Seeing war up close and surviving nonetheless leaves its mark.
---
Andrew Hastie would not be the first person to join the defence force out of both a hunger for adventure and deep-seated sense of duty.
After a distinguished career in the army, including being an officer in the elite Special Air Service (SAS), Hastie speaks to Life & Faith about the experience. He explains why he joined up, his gruelling entry into the SAS and his three tours of Afghanistan.
Here we learn about the Afghan people Andrew worked with, the pressure and intense experience of engaging an enemy in an unfamiliar land and culture, and the toll of responsibility when the stakes are so high. This is a raw and honest assessment of the cost of war, the ethics of battle and the weight of the hard-won lessons of the combat zone.
What can faith offer to those experiencing the wounds of moral injury so prevalent in those who have been taken out of civilian life and placed into the extreme environment of war?
A full life found in the world’s trouble spots
The Vanishing
How CPX Writes About Easter
Being a chaplain in the ICU ... and prison
The Return of Religious Belief
Rebroadcast: To Change the World
Birth Days
Lent for Dummies
The Social Media Age
Christmas in a place of war
Brexit, Trump ... and the Voice? Australia’s political divides
Seen & Heard V: Getting disenchanted with disenchantment
Coming to Faith Through Dawkins
“Mere Christianity”: why does C.S. Lewis’s unlikely classic continue to hold such appeal?
The psychology of hope
Down the Rabbit Hole
REBROADCAST: The “Christian” Classroom
The wounds you can’t see
Gabriel Bani’s life in the Torres Strait
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Devoted To Prayer
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
The Bible Recap
BardsFM