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Breaking Salvation Army Tradition, Trading Career for Love
It's that time of year, where the familiar Salvation Army bells are ringing, calling those of us of better standing to give to the less fortunate.
But for Salvation Army Capt. Johnny Harsh, that same sound signifies quite the opposite. It is the sound of an entire life he will likely be forced to leave behind -- all because he fell in love and found himself in opposition to church doctrine that is nearly a century and a half old.
The Salvation Army, a church established in the 1860s and widely known for its charity work, expressly forbids officers to marry non-officers of the church. That means that Harsh, after working for the church for 14 years, will have to forfeit his job in order to marry his girlfriend and non-member, Cia.
"This ruling, like a lot of other things in other churches, is a manmade rule," Harsh told "Good Morning America." "God does not look at a Salvation Army uniform."
In the Salvation Army, officers are analogous to clergy in other faiths and, according to church doctrine "must marry another Salvation Army officer or leave his or her officer status."Harsh knew and obeyed the rule during his 14 years of service, but when his first wife, who was a Salvation Army officer, died earlier this year and he met Cia, he decided to speak up.
"I asked God to bring me a woman who was pretty on the outside and on the inside and that's exactly what God did," he said. "Something needs to change about this and I pray every future officer that loses their spouse doesn't have to endure what I've endured."
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Mary Richard
Toronto, Canada
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at 04:47 on June 29th, 2009
Just thought i had to pipe up to this as this story appears to be only form 2008- i live in the uk but over here- officers can marry non-officers now- there is even currently people in the training college that are what is known as "single spouse officership"