Episodes
Saturday Sep 11, 2021
9/11 20th Anniversary: President Bush Speaks to the Nation
Saturday Sep 11, 2021
Saturday Sep 11, 2021
It has been two decades since that fateful day that forever changed our nation. We vowed never to forget and the implications and consequences of those acts of terror are still with us today. The night of the attacks, President Bush went before Americans and gave a simple, brief, and clear speech. It is not the eloquence or power of it that makes it Worth repeating. It is when it was delivered; on the night of a day we should never forget. The use of Psalm 23 is an eternal comfort and I am glad he used it. It spoke to me twenty years ago and still does today.
Wednesday Dec 23, 2020
In 2020, We Need to Hear Them. Christmas Bells, 1863
Wednesday Dec 23, 2020
Wednesday Dec 23, 2020
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was in a very dark place in 1863 when he wrote this poem that would eventually be set to music and come to be known as I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day. He lost his wife in 1861 in a horrific way. Still grieving, Longfellow wrote in his journal on December 25, 1862, "A merry Christmas' say the children, but that is no more for me." In 1863 his son who enlisted to fight in the Civil War was gravely wounded in battle. Longfellow was nursing him back to health at home. Deeply depressed and despairing on that Christmas morning 1863, he heard the bells, and the rest is history.
Saturday Jul 04, 2020
A Measure of Devotion: Lincoln's Gettysburg Address
Saturday Jul 04, 2020
Saturday Jul 04, 2020
President Lincoln's Gettysburg Address is more than iconic. It is impactful, profound, and inspiring. It is historically significant and worth not only repeating, but remembering. Only a few minutes long, embarrassingly brief by the standards for oratory of the day, Lincoln's speech evokes the most profound idea of the American founding, "that all men are created equal". This principle which is so essential to democratic society yet so hard for human nature to embrace, express, and experience in its fullest cannot be forgotten. In 1863, Lincoln called the nation to live up to this ideal, to not allow the to dead to have died in vain by quitting and failing to bring to realization for all the inherent equality that all humans posses in the eyes of God.
Monday May 25, 2020
A Memorial Day Challenge to Remember and Recommit from President Reagan 1982
Monday May 25, 2020
Monday May 25, 2020
This podcast is excerpted from a speech given in 1982 by President Ronald Reagan at Memorial Day Ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery. It is brief, but poignant and profound and very "Reaganesque". This national holiday is set aside to commemorate and remember those who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our freedoms, but it should also cause us to reflect upon what is worth dying for and fighting for and how we might live worthy of the sacrifices made for us. It should also cause us to be grateful for, and to, the men and women presently serving our nation, who have not volunteered to die, as President Reagan reminds us, but volunteered to defend values which people have always been willing to die if need be. Thank you to the fallen, and to those who stand today in defense of freedom.
Thursday May 07, 2020
Character and the Forge of Life: The Village Blacksmith by Longfellow
Thursday May 07, 2020
Thursday May 07, 2020
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow captures a character portrait in poetry. One we can learn from. One we can draw inspiration from. One we can share with our children and grandchildren. Published in 1840, early in Longfellow's career, this poem has stood the test of time but is less familiar to us today. That's too bad. It is rich. I memorized it in high school and couldn't figure out why at the time. Now, it makes more sense. Life is to be lived, and character is forged in it, shaped upon the anvil of experience. Steady, strong, true, present, and engaged. Not a bad way to be. Not a bad way to live. But we only get there through the fire and the pounding and the pressing on.
Tuesday Apr 14, 2020
Kept By God: From "The Valley of Vision"
Tuesday Apr 14, 2020
Tuesday Apr 14, 2020
In these days of the COVID19 crisis, it is easy to lose sight of the love and power and sovereign care of God, easy to fear, easy to grieve the loss of comforts of easier days. But the power, grace and mercy of God are real and sustain us. He will keep us and give us strength. The prayers in The Valley of Vision are honest, biblical, profound, and eloquent. They are the product of puritan faith and are beautiful expressions of emotional and spiritual transparency. This particular prayer is a fitting one. May it bless and encourage you.
Wednesday Apr 01, 2020
Never Give In! - Churchill Speaks
Wednesday Apr 01, 2020
Wednesday Apr 01, 2020
In these days of hardship, restrictions, fear, anxiety, and disruption to our lives, there is a need to think about perseverance and perspective. Winston Churchill's famous "Never Give In" speech is well known and is both timely and timeless. But it's striking that its not delivered to troops amassing for battle. It's a commencement speech to his alma mater, to high school students. Churchill shares some important lessons that are not merely expressed in memorable and inspiring phrases but are substantive ones that animate and inspire. "Never Give In" is definitely worth repeating.
Wednesday Mar 25, 2020
Strength and Inspiration from Abigail Adams
Wednesday Mar 25, 2020
Wednesday Mar 25, 2020
Abigail and John Adams are a great pair. They are incredible examples to us in so many ways. They endured much, gave much, and loved and respected one another immensely. In this letter to her husband, Abigail offers her thoughts in two parts. The first, showing her vim and vinegar, inquiring after political and military affairs while opining on what the new nation's virtues must be and what it should look like in the future. The second, sharing news of the suffering around her and her motherly concerns and wifely affection, all while maintaining her perspective and offering her service to the cause in which her husband, so many miles away, was fully engaged. It is a wonderful letter; human, and honest, and inspiring. Enjoy!
Friday Mar 20, 2020
"Can't" and the Importance of Resolve
Friday Mar 20, 2020
Friday Mar 20, 2020
In these days of crisis, it is important to comfort and be comforted. It is important to acknowledge fears and anxieties and concerns. But we also need resolve. We need to press on, persevere, endure. The uncertainty, the inconveniences, the real and perceived threats, the restrictions and even the boredom will require of us a "can do" spirit and mentality. Guest's poem "Can't", speaks to this resolve. It is worth repeating.
Tuesday Mar 17, 2020
In These Days of Fear and Uncertainty, Where is Wisdom? Job 28
Tuesday Mar 17, 2020
Tuesday Mar 17, 2020
When times are hard, when fears rise, and uncertainty looms large, perspective goes a long way. We need to seek it, obtain it, and maintain it. This perspective goes by many names, perhaps wisdom is one we tend not to associate with it. But wisdom matters. And never more so than in trying times when conditions and circumstances beyond our control sweep over us and change our very lives. But where is wisdom? With all that we can do as humans, all that we can accomplish, we must humbly accept that wisdom is beyond ourselves. But it is there for the getting. The book of Job is wisdom in the form of poetry. Tennyson referred Job as the greatest poem of either the ancient or modern world. It is beautiful wisdom worth repeating.