December 19th, 1944. Baston, Belgium. Day three of the German encirclement. Patton had driven through the night from Luxembourg. Through frozen roads, through columns of retreating soldiers, through everything that the Ardens had become in 72 hours. He was there to see what he was dealing with. He walked through Baston at dawn.
The town was damaged. The 101st Airborne was dug in. The German ring was tightening. He turned into a side street. At the end of it, a small Belgian church. The doors were open. Half the roof was gone. He walked in. In the front of the church, at the altar, a single soldier on his knees, praying, not aware anyone had entered, head bowed, eyes closed, lips moving slightly.
Patton stopped, his aid, who was directly behind him stopped too. Patton put out his arm. Stay here. He stood in the back of the destroyed Belgian church, and waited for 11 minutes. While his army was dying 300 m away, he waited. Subscribe before we continue. We tell the stories nobody else tells. The soldier’s name was Private Thomas Reeves, 20 years old, from a small town in Kentucky.
His father was a preacher. His grandfather had been a preacher. His great-grandfather had built a church with his own hands in Eastern Kentucky in 1887. Thomas Reeves had grown up with prayer the way other children grow up with meals, something done every day, something that structured time, something that was so much a part of the rhythm of life that not doing it felt like missing something essential.
He had been in Belgium since September. He had fought through the autumn and into the winter. He had seen things that his father’s church had not prepared him for, not because his faith was weak, but because no faith fully prepares you for what a battlefield actually is. He had adapted not by abandoning his prayers, by changing what he prayed for.
Early in the war, he had prayed for protection for himself, for his squad, for the outcome of specific battles. By December 1944, he had stopped praying for outcomes. He had learned that praying for outcomes in a war was a specific kind of cruelty to yourself because outcomes didn’t always correspond to the prayers.

And if you made the connection between prayer and outcome, then every man who died while you were praying for him became evidence against prayer. He didn’t want to make that connection. So he had stopped praying for outcomes. He prayed for presence instead. That wherever the men in his squad were in the world or out of it, something knew they had existed.
That their names were somewhere, not just in his memory, but somewhere more permanent than that. On December 19th, his squad had taken a position on the eastern edge of Baston. At 0430, the Germans had hit them. When the sun came up, four of the seven men in his squad were dead. He knew all four names.
He went to the church because it was the closest thing to what his father had built in eastern Kentucky. He knelt at the altar and said the four names slowly, clearly. The way you say names when you need something larger than yourself to hear them. He didn’t ask for anything. didn’t request protection or victory or weather or anything at all.
Just the four names, said out loud in a destroyed Belgian church. In the dark before dawn, he had been saying them for 11 minutes when he felt something change in the air behind him. He didn’t know what it was. He finished anyway, the way his father had taught him. You don’t stop a prayer because something interrupts you.
You finish what you came to say. He finished. He opened his eyes. He turned around and saw Patton standing in the back of the church. Patton had been standing there for 11 minutes. He had not sat down, had not made a sound, had not reached for anything, just stood in the back of a broken church in Baston in the middle of the Battle of the Bulge and waited.
When Reeves turned and saw him, neither of them spoke for a long moment. Then Patton asked the question that Reeves remembered for the rest of his life. Patton looked at him. What did you pray for? Reeves was still on his knees. He stood slowly. He said, “I wasn’t praying for anything, sir. I was saying names.” Patton looked at him. “What names?” Reeves said them.
Harrison Moretti Dubois Park. He said them the same way he had said them at the altar. Clearly, slowly, like each one mattered by itself. Patton was quiet for a moment. Your squad? Reef said, “Yes, sir. This morning, East Side.” Patton nodded. He said nothing for a long time. He looked at the altar, at the broken roof above it, at the Belgian winter sky visible through the gap.
Then he said, “Why names? Why not ask for something?” Reeves thought about that. He said, “Because I don’t know what to ask for anymore, sir. Not in a war.” He paused. But I know their names and I know where I am. And I thought if I said them in a place like this, something might take note. Patton looked at him.
Something, Reeves said. I don’t know exactly what, sir. Something bigger than me. Something that lasts longer than a battle. Patton turned back to the broken roof. He stood there for a long time. Then he did something that his aid, standing in the doorway, would spend the rest of his life trying to describe accurately.
Patton walked to the altar. He stood beside Reeves and he knelt down, both knees on the stone floor, the same way Reeves had been. He closed his eyes. He stayed there for 2 minutes. His aid said later that he had no idea what Patton was doing or what he was saying, if anything.
He just saw the general kneel down in a broken Belgian church next to a private from Kentucky and stay there for two minutes in complete stillness. When Patton stood up, he straightened his uniform, put his helmet back straight. He looked at Reeves, he said, “What was Park’s first name?” Reeves said, “James, sir.” James Park from California, 19 years old. Patton nodded.
