Reflections on All Saints Day

Feeling overly emotional today . . . on this November 1st. Perhaps because it’s All Saints Day. Or maybe because neither Roger nor I remembered he was on-call today (third weekend in a row – for the bonus round!) until well after last night’s football game. Imagine how HE felt at learning around midnight that he’d have to work today, starting at 6 a.m.! We’d planned a family work day at home today, beginning with outside winterizing like trimming trees and weeding flower beds, in preparation of “pansy/viola-planting” (my favorite flower b/c they are “happy”). Surely, it can’t be because the most important part of that darn announcement got edited out or that I couldn’t find the timely words (before the mid-term election) yet again for another article about the sad state of affairs in our country!

This is our second year to host the Williams family Thanksgiving gathering and a fair amount of preparation is required (I can’t even think about the inside of the house, yikes!). I agree with Southern Living magazine that Fall IS the South’s best season – I offer today in central Texas as evidence. It’s clear and the air is crisp, ripe with the sights and sounds of autumn. We awoke to temps in the 40s with the high expected near 70 degrees. I’ve always felt more “connected” to the world around me this time of year – likely why I chose to get married in October and honeymoon on the East Coast when fall foliage is in all its glory. My how twenty years flies!

Screen Shot 2014-11-01 at 1.17.07 PMRoger recently texted me this picture of a poster he spotted at work. It’s a quote from Mother Teresa, probably the most-noted of the modern day saints. I love what is says – words to live by – a sort of “how-to” for sainthood or “right-living”; the standard of right being the natural standard or what the Founding Fathers termed “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” in the Declaration of Independence. I love what the poster says but I love it more that Roger saw it, knew it would move me, and took the time to forward it.

It also reminds me of something I recently read in my favorite Lincoln book (so far). Lincoln was a “Clay man” – an admirer and follower of Henry Clay, author of the Missouri Comprise, which had as its purpose to phase out slavery by restricting its expansion into the new territories. Clay had known the Founding Fathers personally and he seemed to Lincoln the natural guardian of their great traditions. What Lincoln said of Clay applied also to himself: “He loved his country warmly, because it was his home; but he loved it even more because it was a free country.” Similar sentiments were echoed when Benjamin Franklin said: “Where liberty dwells, there is my country.” These early statesmen and model patriots sacrificed and served America because of the higher ideal she embodied and hopefully still does.

Down But Not Deterred

Well I must confess, while I am disappointed that Washington’s words were edited out of my announcement on voting, I am not surprised.  However, the show must go on, so I am hanging signs and posting #Vote2014 information around town as promised. #DoTheWork.DSC_0095

 

Hey, P80TX – #ChooseWell!

DSC_0097

I tested the water and waded neck-deep into party politics this year. Figuring one needs to practice what she preaches I volunteered to be a precinct chairman. This is an elected position, unless of course, you are unopposed, in which case . . . tag, you’re it! Additionally, I found myself running the polling location for (voting) Precinct 80 (P80TX). I make the distinction because there are precincts for Justice of the Peace (JP), which are different from voting precincts. How your voting precinct votes in the Texas governor’s race determines which party presides over the polling location in the subsequent election. Texas’ Precinct 80 is Republican. After assisting with the last two elections – as a clerk – I am now the Presiding Judge . . . yikes! Flying solo on Nov. 4th.

In both capacities, I suppose, I wrote the following announcement to be read at our local football game tonight:

 ANNOUNCEMENT ON VOTING

 This Tuesday, November 4th is the mid-term election. Registered voters in McLennan County can vote at ANY one of 40 vote centers across the county.

REPEATING, FOR THE FIRST TIME, THIS ELECTION A REGISTERED VOTER IN MCLENNAN COUNTY MAY VOTE AT ANY ONE OF 40 “VOTE CENTERS” THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY.

Polls will be open from 7 a.m. until 7 p.m., including the Precinct 80 location at Crawford High School. By law, a photo I.D. is required to vote.

For your convenience a listing of county Vote Centers and a sample ballot is located at the stadium entrances as well as the Crawford Post Office and both local convenience stores.

Please reflect on George Washington’s words in his final circular letter to the then thirteen states, upon resigning his commission of the Continental Army:  (followed by a moment of silence)

The Citizens of America, placed in the most enviable condition . . . to be possessed of absolute freedom and Independency; . . . Heaven has crowned all its other blessings, by giving a fairer opportunity for political happiness, than any other Nation has ever been favored with . . . The foundation of our Empire was not laid in the gloomy age of Ignorance and Superstition, but at an Epoch when the rights of mankind were better understood and more clearly defined, than at any former period; the researches of the human mind, after social happiness, have been carried to a great extend . . . and are laid open for our use, and their collected wisdom may be happily applied in the Establishment of our forms of Government; . . . At this auspicious period, the United States came into existence as a Nation, and if their Citizens should not be completely free and happy, the fault will be entirely their own.

