February
is the birth month of four presidents of the United States of America. Two
perennial days of patriotic remembrance, in February, had formerly been
established, specifically, for two of our finest leaders, President George
Washington and President Abraham Lincoln. Fifty years ago, in 1971, those two
days were consolidated into one ‘Presidents’ Day’ which now has morphed into
just a three-day national weekend and sort of a mid-winter secular thanksgiving
day with a slightly patriotic residual.
President
Ronald Reagan’s birthday also falls in February and can be rightly honored. February
is also the birth month of perhaps our least-known and least effective president,
William Henry Harrison, whose presidency ended on April 4, 1841, only 31 days
after it had begun (he died of pneumonia). The record shows that he did not
have or make his time in office productive or do anything noteworthy that would
put him into the esteemed company of the other three presidents who the more
patriotic among us honor this month.
As
mentioned, usually and rightfully Americans have begun the new year for many
decades in separate holidays which acknowledged and celebrated our two finest presidents. We now, in the interest of ‘political
correctness’ (by liberal definition) and merchandising convenience, have
combined these two birthdays into one ‘Presidents’ Day.’ We also have included
on the calendar this month the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., not a
president, but a good man who was highly influential in promoting in a peaceful
way the legitimate goal of human rights for all Americans. We have to balance
these things, you know.
Beyond these
few exceptional individuals we also express, usually in greater measure, our patriotic
sentiments each year on Independence Day (and in likewise manner combined with
it the establishment and ratification of the U.S. Constitution, into what most
Americans simply call ‘the 4th of July’, none of which, incidentally, occurred precisely on 4 July). By further extension we tie in Memorial Day and
Veteran’s Day to our remembrances of the events and groups of brave citizens
who we honor with our patriotic [dictionary definition of ‘patriot’: “one who
loves his country”] songs, gatherings, picnics, and related celebrations.
All of
these acknowledgements respectfully tie in with the patriot’s gratitude for the
freedoms we enjoy as Americans—many of which were paid for at great expense, in
sacrifice, in blood, and even in death.
And so
we see there is a traditional dimension of patriotism which is part of the
American character tied up in red, white, and blue, in coming together of families
and communities, in speeches and in stirring music. And these are good things.
But
patriotism also has its higher and lower dimensions of expression.
As an
example of the latter, there are those who drive around their communities in their
pickup trucks with an American Flag and/or a ‘Trump for President’ flag
flapping in the back, even after a new president has been sworn in, thinking, I
guess, that they are doing something patriotic. Perhaps. Even more distorted, in
my mind, are those who think that joining a white ‘supremist’ group,or
participating and training in a para-military ‘army’ make them elite patriots.
I differ with that thinking and suggest there are higher and more appropriate
considerations for patriotic expression.
I take
the patriotic hymn “America the Beautiful” as an example and as
expressive of higher dimensions of patriotism we would do well to consider. Carefully
read or listen to the lyrics. I will
treat a few of them in this essay.
The lyric
phrase in that song that says, “the patriot dream that sees beyond the years,”
was commented on by one of America’s finest patriots of the 20th
Century. Neal A. Maxwell, said of that song: “It reminds us of the special
perspective that patriotism possesses. True patriotism takes the long view of
this nation’s needs.” I have gained much from Mr. Maxwell’s astute observations
of patriotism.
With few
exceptions the political perspective of our leaders of recent times has been
much foreshortened; it has been on attacking others who have not gone along
with their political views or ambitions; it has been forgetting the lessons of our
history as a nation and our involvement in well-intentioned, but in some cases
misdirected wars to protect us from what was perceived as immanent danger or
the erosions of our freedom under law. It has been stagnating partisanship instead
of bipartisan efforts at E Pluribus Unum.
It has
been on throwing out our traditional (conservative) moral standards and safeguards
in favor of promoting directly or tacitly the agenda of the iconoclast, the
lawbreakers, and the deviant minorities among us at the expense of the decent
and the innocent and yet unborn—the most innocent being the aborted human
beings who were deprived of all human rights—even the right of their own lives.
Not only do ‘black lives matter,’ a true patriot believes ‘all lives matter.’
It has, as well, contributed greatly to the angst and depression and
existentialism of those who are the younger generation who will have to pay the
price of our prodigality.
