Raymond Johnson worked as a medical technician at the Public Hospital in Moline, Illinois, from 1956 to 1958, while attending Gustavus Adolphus College in Rock Island, where he graduated in 1956. He then attended the Lutheran School of Theology where he received his Master of Theology degree in 1960, and was ordained a Lutheran minister. He served as pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Rutland, Vermont, from 1960 to 1966, at which time he entered military service as a U.S. Navy Chaplain. While serving in Vietnam he survived three helicopter crashes, and often drew upon his earlier medical training to assist Corpsmen in the field. He carried a pocket New Testament in the left pocket of his shirt which, on one occasion, may have saved his life when it absorbed a piece of shrapnel. He was one of only two Navy chaplains to earn the Silver Star in Vietnam. After service in Vietnam he served in the Naval District, Washington, D.C., before retiring from military service as a lieutenant commander on December 23, 1969. He continued postgraduate work until 1972, and received his Doctor in Ministry from United Theological Seminary in 1978.