Harrison, first name William from Ohio, 22. Moretti Anthony, New Jersey, 20. Dubois Marcus, Louisiana, 21. Patton repeated each name quietly after Reeves said it. William Harrison, Anthony Moretti, Marcus Dubois, James Park. Then he was quiet. He looked at Reeves. How long have you been praying? Reeves said, “All my life, sir.
” Patton said, “Has it helped?” Reeves thought about it. He said, “Not in the ways I expected, but in some ways I didn’t expect.” Patton looked at him for a long moment. He said, “I’m going to ask my chaplain today to write a prayer for good weather so we can get air support and break this encirclement.” He paused. I don’t know if it will work.
Reeves said nothing, Patton said. But I am going to ask. He looked at the broken roof, the gray Belgian sky, the weather, the names. Maybe it amounts to the same thing. He looked at Reeves, saying what you need to whatever is listening. He turned toward the door. At the door, he stopped. He said without turning around. Harrison Moretti Dewis Park.

He said the four names. Then he walked out. Reeves stood at the altar and listened to the general’s footsteps cross the stone floor and the jeep engine start and the sound of it drive away. He stood there for a long time in the silence that followed. Later that morning, Patton asked his chaplain, Father James O’Neal, to write a prayer for good weather.
The prayer was distributed to 250,000 men. It read in part, “Omighty and most merciful Father, we humbly beseech thee of thy great goodness to restrain these immodderate reigns with which we have had to contend. Grant us fair weather for battle. Graciously hearken to us as soldiers who call upon thee that armed with thy power, we may advance from victory to victory, and crush the oppression and wickedness of our enemies, and establish thy justice among men and nations.
” On December 23rd, 4 days after Patton knelt in the Belgian church, the weather cleared. The skies open. The Allied Air Force flew. Patton’s Third Army broke through the German encirclement of Baston on December 26th. Whether the prayer caused the weather is a question that cannot be answered. What is known is that Patton wore a copy of that prayer in his pocket for the rest of the war.
And that when reporters asked him later what he attributed the weather change to, he said, “I prayed and the Lord got the message.” What nobody wrote about was a Belgian church and a private from Kentucky and four names said out loud in the dark. Before all of that happened, Thomas Reeves served for the rest of the war.
He fought through Germany into April 1945. He went home in October back to Kentucky to his father’s church. He became a preacher himself 40 years in the same small town where his father had preached and his grandfather before that he was known in his congregation for one thing above all others. He said names. Not in the abstract, not as examples or illustrations, names.
When he preached about loss, he said the names of people who had been lost. When he prayed at funerals, he said the name of the person who had died. Many times slowly, like each repetition made it slightly more certain that the name had been heard. His congregation said it was the most unusual thing about his ministry.
Other preachers spoke in generalities. He spoke in names. One of his older congregants asked him once where that came from. Reeves said, “I learned it in Belgium in 1944 from saying names in a broken church.” He paused and from a general who stopped what he was doing and waited until I was done. The congregant asked, “What general?” Reeves said, “Patton.
” The congregant didn’t believe him. He didn’t push it. He didn’t need to. He knew what he had seen in that church. He had seen a man who commanded 400,000 soldiers stand still in a doorway and decide that what one private was doing was more important than the next 60 seconds of his day. That what the private was doing was worth waiting for.
That the names of four dead soldiers from Kentucky and Ohio and New Jersey and California were worth standing still for in a broken church in Baston in the worst week of the worst battle of the entire European campaign. Patton never mentioned it. Not in his diary, not in any letter, not to any reporter, just his aids account written in private papers published years later.
His aid wrote, “He walked into that church and saw that soldier praying and put his arm out and said, “Stay here.” and waited 11 minutes. He paused in the papers. I have thought about why many times since. I think he understood something about what the soldier was doing that required silence. That interrupting it would have been a kind of destruction.
that what was happening in the front of that church was doing something that nothing else in Baston that morning could do. He paused again. He was saying the names and Patton understood that names needed to be said. That the four men who died on the east side of Baston that morning deserve to be somewhere other than a casualty report.
They deserve to be in a church in a prayer on someone’s lips said out loud so something could hear them. His aid ended the entry. He knelt down too. I saw him 2 minutes in the back of a broken church. I don’t know what he said, but I know he said something. And I know he said it for the same reason the private did. Because the names needed to be somewhere that lasted longer than we do.
