He was removed from service by the church. The military was fine with it. The church did not like army chaplains inventing new catholic rituals.
Was the cannon or the chaplain removed from service?
Known by Irish immigrant soldiers as “Canon Fodder”
Had he been born 38 millennia in the future, his beliefs would have been considered mainstream.
So, what you’re saying is: Army chaplains have been fucking weird as far back as the Civil War.
+1 against evil creatures, including incorporeal, and every threat is a crit
I see your holy hand grenade…
#”Why would anyone be surprised at this from an Irish Roman-Catholic yankee priest?” is the real question here.
After the baptism the cannon became known as Ol’ Rusty.
Sounds like a normal day in the Trench Crusade universe
Any war story you hear that sound believable is a lie, and any war story you hear that sounds absurd is the truth.
He sounds like a priest I would have liked.
Baptise a cannon. Hey, he could be a canon. If he’d been a conventional priest and worked well with the Church hierarchy he could have worked his way up to position on a bishop’s staff – a canon.
I love how one comment says he was removed from military service and returned to the church, and another says he was removed from the church and remained in the military
“Mooney became the chaplain of the Fighting 69th regiment of the New York State Militia”
This guy fucked a cannon?
Trump would make him defense secretary
Military chaplains might be one of the biggest oxymorons in history…
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