Posted in Devotions, Military Family, Uncategorized, tagged armed forces, army, Bible, birth of America, celebrate religious freedom, chaplain, Christ, christian, Christian rights, christian worship, Christianity, constitutional right of worship, constitutional rights, current events, declaration of independence, democracy, faith, families, family, fourth of july, freedom, freedom to worship, friends, god, god squad, human-rights, independence, Jesus, love, mayflower, mayflower compact, military, military family, national guard, persecuted christians, persecuted church, persecution, pilgrims, Plymouth, Plymouth Colony, politics, religion, religious, religious freedom, religious liberty, religious rights, right to worship, rights of Christians, separation of church and state, soldier, spiritual, spirituality, squad on June 28, 2012|

Each Fourth of July we celebrate the birth of America. We celebrate freedom, independence, and the precious rights that guarantee the blessings of liberty. But it is important to remember how religious freedom was the original goal of living in our land. And by that, I mean prior to signing the Declaration of Independence.
Christianity operated in a very different environment from what we know today. Prior to the Pilgrims leaving England, there was no separation of church and state. There was one official church for people to attend and the King was the head of the church. During the 1600s, British law required citizens to attend worship services. Those who did not attend would be fined one shilling for each Sunday and holy day missed. People who conducted unofficial church services could be fined, jailed, or executed.
As persecution and arrests grew, the Pilgrims left England for Amsterdam. By 1617 the congregation was stable enough for another, more permanent move. They wanted an enduring place where opportunity and religious freedom could be secured for their families. They turned their eyes to the new America, braved a sixty-five day voyage across the Atlantic, and started Plymouth Colony.
Days after sighting land, The Mayflower Compact was established as a way to honor God, guarantee just and equal laws in the colony, and create a free form of government. The Pilgrims decided to establish a system where every member of the colony could enjoy guaranteed rights and freedoms under majority rule. Freedoms that they were unable to enjoy until that very moment when the ink was dry.
Their voyage and vision created the first written constitution on our continent. It became the seed of American freedom and democracy.
We often forget the past difficulties that Christians have faced trying to worship God. We also forget the difficulties in our present age. We have been so blessed with liberty in our nation, that we forget the inequalities that exist elsewhere. While we are not fined, jailed, or executed for practicing our faith in America many others suffer across the globe. We have brothers and sisters in Christ who live with the same fears, torment, and punishments of seventeenth century Pilgrims.
Recognize the incredible gift we have as Americans and utilize your religious freedom. Glorify our risen Savior in song. Strengthen your faith in a worship service. Read your Bible in public. But also take time to pray for the persecuted Church beyond our borders. Their current plight was ours not so long ago.
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Dust Bowl Documentary Serves as a Reminder to be Thankful
Posted in News & Commentary, Uncategorized, tagged chaplain, christian, dust bowl, dust bowl survivor, Ken Burns, pastor, PBS, religion, spiritual on November 20, 2012| Leave a Comment »
This week PBS aired, “The Dust Bowl” Ken Burns’ latest film. The documentary chronicled a decade-long drought during the 1930s and how it impacted farm families across the heart of America. Survivors shared powerful stories on how they endured incredible suffering and hardship.
It was truly moving to hear the personal accounts of loss and sacrifice. Sand and dust dunes covered crops and livestock. Money was so scarce that mothers would turn used flour sacks into dresses for daughters. Ranchers would burn the needles off cactus plants so their cattle could eat. Farmers went years without rain and crops. Families lost homes, mortgaged their farm machinery, and send children to live with relatives. Many who decided to ride out the dust storms lost infants and elderly family members to “dust pneumonia.”
No one can watch this series and remain the same. The hardships and trials of this generation will shock you. The stories of survival will amaze you. They endured the suffering and poverty that few can imagine in our country. This series is an important reminder to be thankful and consider our blessings.
I encourage you to watch the series and consider how God has personally blessed you this holiday season.
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