Independence Day is Monday this week, when we in the US celebrate our freedom. At times it is a bittersweet celebration.
Imagining What Was
My imagination conjures up pictures from the past of wars for freedom, explorers who discovered a continent while looking for a Northwest Passage and the Native Americans who helped them, pioneers migrating to build a nation.
Then a little bit later, and in Main Street America stood gazebos and marching bands in the middle of towns across the land. I see families with picnics, big hats and long dresses on women and children chasing wheels down the street with sticks in their hands.
Loads of food covered the tops of gaily decorated tables. In still later years, when electricity caught on, carnival rides became a part of the scene, too. As the sunny, warm days waned and the golden streaks across the sky indicated the evening, everyone waited expectantly for the fireworks show. What a sparkling, colorful end to a wonderful day in a wonderful, free country.
Looking At Today
Today we do still head for town and the festivities provided. There are now food and every other kind of vendors vying for our money. Outdoor concerts still happen and many of us head for the lake to boat, ski and swim. We continue to celebrate. It is yet a great country and the concept of self-governing—the first in history—remains a great vision dreamed by our forefathers.
Remembering
I heard a program on the radio that progressed musically and verbally through the history of this nation. From the beginning: when our forefathers and foremothers came together and the Declaration of Independence started a war that separated us from Britain. At the time, Britain was the world power, yet God favored this fledgling nation. We moved on to innovators, inventors, and slavery. The young nation nearly ended, yet, somehow, survived the Conflict Between the States. The great migration west and the settling of a wild land; then onward to the World Wars of last century and the Greatest Generation that sacrificed so much at home as well as abroad. The losses of an unpopular war in Vietnam that was catastrophic to the generation involved led to a new coming of age.
Every year—we remember.
We are still a nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Let us continue to recall what God has done for us. How He has kept this nation through every trauma, anniversary and accomplishment. The nation that remembers God is the one that marches into the future with confidence.
Keep Remembering
As we enter into another election cycle, let us remember … “One nation under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all.”




Linda Jo, I love this post. We stand on the shoulders of those who went before us. “You make known to me the path of life; you will fill me with joy in your presence, with eternal pleasures at your right hand.” (Psalm 16:11) One nation under God indeed!
Yes, indeed, Lynn. I love the Scripture you quoted. Our God is so faithful!