Newer email correspondence from the Pentagon inviting individuals to partake in a Christian prayer service within the Department of Defense was sent to at least eight U.S. defense contractors, Military.com has learned.
Emails scribed by DoD and sent last week to an undisclosed number of individuals were shared with Military.com, inviting the persons to join a "Christian prayer and worship service" between 12-12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 21, in the Pentagon auditorium. The correspondence was sent from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's office, labeled the "Department of War."
The correspondence was strongly chastised by groups like the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, whose founder, Mikey Weinstein, told Military.com that he believes it was the first time such correspondence was sent to defense contractors.
He said the eight of them that received the message contacted MRFF, which for decades has challenged the lack of separation of church and state within military and government ranks. The contractors were from small, medium, and some of the largest defense contractors in the United States.
"There is no doubt that [the Pentagon has] now started to include defense contractors or 'war contractors' in their vicious violation of the constitution, proselytizing outreach directly from Hegseth himself," said Weinstein, whose organization includes nearly 90,000 service members—about 95% of whom are self-described Christians.
Hegseth has been accused by Weinstein, MRFF and others of pushing Christian nationalism in the military ranks since he became secretary in early 2025, with such efforts also exhibited in other government agencies.
Last September, MRFF chided U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) Secretary Sean Duffy moved and restored a giant decades-old painting of Jesus guiding sailors through stormy seas, which according to DOT at the time “symbolized President Trump and Secretary Duffy’s commitment to protecting expressions of faith,” per the DOT.
Pentagon Defends Invitation
The email shared with Military.com was sent on Friday, Jan. 16, from an email address listed as "OSW [Office of the Secretary of War] Protocol Prayer Service."
That email reads as following, verbatim:
Good afternoon,
The Secretary of War invites you to join him for a Christian prayer and worship service next Wednesday, January 21st, in the Pentagon Auditorium (BH650) at 1200. This is an optional service that is open to all Department staff stationed at, or with access to, the Pentagon – due to seat limitations, no visitors or external guests will be accommodated.
Seating will be accommodated at a first come, first served basis. Seat reservations can be confirmed for GO/FO and Senior Leaders only by RSVP.
If you are unable to join the service, it will be livestreamed internally on Pentagon TV Channel 2 and via DVIDS: www.dvidshub.net/webcast/37333.
Please feel free to forward this invitation widely to members in your organization.
The actual email address has been excluded from this report.
Military.com asked the Pentagon about the service, including questions about celebrating Christianity over other faiths, whether the Pentagon tracks prayer service attendees whether active-duty or contractors, and if repercussions are faced by those who choose not to attend such services.
Prayer services are 100% voluntary and are not mandated whatsoever. No one at the Pentagon tracks who does and does not attend these voluntary services. No special treatment or punishment is given as a result of one's choice to attend these prayer services. The Secretary's prayer services undoubtedly improve morale for those who choose to attend and are constitutionally protected. We are proud to host these services and will continue to do so. - Pentagon spokesperson Kingsley Wilson
Weinstein and MRFF learned about the correspondence just a couple days after they were contacted by an active-duty military officer who wrote to the organization on behalf of 32 other service members from several units who are "under the commanders holding duty day Christian worship services."
He called the invitation to fully-uniformed military service members and others to the Pentagon's largest auditorium "a pristine example of the tyranny, oppression and ugliness of abject Christian nationalism, which destroys the essence of what even our U.S. Supreme Court has proclaimed to be full panoply of constitutional protections for the rest of us in this nation."
"And this invitation for his latest monthly grotesque distortion of the Constitution obliterates the requisite good order, morale, discipline and unique cohesion, which comprises that compelling government interest," he added. "It reeks of the malodorous stench of fundamentalist Christian extremism, exceptionalism, triumphalism, supremacy and domination, in complete defiance of the most basic rubrics of our U.S. Constitution."
He said such services would only be constitutionally protected if they occurred within the private sector, yet this invitation is "absolutely the opposite."