Dems Picked a Bad Time to Circle the Wagons Around Graham Platner
Reports: More CBS News Reporters Could Leave Following Scott Pelley's Termination
Watch These Two Guests on CNN Absolutely Cook Dems Over Their Support for...
Someone Should Check on John Cornyn After His Break With Trump
Graham Platner Hates Corporations, but He Sure Loves Their Money
Netanyahu Discusses Phone Call With Trump: 'We've Always Found a Way'
The Press Support for Pelley Becomes More Strained; MMA at the WH Is...
Secretary Duffy Demands Answers After Great-Grandmother Is Murdered on the City's MARTA
Mike Pence Hits the Book Tour Trail and Takes Aim at the 'Populist...
AI Will Reshape the Economy—And That’s Exactly the Point
Stephen A. Smith Says Republicans’ Success in California Is a Damning 'Indictment' of...
The Left Defended Kaitlan Collins, but They're Silent on Pelosi Telling a Reporter...
Candace Owens Touts Russia's 'Christian Heritage' — Here's What She Left Out
VA Judge Dismisses Indictments Against Trans-Identifying Sex Offender Who Exposed Himself...
EXCLUSIVE: Science Is 'Alive and Well' at This Trump Admin Agency, Top Official...
OPINION

After death, soldier's witness survives

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
After death, soldier's witness survives
LATHROP, Mo. (BP)--Issac Jackson spoke at his home church every time he came back home on leave from Fort Lewis, Wash. And when he returned to duty, he was a witness for Christ every day on the battlefield leading up his death in Afghanistan on Oct. 27, 2009.
Advertisement

Jackson was five months into his second tour of duty in Kandahar when he and six of his seven crew members were killed when an improvised explosive device (IED) struck their vehicle. He served as the commander of a Stryker, an eight-wheeled armored mash-up of a tank and a Humvee. His battalion on his first tour, based out of Fort Drum, N.Y., suffered heavy casualties. His was to be the first Stryker brigade deployed to Afghanistan, and his wife Kristen said he knew before he left that his unit likely would suffer similar losses.

But even though Jackson left behind a baby boy, Enoch, who is now 2, and a daughter, Eden, born six weeks after his death, Kristen said she knows he died doing his duty for his country and, more importantly, for his Lord.

"He spoke of his 'ministry in the military,'" she said. "He was constantly having debates with the guys and they were always starting arguments on God, Christianity or evolution and stuff like that."

Since he was an infantryman and served on the front lines, he was surrounded mostly by men with anti-Christian attitudes.

Advertisement

"It's pretty rare to find godly men in the military; they're few and far between," Kristen said. "He was kind of a lone ranger when it came to being a Christian. He had no problem telling people what he believed."

Jackson was the youngest of three brothers. His father was killed when he was only 18 months old and, in Kristen's words, "he wasn't a good kid."

"I asked him one time, 'Why were you so bad?'" she recounted. "He was just angry. He got better -- legally at least -- as he got a little older."

But it wasn't until Jackson accepted Christ just before his 22nd birthday that he made up for not having an earthly father by accepting his heavenly Father. He joined First Baptist Church in Lathrop, Mo., where he was discipled by the church's music minister, Donnie Quinn.

Though Kristen accepted Christ as her Savior at the age of 5, she "got totally off track" in high school. When they connected through their church in the small community north of Kansas City, they began their discipleship journey together. Issac and Kristen began dating in March 2004 and he enlisted in the Army the following May. They were engaged five months later and married Dec. 18, 2004.

Advertisement

"We came back to Jesus at the same time," Kristen said. "We provided good accountability for each other. Even when he was stationed somewhere, we were good for each other in that."

Even now, a year after his death, Issac's faith is making a difference.

"I've had a couple of soldiers find me on Facebook and tell me about the talks they had with Issac about God and Jesus," Kristen said. "They said that talking with him changed their opinions of God and Christians."

Brian Koonce is a staff writer for The Pathway (www.mbcpathway.com), newsjournal of the Missouri Baptist Convention.

Copyright (c) 2010 Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist Press www.BPNews.net

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement