The Broadside | Memorial Day 2025

Until I started blogging regularly, I never thought much about the origins of national holidays. My wife and I always celebrated Easter and Christmas with more vigor because of our faith but have tried to make Thanksgiving and days like Veteran’s Day, Memorial Day, and July 4th more meaningful by connecting with veterans, or looking up historical speeches and stories and incorporating them in the observances.

Part of why we do that is because we want our kids, and their kids, to remember why we as a nation set these days aside. Schools certainly don’t do a great job of passing along the history and traditions of our culture. It’s up to individual families—parents, really, and fathers, specifically—to make holidays more than just a day off to get more work done or to lounge at the pool.

But to meaningfully pass them along, you need to know the history of them yourself.

Our modern Memorial Day finds its roots in the aftermath of the American Civil War, when citizens would strew flowers on the graves of both Union and Confederate dead. One of the earliest accounts of the practice was from May 1865, a month following the assassination of Abraham Lincoln and the formal end of hostilities between North and South.

In May 1865, just after the war ended, a large procession was held in the ruined city of Charleston, S.C. There, thousands of Black Americans, many of whom had been enslaved until the city was liberated just months earlier, commemorated the lives of Union captives buried in a mass grave at a former racecourse. The service was led by some 3,000 schoolchildren carrying roses and singing the Union marching song “John Brown’s Body.” Hundreds of women followed with baskets of flowers, wreaths and crosses, according to historical accounts.

The observance was formalized three years later on May 5, 1868, by Maj. Gen. John A. Logan, who led the Grand Army of the Republic (an organization of Union veterans), calling for a national holiday to remember the Civil War dead on May 30.

Originally called “Decoration Day,” the annual observance broadened after World War I to include all troops who had fallen serving the country, not just those of the Civil War. In 1971, Memorial Day was declared a national holiday by an act of Congress to be observed on the last Monday in May. On it we take “pride in the valor of those who gave their lives in the cause of freedom, and sorrow that such self-sacrifice should have been necessary.”

There are two details about Memorial Day I was unaware of until doing the research for this post. First, the intended focus of Memorial Day is not just remembering and being grateful for those who made the ultimate sacrifice for our freedoms, although that is important. Its original focus was “prayer for a permanent peace.”

(a) Designation.—The last Monday in May is Memorial Day.

(b) Proclamation.—The President is requested to issue each year a proclamation—

(1) calling on the people of the United States to observe Memorial Day by praying, according to their individual religious faith, for permanent peace;

(2) designating a period of time on Memorial Day during which the people may unite in prayer for a permanent peace;

(3) calling on the people of the United States to unite in prayer at that time; and

(4) calling on the media to join in observing Memorial Day and the period of prayer.

I was surprised to discover that prayer was, and is, the express focus of Memorial Day. Our government is “calling on the people of the United States” to pray on the last Monday of May each year. We’re being invited by those who we elect to lead us to pray for a permanent peace.

As a Christian, I’m challenged by this charge. While government is not the Church, shouldn’t we believers be the first to respond to the call to prayer? Which leads me to the second thing I discovered.

Note that under (b)(2) and (b)(3) there is to be a designated time for prayer, and we are to “unite in prayer at that time.” I didn’t know this, but that time is 3:00 p.m. local and is called “The National Moment of Remembrance.”

Not only has our government invited us to pray, but it specifically set a time to be united in prayer for a permanent peace.

Today I will cease all other activity at 3:00 p.m. local time and pray for a permanent peace. I will also thank God for the men and women who have served in our armed forces and have selflessly fought to keep our enemies at arm’s length and to preserve the peace here in our homeland.

Gen. Logan set the precedent in his order establishing Decoration Day.

Gen. Logan’s order for his posts to decorate graves in 1868 “with the choicest flowers of springtime” urged: “We should guard their graves with sacred vigilance. … Let pleasant paths invite the coming and going of reverent visitors and fond mourners. Let no neglect, no ravages of time, testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided republic.

What could be more important than that? Our freedom is precious, and it comes at a price — a price that we pray we never have to pay — unless we must. And if we must, we will then remember those who valiantly fought to protect and preserve the peace for those of us who enjoy those freedoms today.

I invite you to join me.

The Broadside | Today is the National Day of Prayer

Thanks to Linda for calling it to my attention.