MOMENT OF SILENCE

This is the unedited version. It remains to be seen if the announcement gets approved as written or pared down or omitted altogether. It’s a beautiful fall evening – perfect football weather – and I think it would be touching to have the announcement immediately precede the requisite “moment of silence” – words from George Washington serving as the next best thing to a prayer. They provide much needed national guidance.

P80TX:  #ChooseWell

The Right Side

When I’m feeling anxious – alot lately – I find solace, inspiration, and direction in the life of Abraham Lincoln.  The following is a perfect example of why.  Lincoln once wrote to a clergyman, “If it were not for my firm belief in an over-ruling providence, it would be difficult for me, in the midst of such complications of affairs, to keep my reason in its seat.  But I am confident that the Almighty has His plans and will work them out; and whether we see it or not, they will be the wisest and best for us.”  And when another minister expressed his hope that the Lord is on the side of the North, Lincoln responded:  “I am not at all concerned about that, for I know that the Lord is always on the side of the right.  But it is my constant anxiety and prayer that I and this nation should be on the Lord’s side.”  Amen.Screen Shot 2014-10-18 at 12.50.26 AM

PRESIDENT’S DAY: “Lincoln Sense – A Penny for Abe’s Thoughts”

Screen Shot 2014-02-09 at 11.38.36 AMDaunted yet compelled to pay a heartfelt tribute to America’s 16th president, the challenge of capturing such sentiments is compounded by the fact that the subject was indisputably one of the most eloquent prose writers of the nineteenth century.  Perhaps his own words can be of assistance.  At this juncture in our political life and at the occasions of President’s day and his recent birthday, let us pause to reflect on Lincoln’s indelible mark on “the hearts of the people for whom he saved the union.”  “It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.”

Lincoln used his understanding of the relationship between the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence to successfully confront and resolve the most serious existential crisis faced by America since the Revolution.  In the unpublished “Fragment on the Constitution and the Union”,  Lincoln enlisted one his famous biblical allusions to describe this relationship.  Drawing on the King James translation of Proverbs 25:11 –   “A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver” –  he likened the Declaration to the “apple of gold” and the Constitution (and the union) to the silver frame or “picture of silver” wrapped around it.  “The picture was made not to conceal, or destroy the apple; but to adorn, and preserve it.  The picture was made for the apple – not the apple for the picture.”  Lincoln understood the Constitution as the embodiment or fulfillment of the principle of liberty to all expressed in the Declaration.

It was the inseparable nature of the Constitution and the Declaration that allowed us to discern that slavery was wrong. To do otherwise, Lincoln argued, would presume that slavery and freedom were moral equivalents.  Therefore, those who stopped short of recognizing the equal, natural rights of every human being were incorrect in their understanding of the American regime.  Chief Justice Taney’s assertion of the right of property in slaves, for example, was flawed in that it considered the Constitution independently of the purpose for which it was designed to serve.

Continuing in “The Fragment”, Lincoln noted, “The assertion of that principle, at that time, was the word, ‘fitly spoken’ which has proved an ‘apple of gold’ to us.”  Lincoln believed that the transcendent principle of liberty to all was the “father of all moral principles” and the “electric cord” that united liberty loving people in every age.  In other words it gave America a cohesion, by melding (hint:  melting pot) a diverse population into one people by a common commitment to a moral principle, hence “e pluribus unum.”  Implicit in this universal truth was the understanding that our rights stem from what we all have in common – our human nature – as opposed to our differences.  Additionally, in his “Speech on the Dred Scott Decision” Lincoln maintained that “The assertion that ‘all men are created equal’ was of no practical use in effecting our separation from Great Britain; and it was placed in the Declaration, nor for that, but for future use.  Its authors meant it to be, thank God, it is now proving itself, a stumbling block to those who in after times might seek to turn a free people back into the hateful paths of despotism.  They knew the proneness of prosperity to breed tyrants, and they meant when such should reappear in this fair land and commence their vocation they should find left for them at least one hard nut to crack.”  Sound familiar?

“Today we are a nation half committed to the American founding and the constitutionalism that flows from it and half committed to progressivism and the modern state,” Hillsdale professor Dr. Portteus notes.  “It is unclear, just as in Lincoln’s own time, whether we will return to our founding principles or take the last steps toward becoming a progressive state and completely rejecting the original ideal for which the revolutionary struggle was made.”  Lincoln asked rhetorically in “A House Divided” speech:  “Have we no tendency to the latter condition?”

Lincoln’s standard of leadership stands in stark contrast to present day politicians, where principles are shaped by public opinion and acted upon only when a voting majority exists.  He faithfully fulfilled his oath to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution . . .”, adhering to its spirit and intent as opposed to seeking to “fundamentally transform” the nature of the relationship between the government and the governed.  Belief in America’s founding principles necessitated Lincoln’s actions and ironically, he, too, “gave the last full measure of devotion.”  May President Lincoln “not have died in vain.”