINE interruption I believe, its going to be a holy interruption for good, I know it”

This is how Jesus lived. We see it on display in the book of Mark. Let’s take a look.

MARK 5:21-36

  1. And when Jesus had crossed again in the boat to the other side, a great crowd gathered about him, and he was beside the sea.
  2. Then came one of the rulers of the synagogue Jairus by name, and seeing him, he fell at his feet.
  3. And implored him earnestly, saying, “My little daughter is at the point of death. Come and lay your hands on her, so that she may be made well and live.”
  4. And he went with him. And a great crowd followed him and thronged about him.
  5. And there was a woman who had had a discharge of blood for twelve years,
  6. And who had suffered much under many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was no better but rather grew worse
  7. She had heard the reports about Jesus and came up behind him in the crowd and touched his garment.
  8. For she said, “If I touch even His garments, I will be made well.”
  9. And immediately the flow of blood dried up, and she felt in her body that she was healed of her disease.
  10. And Jesus, perceiving in himself that power had gone out from him, immediately turned about in the crowd and said, “Who touched my garments?”
  11. And his disciples said to him, “You see the crowd pressing around you, and yet you say, ‘Who touched me?’ ”
  12. And He looked around to see who had done it
  13. But the woman, knowing what had happened to her, came in fear and trembling and fell down before Him and told the whole truth.
  14. And He said to her, “Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.”
  15. While He was still speaking, there came from the ruler’s house some who said, “Your daughter is dead. Why trouble the Teacher any further?
  16. But overhearing what they said, Jesus said to the ruler of the synagogue, “Do not fear, only believe.”

Here in the passage, even in the midst of His great authority, power, foreknowledge and momentum– In this movement that was steadily revealing the kingdom of the living God– We see orchestrated what seems an operational pause diverting the plan that was unfolding (with force) in Mark’s Gospel.

And Why?

To show those closest to Him—the Twelve,
To show a tormented broken woman,
And a frightened Dad,

That God is SOVEREIGN IN THE STOPS! That He is actually, not only in control of them, BUT IN THE MIDST OF THEM.

These interruptions become opportunities for some of our most beautiful demonstrations of trusting faith when we don’t know what’s going to happen but we trust Him.

The interruptions also reveal His intervening power on our behalf.

Let’s shift gears and talk about our walk with Christ, and how it really is going for us following Him. Have you felt, maybe, yourself not quite alive, not excited to know Him as you used to? Stagnant? Dormant?

A good question to ask, then, may be—”Am I living a moment-by-moment obedience which is receptive to Divine Interruption?”

For this is actually the Kingdom Way and could explain why your faith is not being challenged or pushed.

We need to put “interruption” back on the “Menu” of our lives, not as nuisances but as critical to Christian obedience.

You may question this saying, “It’s easy to seem open to Divine Interruptions, if it’s a Spirit thing, but how do I know it’s God?”

Especially considering how extended high stress begins to change us in life.

Before, perhaps, you were open to the leading of His Spirit but now such holy interruptions aren’t so welcome…

-after the third flat tire.
-Or news that your child needs special surgery.
-Or that your orders have been canceled
-Or you’re on a deployment separated from your loved ones and you just don’t feel like it that day.

 

Studying Our Passage

V. 24

The Synagogue Ruler, Jairus, is likely a Pharisee with some wealth. But we meet him here in desperate need. His daughter’s grave illness opened his heart to Jesus.

So a Primary Truth we can internalize here is that we need to take the opportunity to introduce people to Jesus in their pain. C.S. Lewis said, “Pain is God’s Megaphone to Rouse a Deaf and Dying World.”

V. 25 Divine Interruption of His Mission to Help Jairus.

Often the most special ministry happens in the unexpected moments, interruptions, when we feel we’re too busy.  We already have an agenda…set. I mean doesn’t Jesus have a pretty important “customer” here in this synagogue ruler?

This is some “STRATEGIC MINISTRY” right? Maybe Jairus can help turn the tide of Negative Opinion these leaders have formed of Jesus.

We need to notice how intentional God was, to strike Peter, and his mentee Mark, with the circumstances that unfold here. Mark’s description of the woman with the issue of blood is very detailed compared to the people we see healed in this Gospel. Most of the them anonymous.

Her story. Her look. Her need, Her faith, captured Peter and the Disciples…It’s moving. We’ll come back to this.

V. 30 Jesus is teaching something about Himself; and about His Kingdom DNA, that we’re to live out.

HE STOPPED and then engaged the situation and the person with much tender care and intentionality.

Not a Nuisance or frustrating diversion! She is not an interruption to Jesus. She is a priority.