Instead of writing about the latest political or cultural rot, here’s the official “2025 National Prayer.” Honestly, I’m as guilty as the next Christian when it comes to pointing out the flaws in our great nation rather than petitioning God to change hearts and minds by His Spirit.

Take a moment with me to pray this prayer on behalf of our nation today.

God of hope, fill us with all joy and peace

in believing, so that we will abound in

hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

You have caused us to be born again to

a living hope through the resurrection of

Jesus Christ from the dead; therefore,

we hope in what we do not see.

This world is not our home or reality,

but the Lord is our Rock,

our Truth, our certainty.

God of hope, we pour out our praise

and are filled with Your powerful presence.

We pour out repentance of sin and are filled

with forgiveness and righteousness.

We pour out pain from the attacks of the

enemy—anxiousness, fear, anger—and You

fill us with courage, assurance, and love.

We pour out our needs, the desires of our

hearts, and are filled with Your Kingdom

provision and purpose.

We pour out our hearts for our nation, for

the people and places, relationships and

responsibilities the Lord has established: the

Church, Family, Education, Business,

Military, Arts, Entertainment, Media, and

Government. May all who live, serve, and

steward in these be filled with Your purpose,

wisdom, strength, and truth.

Let Your lovingkindness, O LORD, be upon

us, as we have hoped in You.

In abounding hope, anchored by our hope

in the name of Jesus, we pray. Amen!

See you tomorrow.

The Broadside | Make it a Good Friday

Isn’t it refreshing to have a president who at least respects the Christian faith, even if we sometimes wonder just where he himself stands with Jesus Christ? I think some of what Trump does in defending the faith is part of his MAGA agenda, since he and any historian worth their degree knows that our Founders and the early republic reflected Judeo-Christian beliefs. Our entire system of government rests on the model of biblical law.

He has risen indeed!

Have a great weekend.

Daily Broadside | Memorial Day 2024

Several times each year I intentionally remind myself of my freedoms and that those freedoms have come at a cost. One of those occasions is Memorial Day.

I found the following poem, written by Wallace Stevens, an American modernist poet who published his first book of poetry (Harmonium) in 1923, just over 100 years ago. In it was a poem called “The Death of a Soldier.”

‘The Death of a Soldier’

Life contracts and death is expected,
As in a season of autumn.
The soldier falls.

He does not become a three-days’ personage,
Imposing his separation,
Calling for pomp.

Death is absolute and without memorial,
As in a season of autumn,
When the wind stops.

When the wind stops and, over the heavens,
The clouds go, nevertheless,
In their direction.

The line that caught me is, “Death is absolute and without memorial.”

Is it true that death is “without memorial”? Perhaps as an event death does its work and offers nothing more. Death itself only takes and provides no memorial.

But as a matter of shared inevitability among us, we recognize that, by nature, there is nothing more here for a person after death, and we make an effort to keep a memory of the deceased alive through our mourning, our cemetaries, and our memorial days.

It is more poignant still when death is voluntarily embraced for a noble cause. Death comes for us all eventually, but some are willing to embrace it unnaturally early for the sake of protecting others they both know and would never know for generations to come.

That’s what this Memorial Day is for. You may not personally know any of the thousands of men and women who have given “the last full measure of devotion.” The many thousands of them probably never knew you. But you can breathe a prayer of thanks for them and their willingness to confront whatever threatened their contemporaries and the lives yet to come, including yours.

Be grateful today for those who made the ultimate sacrifice in service to you and to me.

Daily Broadside | Thanksgiving Edition

Quick! What’s the first word that comes to mind when you think of Thanksgiving? (Don’t scroll until you have your word.)

What word(s) did you come up with?

Turkey?

Football?

Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade?

A day off?

Fall leaves?

Black Friday?

If you chose one of these words, congratulations. You have been successfully innoculated against the original spirit of the day along with millions of your compatriots—including me.

But we can recapture it’s meaning if we make it a point to tell the story to our family and guests who gather with us on this day.

The first Thanksgiving was at Plymouth Plantation in Massachusetts, so named for the port in England from which the Pilgrims set sail on September 6, 1620, for a 65-day journey across the Atlantic. Less than 50 of the roughly 100 passengers and crew on the Mayflower survived the winter of 1620.

Sometime in October or November of 1621, the Pilgrims gathered in the great English tradition of a 3-day harvest festival that featured venison, turkey and waterfowl, cod, and bass, plus wheat, corn, and barley, and probably a number of vegtables and fruit. It was there that they celebrated a bountiful harvest and gave thanks to God for his gracious provision.

What does that have to do with us today?

For those of us who still love these United States and its ideals, Thanksgiving represents an opportunity to express a grateful heart that has not taken prosperity for granted. We stand on the shoulders of men and women who braved the unknown and persevered through trials that we can only hope we never face. Because of their courage and perseverance, we are blessed beyond measure to live in a country where we are (mostly) free from want and, in fact, have more than we really need.

As you gather with friends or family today, perhaps take a minute or two to read one of the only two accounts of that first harvest festival. Have your guests each name one thing that they are thankful for. Then take a moment to sincerely acknowledge God’s provision in your life, and thank Him for His blessings.

Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus. (1 Thessalonians 5:16-18)

Whatever you choose to do, I wish you and yours a very Happy Thanksgiving!

History of Massachusetts: History of the First Thanksgiving
The True Story of That First Thanksgiving

Daily Broadside | Happy Independence Day!

We live during a time of great upheaval in our country and it seems as though things are coming apart at the seams. And perhaps they are.

But patriots all over the nation will be celebrating Independence Day today, and the best thing you can do is reflect on all that we have to be grateful for in this country, holding out hope that one day, we will return to a culture of thanksgiving for what we have in the U.S.A.

I thought that starting the day with one of the greatest performances of our national anthem might just do the trick this morning. Maybe it will do it for you, too.

Have a great Fourth of July!

Driving on the Wrong Side of the Road

How Bizarre is That?

Imagine someone driving on the wrong side of the road and justifying it by saying they have the right to be happy.

How bizarre is that?

Now envision that same situation, only now that person is being pulled from the wreckage that was their automobile after colliding with another car because they were in the wrong lane. But instead of admitting that it was their fault, they insist that it’s all due to an oppressive system that obligates them to conform in ways that make them feel uncomfortable.

The person who wants to see themselves as their own absolute is having to constantly reconfigure the human experience in order to validate their mindset as being beyond reproach. They’re like the middle schooler who turns in their multiple choice exam believing that because they had the freedom to choose how they wanted to answer each question, they’re automatically deserving of a perfect score.

This is the world of the individual who has declared himself as his own bottom line. There are no failing test scores, there are no standards, and anything that could be accurately processed as a consequence of their actions is dismissed by labeling it as a hateful convention coming from either a corrupt institution that needs to be destroyed or an ignorant individual that needs to be silenced.

They shoot themselves in the foot and then blame all the pain they’re in on the one who told them not to pull the trigger to begin with.

When you attempt to reason with this kind of person, you are not being heard as someone who’s questioning their logic as much as you are challenging their authority. It’s not about what’s true, it’s about what works as far as those statistics and testimonies that can be used to make a self serving agenda appear compassionate and preferrable while simultaneously validating themselves as the only one that they’re accountable to.

And yet…

Practical Gravity and Simple Math

The validity of one’s perspective is ultimately proven by what happens when that perspective is put into practice. However convoluted and volatile the debate may be, feelings and beliefs can be readily identified as being either clarifying or distracting simply by observing those things that result from the application of any one methodology.

Should one approach translate to a world of pain and problems, that perspective can then be logically subordinated to a viewpoint that yields better results. At that point, you’re not looking at anything other than pure utility and however passionate you may be about your particular brand of morality, you are no longer able to assert your preferences as principles when all that exists in the aftermath is a mess you expect someone else to clean up.

There has always been an element that wants to push back against those things that remind them that there is such a thing as “practical gravity.” You cannot hope to do certain things and not have to contend with the natural consequences of your actions. If you decide to jump out of an airplane as it’s flying through the sky, you can’t deny the effects of gravity simply because you want to believe that you have the right to be happy or because you believe that gravity is a byproduct of an oppressive hierarchy.

In a similar way, you can’t drive on the wrong side of the road and not risk a head on collision, nor can you embrace what amounts to a perverse or irresponsible lifestyle and not be confronted with the medical and practical realities that characterize the choice that you have made.

There is a natural order in place that transcends whatever it is that drives your resolve and you can’t circumvent that infrastructure simply because it doesn’t coincide with your opinion on the matter.

It’s math, really.

The way you think + the way you act = the price you pay

Wise decisions tend to be very beneficial and cost very little.

On the other hand, foolish choices can be lethal and in that way are very expensive.

And here’s the thing: When that bill arrives, it’s your responsibility. However you want to insist that it’s someone else’s fault or another person’s obligation, you’re the one that has to come up with the functional finances necessary to pay the amount owed which will inevitably include a lack of fulfillment, a substantial amount of wasted time and a collection of physical and emotional scars.

Antiquated Traditions

Some want to try and avoid the “practical gravity” of their situation by insisting that the angst they experience as a result of the way they choose to process themselves and the world around them is due to the unjust and antiquated traditions of the society they live in.

Perhaps.

But then again, if your perspective is revealed as being problematic in terms of what happens when your perspective is put into practice, it’s not the society you live in that’s causing the tension, it’s the organic outcome of your flawed approach.

It’s not the Supreme Court, it’s not a political party, it’s not a cultural trend or a societal norm.

You’re driving on the wrong side of the road and there are consequences to not staying in your lane that are based more so on the laws of Physics and Chemistry then they are the Department of Motor Vehicles.

This is the problem you inevitably encounter when you establish any kind of human agency as your philosophical foundation.

Die, Quit or Change

You have chosen to build your existence on a platform that is destined to either die, quit or change. It is as fluid as it is inconsistent and whatever rights or truisms you want to maintain as givens will resonate as such only when you’ve surrounded yourself with like-minded individuals. Reason being is that you can’t logically condemn another person’s viewpoint if everyone is entitled to their opinion and the universe is nothing more than a lucky mistake.

This is what happens when you remove God from the equation. Bear in mind that there are only two religions in the world: Either God is God or you are. Every religion on the planet empowers the individual with the ability to facilitate their own salvation. Only Christianity maintains that you are not your own deity and the only thing that you contribute to your salvation is the sin that makes it necessary.

When you embrace God as your philosophical starting point and the Substance of the empty tomb as what defines your identity, you’re no longer tasked with having to manufacture a reason for your existence or an enduring Source of fulfillment.

Bear in mind we’re talking about the Person of Jesus Christ – the Son of God and not a corrupted clergyman or a hypocritical layperson. Neither one of those two individuals died for your sins or put the planets in their place.

The Image of God, the Son of God and the Spirit of God

You are made in the Image of God, you have been redeemed by the Son of God and you have access to a Perfect Source of Purpose, Peace and Power because of the Spirit of God who lives in and through you.

Like our Founding Fathers, you can effectively dispute injustice because you’re not limited to a human premise, and unlike those who borrow from God without believing in Him, you can accurately claim an entitlement as a legitimate right because you know that they’re gifts from God He gives to guard your way and not weapons you use in an attempt to get your way.

Moreover, you don’t see His Instructions as “rules” as much as you see them as “tools” that you use to realize a life where you are making a difference and not just an appearance.

Scale That Wall and Dismantle That Strategy

There will always be people who drive on the wrong side of the road. They will justify themselves with compelling sounding arguments framed by a strategy designed to avoid that direct line of questioning that has the capacity to reveal their platform as toxic and self-serving.

But you can scale that wall and dismantle that strategy by focusing on the empirical results of their perspective and allow the logic of how a flawed methodology needs to be subordinated to an approach that yields a better outcome.

When you hear someone say, “That’s your opinion!” or “You can’t force your beliefs on me!” they’re neither proving their point nor are they proving you to be wrong. Rather, they’re attempting to secure the kind of pity that’s awarded to the person who’s been hurt in order to distract from the wreckage caused by their own decision making.

You can’t always change a person’s mind without changing their heart and only God can do that.

But God can use you to make an impact and you want to be ready to do more than argue…

You want to champion the Truth by asking the right questions and letting their responses not only make your point, but more importantly make Him known.

Daily Broadside | Memorial Day 2023

The older I get, the deeper my appreciation for the hundreds of thousands of men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice for me and millions of others who call the United States home. Every number in the video below represents one soldier, airman, seaman or marine who didn’t make it back from the conflict in which they fought. They died that I might live in freedom without fear.

The numbers are staggering.

Jesus also made the ultimate sacrifice for me and for millions of others; He died that I might live in spiritual freedom without fear of God’s wrath.

To those in the military who fought for my freedom to worship my Savior and to live my life in relative peace, I salute you.

Thank you.