I wanted to post this today in honor of the men and women who have served or are currently serving in the United States military. Thank you for your service! May God bless you all, and may we all remember this weekend the sacrifice given for freedom. This poem by Edgar Guest says it well.
Memorial Day
Edgar Guest
The finest tribute we can pay
Unto our hero dead to-day,
Is not a rose wreath, white and red,
In memory of the blood they shed;
It is to stand beside each mound,
Each couch of consecrated ground,
And pledge ourselves as warriors true
Unto the work they died to do.
Into God's valleys where they lie
At rest, beneath the open sky,
Triumphant now o'er every foe,
As living tributes let us go.
No wreath of rose or immortelles
Or spoken word or tolling bells
Will do to-day, unless we give
Our pledge that liberty shall live.
Our hearts must be the roses red
We place above our hero dead;
To-day beside their graves we must
Renew allegiance to their trust;
Must bare our heads and humbly say
We hold the Flag as dear as they,
And stand, as once they stood, to die
To keep the Stars and Stripes on high.
The finest tribute we can pay
Unto our hero dead to-day
Is not of speech or roses red,
But living, throbbing hearts instead,
That shall renew the pledge they sealed
With death upon the battlefield:
That freedom's flag shall bear no stain
And free men wear no tyrant's chain.
Thanks for reading!
1 comment:
I was delighted to find your blog (via a T-Bone Burnett search!) and I see you share with CS Lewis a repect for patriotism.
As you'll know, he has a brilliantly un-PC chapter of Mere Christianity where he encourages young Christians to fight with verve and wholeheartedness if called to serve.
However, Stanley Hauerwas and other theologians who link nationalism and sin do seem compelling as the not-especially-pure history of the United States and United Kingdom become accepted by scholars not limited to the Left.
Britain and France created the Middle East in a handful of hours. US interventionism in much of Latin America is deeply troubling. Can the treatment of the Native Americans be interpreted as anything other than genocide?
At the same time, George Bush's "freedom" rhetoric is stirring, and the Eastern Europeans (who know a thing or three about tyranny) welcomed him with joy when he recently visited.
There's much thinking to be done here. Augustine made a great start. I've had a stab at thinking this through at http://davidwilliamson.blogspot.com/2005/02/sects-and-violence.html
Best regards,
David
Post a Comment