If someone was praying and you needed to be somewhere, would you wait? Let us know in the comments. And if you want more stories about who Patton really was, subscribe. You’re in Patton’s army
He Was Praying When Patton Found Him — Patton Waited Until He Finished
December 19th, 1944. Baston, Belgium. Day three of the German encirclement. Patton had driven through the night from Luxembourg. Through frozen roads, through columns of retreating soldiers, through everything that the Ardens had become in 72 hours. He was there to see what he was dealing with. He walked through Baston at dawn.
The town was damaged. The 101st Airborne was dug in. The German ring was tightening. He turned into a side street. At the end of it, a small Belgian church. The doors were open. Half the roof was gone. He walked in. In the front of the church, at the altar, a single soldier on his knees, praying, not aware anyone had entered, head bowed, eyes closed, lips moving slightly.
Patton stopped, his aid, who was directly behind him stopped too. Patton put out his arm. Stay here. He stood in the back of the destroyed Belgian church, and waited for 11 minutes. While his army was dying 300 m away, he waited. Subscribe before we continue. We tell the stories nobody else tells. The soldier’s name was Private Thomas Reeves, 20 years old, from a small town in Kentucky.
His father was a preacher. His grandfather had been a preacher. His great-grandfather had built a church with his own hands in Eastern Kentucky in 1887. Thomas Reeves had grown up with prayer the way other children grow up with meals, something done every day, something that structured time, something that was so much a part of the rhythm of life that not doing it felt like missing something essential.
He had been in Belgium since September. He had fought through the autumn and into the winter. He had seen things that his father’s church had not prepared him for, not because his faith was weak, but because no faith fully prepares you for what a battlefield actually is. He had adapted not by abandoning his prayers, by changing what he prayed for.
Early in the war, he had prayed for protection for himself, for his squad, for the outcome of specific battles. By December 1944, he had stopped praying for outcomes. He had learned that praying for outcomes in a war was a specific kind of cruelty to yourself because outcomes didn’t always correspond to the prayers.
And if you made the connection between prayer and outcome, then every man who died while you were praying for him became evidence against prayer. He didn’t want to make that connection. So he had stopped praying for outcomes. He prayed for presence instead. That wherever the men in his squad were in the world or out of it, something knew they had existed.
That their names were somewhere, not just in his memory, but somewhere more permanent than that. On December 19th, his squad had taken a position on the eastern edge of Baston. At 0430, the Germans had hit them. When the sun came up, four of the seven men in his squad were dead. He knew all four names.
He went to the church because it was the closest thing to what his father had built in eastern Kentucky. He knelt at the altar and said the four names slowly, clearly. The way you say names when you need something larger than yourself to hear them. He didn’t ask for anything. didn’t request protection or victory or weather or anything at all.
Just the four names, said out loud in a destroyed Belgian church. In the dark before dawn, he had been saying them for 11 minutes when he felt something change in the air behind him. He didn’t know what it was. He finished anyway, the way his father had taught him. You don’t stop a prayer because something interrupts you.
You finish what you came to say. He finished. He opened his eyes. He turned around and saw Patton standing in the back of the church. Patton had been standing there for 11 minutes. He had not sat down, had not made a sound, had not reached for anything, just stood in the back of a broken church in Baston in the middle of the Battle of the Bulge and waited.
When Reeves turned and saw him, neither of them spoke for a long moment. Then Patton asked the question that Reeves remembered for the rest of his life. Patton looked at him. What did you pray for? Reeves was still on his knees. He stood slowly. He said, “I wasn’t praying for anything, sir. I was saying names.” Patton looked at him. “What names?” Reeves said them.
Harrison Moretti Dubois Park. He said them the same way he had said them at the altar. Clearly, slowly, like each one mattered by itself. Patton was quiet for a moment. Your squad? Reef said, “Yes, sir. This morning, East Side.” Patton nodded. He said nothing for a long time. He looked at the altar, at the broken roof above it, at the Belgian winter sky visible through the gap.
Then he said, “Why names? Why not ask for something?” Reeves thought about that. He said, “Because I don’t know what to ask for anymore, sir. Not in a war.” He paused. But I know their names and I know where I am. And I thought if I said them in a place like this, something might take note. Patton looked at him.
Something, Reeves said. I don’t know exactly what, sir. Something bigger than me. Something that lasts longer than a battle. Patton turned back to the broken roof. He stood there for a long time. Then he did something that his aid, standing in the doorway, would spend the rest of his life trying to describe accurately.
Patton walked to the altar. He stood beside Reeves and he knelt down, both knees on the stone floor, the same way Reeves had been. He closed his eyes. He stayed there for 2 minutes. His aid said later that he had no idea what Patton was doing or what he was saying, if anything.
