Monday, December 20, 2010
Bethlehem, the City of David
This week, our Sunday School lesson was from the beautiful account given by Luke in Chapter 2 of his Gospel. I had a thought--Bethlehem was the city of a shepherd who would become a king; and a King who would become a Shepherd.
Merry Christmas!
Posted by At Home Together at 3:42 AM 2 comments
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Men of the 20th Century
I have come to believe that the 20th Century was defined (in human terms) by these two men. Imperfect men, with sometimes flawed judgment, they nevertheless led the effort that saved the world from the evil forces that brought about World War II. I am pleased to note that the students in the Era of the World Wars course became captivated by both of these men, especially by Churchill. Whatever your politics, you have to see FDR as a great wartime President. Together, these two waged war against a common enemy, forged an uncomfortable but necessary peace with another enemy ("Uncle Joe") and unwittingly laid the groundwork for a dramtically different world order.
This 1941 picture was taken well before FDR's dramatic decline in health in 1944, and they seem to be as two old seadogs recollecting grander days. The Lord watches over this earth and places men in their own peculiar destinies for the good of us all.
This 1941 picture was taken well before FDR's dramatic decline in health in 1944, and they seem to be as two old seadogs recollecting grander days. The Lord watches over this earth and places men in their own peculiar destinies for the good of us all.
Posted by At Home Together at 6:03 PM 1 comments
Friday, December 3, 2010
Repatriating
History has long been a field dominated by those with a liberal agenda. In my years in graduate school, Marxist historians, women's history and "social history" began to replace traditional approaches. But it wasn't enough to ignore George Washington and the great battles that secured our independence and later our freedom. Historians have taken their desire to prove how liberal they are to a new low. In today's typical college history textbook, America is chastised for her greatness, and authors are apologetic for her successes. Recently, as I read through a section regarding American expansion in the years preceding the Civil War, I was appalled to note how the author of this text "trashed" John L. O'Sullivan's phrase, "Manifest Destiny." He labeled this belief that God had given us the land as "arrogance" that troubled American diplomatic policies from that point forward. Oh my! Needless to say, we do not use this text in our classes.
I shared with my husband that I feel as obsolete as a card catalog in a library today. (I love the old card catalog and shelf list system, by the way). I sometimes feel my values are not traditional, but arcane compared to the current social mileu of our nation and to the mood of academics. But I refuse to change! Instead, I will teach my students the greatness as well as the flaws within our country's past and present. I will challenge them to repatriate--to once again be proud to be proud of our nation! The United States has enjoyed some of God's greatest blessings, and it is time we return to Him in thankfulness.
Posted by At Home Together at 4:21 PM 3 comments
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