From Cop to Chaplain, One Role Helps the Other

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A U.S. Air Force chaplain holds a church service at Fort Hunter Liggett, California.
A U.S. Air Force chaplain holds a church service at Fort Hunter Liggett, California, May 21, 2011. (Senior Airman Raymond Estes/4th Combat Camera Squadron)

TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (AFNS) -- While every job plays an important role in the Air Force, two are known well by every airman: security forces and chaplains.

Airmen recognize members of security forces as the guardians of the gates for military installations. On the other hand, many airmen know chaplains to be confidential sources that are sought out in times of need or leaned on for spiritual guidance. Though the jobs seem very different at first glance, one airman said, his duty in one role has helped him fulfill his duty in the other.

Capt. Matthew Spencer, 325th Fighter Wing chaplain, began his Air Force career as an enlisted security forces member at F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Cheyenne, Wyoming.

"Right out of high school, I joined and went to basic training in Lackland Air Force Base, Texas," Spencer said. "My Air Force specialty code was security forces, and I spent six years in security forces."

After Spencer completed his six-year commitment, he separated from the military and worked on furthering his education.

"My wife was the catalyst behind me going to school," Spencer said. "She could tell it was on my heart, but I didn't really feel I was smart enough to make it happen. I was thinking, 'Master's degrees, that's beyond what I can accomplish.' She pushed me to do it, she gave me the encouragement and she believed in me when I didn't believe in myself."

Spencer explained that he and his wife worked in real estate, and she shouldered the burden of a heavier workload to allow him the opportunity to go back to school.

"I went to school full time. I took no breaks," Spencer said. "All summer, all the way through, and I even took a couple semesters of course overload, which was approved by the dean. My wife took the workload, so I owe her a lot."

After obtaining his master's degrees from Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia, Spencer felt a calling to return to the Air Force, but this time as a chaplain. He said it was because of his time as a security forces member that he had something to offer as a chaplain.

"I feel like I really connect with the security forces troops, because I've stood at the gate with two stripes on and waved cars on for hours and hours, and I've sat in the snow at the static posts," Spencer said. "I've worked the flight line, I worked law enforcement and I did nuclear missile convoys. I really enjoyed that time, but that's the main reason I really wanted to come back in as a chaplain, because I know what those guys go through."

With his strong calling and wife's encouragement, Spencer became an officer in the Air Force Reserves and now fulfills his obligations to the Air Force by reporting to Tyndall and ministering over the protestant services on base.

As with many reservists, Spencer has a job in the civilian sector as well. When he leaves Tyndall, Spencer says he will resume his job as a host for a television show, "Final Fate TV," on the Hunt Channel. Even though his job for the television show is considered full time, he likes to support his fellow airmen any way he can. One of the ways he likes to support them is by inviting them to be a part of his show.

"We are going to give a hunt away to an airman from Tyndall that will be filmed with me on our show," Spencer said. "Sign-ups will be through the chapel."

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