Editor’s note: CNN.com writer Moni Basu is author of “ Chaplain Turner’s War,” published by Agate Digital.

By Moni Basu, CNN

Atlanta, Georgia (CNN) - Darren Turner insisted on going to war, even though the Army usually reserves desk jobs at home for new chaplains like him.

Turner was young and green, enthusiastic about taking God to the battlefield. The Army captain had learned that people in pain are often wide-open to inviting God into their lives.

Jesus always ran to crises. Turner was going to do the same.

He’d enrolled in seminary in 2004 at Regent University in Virginia, founded by evangelist Pat Robertson. And early in his spiritual journey, he was inspired by Christian writer John Eldredge, who suggests that American men have abandoned the stuff of heroic dreams, aided by a Christianity that tells them to be “nice guys.”

God, says Eldredge, designed men to be daring, even dangerous.

Read the full story on CNN’s Belief blog

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7pLrNZ5qopV9nfXJ%2BjmlsaGpoZMK0e8Gaq62klZu2prjDZpqhmaChrqq60maumqpdqrunu8udnJ1ln6N6rq3NsmSfqp%2BjwbR7yKebnrBencGuuA%3D%3D