Courtesy:
Family Federation for World Peace and Unification of U.S.A.

Why I Chose to Serve
By Sergeant Justin Harding
11 November, 2008
Hello Family! On this Veterans Day I would like to speak to all of you about
service
from the point of view of a fellow Unificationist. I chose to go the route
of
military service, which has not been all peaches and cream. And some of you
have
asked me, “Why did I pick up the cross of military service?”
On July 26, 1998 I enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. My desire was
to serve
God and serve my nation. There was no global war on terror at the time, yet
we did
train day and night in the event that the President would call upon us to
defend the
freedoms our Creator has so richly bestowed upon this Nation.
Currently, I have served ten years on two tours of duty to Southeast Asia
and four
tours to Iraq. I did so in the capacity of infantry rifleman, aka “a grunt.”
Why as
an Unificationist did I choose this path? Simple: I recognized there is evil
in the
world. And that evil must not go unchecked, lest it should influence others
in the
wrong way. As I learned through my activism with Unificationist clubs in
college,
this evil came from within me. I determined after graduating from college
that I
would go down to the bottom and work my way up.
There is no lower place one can go than as a maggot recruit at Parris
Island. The
only thing that wasn’t stripped away from me there was my identity as a
child of God.
The Drill Instructors couldn’t take away the love of God from me, the love
of my
wife, the love of my family, etc.
They rebuilt and trained me to value honor, courage, and commitment. I
endured many
sleepless nights and sweaty days wracking my mind and body. My
Unificationist
character education has held the keel of my mind steady now for more than
ten years.
Have I made mistakes and sinned in my ten years of service? “Yes,” but I
have
disciplined myself to never giving up. I really don’t want to go to Heaven.
I want to
bring other people there. I hope I am the last one in, and all my squad has
their
rack space in Heaven before I show up. My religious training has taught me
to love my
enemies more than my own children.
True, I also joined the military to make money for my family, have a
computer and a
car, and be able to support my church with offerings and tithing. Ideals not
grounded
in reality don’t really have any value. Service brings these ideals to earth.
The
Marine Corps allowed me to get on my feet financially and better support our
faith
community as well. As a Unificationist I don’t accept the reality of this
messed-up
culture, and I strive to serve day by day in peacetime or in war to make the
world a
better and safer place. I chose to do this through military service.
At the Fourth-of-July Rose Bowl event the other branches of the service were
out in
full force showing off humvees, promoting the GI Bill for college, and
speaking about
the benefits you could get from joining their respective service. The
Marines
displayed their weapons and had a pull-up bar. Do you have what it takes?
President
Kennedy was famous for challenging Americans to “ask not what your country
can do for
you,” but to “ask what you can do for your country.” The Marine Corps
embodies this
remark. Do you have what it takes to go to the worst places in the world,
accomplish
the mission whether it be training, humanitarian assistance, or God-forbid
combat and
get the job done? I remember, too, when I joined the recruiters, seeing the
pull-up
bar. They didn’t even talk to me. In order to talk to the recruiter, I had
to jump up
on the bar. As a Unificationist I liked this – this service was for me.
Again, back to earth. The military and the Marine Corps include by far some
of the
heaviest drinkers, smokers, and promiscuous people I have ever met. Have I
been
influenced by that negative peer pressure? Yes, I have, but I have also
influenced
that nasty culture we talk about in lectures called the Fallen World. I’ll
give you
the names of more than two hundred Marines, ranking from private to Colonel,
who know
what my faith is, its founder and what I have done with it. The evil in me
and the
evil in these guys doesn’t scare me any more. I just deal with it. I stumble,
but I
will never give up showing the words I have been taught by my God. You know
what
shocks the Marines the most? It is that I have a wife and three kids and
have been
married for more than 16 years and still go out and sacrifice in peacetime
and in a
time of war. I am proud to be a Unificationist. We have something so much
better than
this rotten culture. I have chosen to light my lamp on the background of
military
service. I admit, it is not for everyone.
So I wish you all a Happy Veteran’s Day. To my brothers in arms, I pledge I
will not
let your sacrifice go unnoticed on earth or beyond. I have your six and will
do all I
can to help you make it to our true home. Semper Fidelis to all you jarheads
out
there! And to all Unificationists who might question military service as a
way to
achieve peace, I just say “Someone’s got to do it.”

Justin Harding joined the Unification Movement in 1989. In 1992 he received
the
marriage blessing with Yuriko Harding at the 30,000-couples Blessing. He
graduated
from the University of Bridgeport in 1998 and enlisted that year in the
United States
Marines Corps. He has served with the Second Battalion Fifth Marine Regiment
"The
Most Decorated Infantry Battalion in the USMC" for the last 10 years as an
Infantry
Antitank Assaultman. His highest personal Awards include a Bronze Star with
a "V" for
valor in combat, the Purple Heart, Navy & Marine Corps Achievement Medals,
and the
Combat Action Ribbon.
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