He just saw the general kneel down in a broken Belgian church next to a private from Kentucky and stay there for two minutes in complete stillness. When Patton stood up, he straightened his uniform, put his helmet back straight. He looked at Reeves, he said, “What was Park’s first name?” Reeves said, “James, sir.” James Park from California, 19 years old. Patton nodded.
Harrison, first name William from Ohio, 22. Moretti Anthony, New Jersey, 20. Dubois Marcus, Louisiana, 21. Patton repeated each name quietly after Reeves said it. William Harrison, Anthony Moretti, Marcus Dubois, James Park. Then he was quiet. He looked at Reeves. How long have you been praying? Reeves said, “All my life, sir.
” Patton said, “Has it helped?” Reeves thought about it. He said, “Not in the ways I expected, but in some ways I didn’t expect.” Patton looked at him for a long moment. He said, “I’m going to ask my chaplain today to write a prayer for good weather so we can get air support and break this encirclement.” He paused. I don’t know if it will work.
Reeves said nothing, Patton said. But I am going to ask. He looked at the broken roof, the gray Belgian sky, the weather, the names. Maybe it amounts to the same thing. He looked at Reeves, saying what you need to whatever is listening. He turned toward the door. At the door, he stopped. He said without turning around. Harrison Moretti Dewis Park.
He said the four names. Then he walked out. Reeves stood at the altar and listened to the general’s footsteps cross the stone floor and the jeep engine start and the sound of it drive away. He stood there for a long time in the silence that followed. Later that morning, Patton asked his chaplain, Father James O’Neal, to write a prayer for good weather.
The prayer was distributed to 250,000 men. It read in part, “Omighty and most merciful Father, we humbly beseech thee of thy great goodness to restrain these immodderate reigns with which we have had to contend. Grant us fair weather for battle. Graciously hearken to us as soldiers who call upon thee that armed with thy power, we may advance from victory to victory, and crush the oppression and wickedness of our enemies, and establish thy justice among men and nations.
” On December 23rd, 4 days after Patton knelt in the Belgian church, the weather cleared. The skies open. The Allied Air Force flew. Patton’s Third Army broke through the German encirclement of Baston on December 26th. Whether the prayer caused the weather is a question that cannot be answered. What is known is that Patton wore a copy of that prayer in his pocket for the rest of the war.
And that when reporters asked him later what he attributed the weather change to, he said, “I prayed and the Lord got the message.” What nobody wrote about was a Belgian church and a private from Kentucky and four names said out loud in the dark. Before all of that happened, Thomas Reeves served for the rest of the war.
He fought through Germany into April 1945. He went home in October back to Kentucky to his father’s church. He became a preacher himself 40 years in the same small town where his father had preached and his grandfather before that he was known in his congregation for one thing above all others. He said names. Not in the abstract, not as examples or illustrations, names.
When he preached about loss, he said the names of people who had been lost. When he prayed at funerals, he said the name of the person who had died. Many times slowly, like each repetition made it slightly more certain that the name had been heard. His congregation said it was the most unusual thing about his ministry.
Other preachers spoke in generalities. He spoke in names. One of his older congregants asked him once where that came from. Reeves said, “I learned it in Belgium in 1944 from saying names in a broken church.” He paused and from a general who stopped what he was doing and waited until I was done. The congregant asked, “What general?” Reeves said, “Patton.
” The congregant didn’t believe him. He didn’t push it. He didn’t need to. He knew what he had seen in that church. He had seen a man who commanded 400,000 soldiers stand still in a doorway and decide that what one private was doing was more important than the next 60 seconds of his day. That what the private was doing was worth waiting for.
That the names of four dead soldiers from Kentucky and Ohio and New Jersey and California were worth standing still for in a broken church in Baston in the worst week of the worst battle of the entire European campaign. Patton never mentioned it. Not in his diary, not in any letter, not to any reporter, just his aids account written in private papers published years later.
His aid wrote, “He walked into that church and saw that soldier praying and put his arm out and said, “Stay here.” and waited 11 minutes. He paused in the papers. I have thought about why many times since. I think he understood something about what the soldier was doing that required silence. That interrupting it would have been a kind of destruction.
that what was happening in the front of that church was doing something that nothing else in Baston that morning could do. He paused again. He was saying the names and Patton understood that names needed to be said. That the four men who died on the east side of Baston that morning deserve to be somewhere other than a casualty report.
They deserve to be in a church in a prayer on someone’s lips said out loud so something could hear them. His aid ended the entry. He knelt down too. I saw him 2 minutes in the back of a broken church. I don’t know what he said, but I know he said something. And I know he said it for the same reason the private did. Because the names needed to be somewhere that lasted longer than we do.
If someone was praying and you needed to be somewhere, would you wait? Let us know in the comments. And if you want more stories about who Patton really was, subscribe. You’re in Patton’s army
Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.