Do you feel the momentum of Mark…Miracle after Miracle, Just Deed after Just Deed, True Word after True Word.  Who is this man…

PETER will soon say in Chapter 8, “I believe you are Messiah, the Christ of the Living God”

There’s Inevitability, a sense of the unstoppable reality of Jesus’ coming revelation of glory and authority –you can feel the Kingdom that’s spoken of and glimpsed, will soon be seen in its sweeping immensity… the story is moving forward here with Jairus!!

BUT HE STOPPED

How often do you need to stop, and ask, “Lord what is happening? Are you saying something to me? Are you up to something here?”

Through life,

Through unexpected circumstances that compound one upon another.

Through His Holy Spirit’s nudges to us.  And through God’s Word.  I want to be listening. Do you feel that challenge too?

 

V. 28 “She (just) touched his garment”

Desperate. Humble. Demonstrates quiet faith…belief in him

And we know, there was compassion in His eyes. And throughout God’s Word it’s there. Look for it. Expect it.  And when you talk to friends or those who see our Lord as hard.  Remember how he Stopped for a woman who desperately reached up at the end of her hope to touch the hem of His garment.

V. 29: “She had suffered much at the hand of ‘physicians’ and ‘quack doctors’

Likely I imagine, experimental therapies…or new wave spiritual remedies from local “new age” village ‘doctors’

Certainly at the hands of whomever, even upstanding Doctors of the day, it was uncomfortable. The procedures embarrassing.

Think of now and then.  Chemo. Multiple surgeries. Former practices debunked, like blood-letting. AND

She “had spent all she had.”

Expensive medical bills apparently aren’t just a 21st century American problem.

V. 29 “She had heard reports”

May I ask, “How did you first hear about Jesus?”

And for her do you wonder what the reports sounded like…? I do,

Let’s call the woman with the issue of blood, ‘Sarai’

Imagine with me the first report she heard.

“Sarai, there’s a man, a rabbi, a prophet from Nazareth who is casting out demons, healing the lame, and many, many other sicknesses…You should go see Him?  What if God still has a cure for you?”

Or, maybe, as she sweeps the entrance to her home, she overhears people moving by pushing their cart piled high with vegetables and fresh baked cakes for the local convenience mart…

“Did you hear about what Yeshua did for the Cohens? Young Itzahk is now so active his parents barely know what to do!!

Just last month he was his usual mopey, hobble around self, — never could use that left leg for support …

But now they can’t keep him from climbing trees, and tousling with the boys playing touch roundball…

When was the last time we saw such a move of God in Israel?”

V. 31 The Disciples were like, “Come’on Jesus let’s keep moving…these crowds are thick.

Imagine the Beatles trying to get from the chauffeured car and walk the red carpet into Radio City Hall …Everyone crushing in around and they’re just trying to get to the door.  How many must have wanted Jesus’ attention? Even called out for Him. So the Disciples THOUGHT they were doing what was best, because they were doing what was GOOD. JUST MAKE A BEE-LINE to Jairus’ home miles away, the thought. But what they didn’t know, as they questioned Jesus sensitivity to this interruption, is that so often, we must expect in our Christ-Following obedience that You will be questioned when you Embrace Holy Interruptions

V. 33

Why is she afraid?  The ESV Study Bible Notes explain that perhaps because she’s ceremonially unclean, having touched all these people to get to Jesus, she may have become a potential target for public anger and abuse

V. 34

And He said to her, “Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed of your disease.”

A Divine interruption saved the most vulnerable person in this true story…

And a Divine interruption also occasioned our salvation my friends

We may ask, “Jesus you love me, even me??”

“Yes, I do.”  Hear him say.

Just as His actions said to the woman with the issue of blood.
Thank you Jesus that you chose to stop, not to pass by our pain, our loss, our crippling shock at the COLD and BRUTAL nature of this fallen world.

But You saw me, each of us, and lifted us up!

Do you remember when you felt it?  When the Savior drew you gently? And said, “I love you, I choose You. Follow me, and I will make you a “Fisher of Men.”

Yes He gave purpose beyond what you hoped for. Life brighter than you’d ever known, and salvation forever rich, free and not accidental.

It cost Him, the Son of God, His very life on Calvary. He gave His life to give you Yours.

Let’s open our hearts to Him today. We’ll be, forever interrupted. And forever loved we’ll stand.

***

These sermons are written in the push and pull of operational service aboard CG-52, USS Bunker Hill. Preached for God’s glory and shared in Chapel each week to build up the believers aboard. Each one called by God and being equipped for remarkable things beyond our present understanding in the military and afterward.

Forgive the hum of nearly 100,000 Horsepower from the Gas Turbine Engines spinning ship’s shafts and propeller. It’s our background for worship from the deep.