Therefore,
the farsightedness of our founding fathers, the bravery and heroism of those in
uniform (true patriots, I believe will ‘Back the Blue’), the contributions of
those who wrote the laws which were based upon Constitutional and religious
standards and restraints have been diminished at the expense of those who have
championed ‘toleration’ and ‘rights’(?), as they stridently demand, to do what
used to be called “their own thing” regardless of how egregious that behavior
might be, or collect unearned ‘government benefits’ at the expense of other
people who are paying their bills. Giving all people a decent chance, or even a
second chance is, of course, the right thing to do, but it should not give the
able-bodied or able-minded a free ride throughout life. A self-labeled patriot,
like all Americans, need to do all they can to further their own righteous agenda
without treading on the rights of others which gives patriotism a bad name.
A higher patriotism is more, though, than paying taxes or simply abiding by the
laws of the land, more than saluting the flag or voting or even saying with
conviction the pledge of allegiance “to…the United States of America” rather
than some foreign country. Of course it includes these things. Patriotism
requires an educated public, and growing from it a public participation in productive
endeavors that unite us rather than separate us from one another.
I also
bring your attention to those words in “America the Beautiful” that
urges us to “confirm thy soul in self-control.” How self-controlled are our self-proclaimed
gun-toting “patriots,” and more our non-patriots, who pull down statues,
who taunt the police and loot and burn cites, who rewrite our history in their
own agnostic image or who try to skew our political system to the historically failed
or tyrannical systems of many countries in Europe or Asia or the Middle East? Those who have a lack of self-control
contribute to our nation’s devastating drug problem, growing crime, and in a
large measure to our problem of homelessness by demanding entitlements to
reclaim a life of bad decisions. A lack of self-control historically has
brought upon those who do not have it severe external controls, or will to our
society anarchy if it gets the upper hand.
The
place to develop self-control is in healthy families, but families are failing
because far too many parents have failed—failed to keep their marriage
commitments “through thick and thin, for better or for worse, in sickness and
in health.” Parents who have failed to nurture their children by being with
them and teaching them and loving them, failed to understand that child-care,
or schools, or television, or cell-phones, or even grandparents are no
substitute for the sacrifice parents must make to show children they love them
and expect good things of them. School teachers, entertainment ‘personalities,’
even police are no substitute for failure in the home.
Other
lyrics of that wonderfully patriotic hymn “America the Beautiful” include
the phrase that America should be “crowned with brotherhood,” but we
have increasing separatism in class structure, in race relations, in economic
parity, in educational attainment, in those who feel left out of the American
Dream. Fortunately we still have churches who welcome people of every circumstance
into their fold to rekindle a hope of a hopeful future for all of God’s
children, not just those who have been born into privilege or assumed an
attitude of entitlement. If the parishioners implore God to “mend our every
flaw” as the song implores, we must believe in the “mender.” We must build
on a spiritual foundation and we must work; and we must do as Abraham Lincoln
said in a tragic and different context but which express the same principles:
“It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated
here to the unfinished work which they who fought here [Gettysburg, 1864] have thus
far so nobly advanced. It is rather for
us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us that from these
honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the
last full measure of devotion—that we here highly resolve that these dead shall
not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of
freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall
not perish from the earth.”
A
patriot does that. A true patriot must have a disciplined conscience and
be obedient to that conscience and believe that virtue must reside in himself,
not just in the leaders.
A higher patriotism requires that those who consider themselves to have responsibility
to such a conscience understand, as stated by one of our founding fathers, our second
president, John Adams: “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and
religious people; it is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” The
patriot must demonstrate that “moral and religious” in their interactions with
all people. More legislation or executive orders or even further amendment to
our divinely inspired Constitution will not “mend our every flaw,” which
are many, unless we begin the task of mending ourselves, and our families, and
our communities, and then trust in God to make up the difference as we continue
to make our best efforts.
The
strands of our moral fiber are more-and-more being stressed and frayed by those—and
the number is increasing—who have no patriotic sentiments or moral foundation for
their lives, and our nation will not long endure without it. We cannot endure
as a nation, as a people, with God’s blessing upon us with hostility to or
indifference to or ignorance of the inspired principles upon which this nation,
“one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all,” was
founded.
I end on
the sober note expressed by John Stuart Mill, not a founding father, or a
conventionally religious man, but a wise man who, I think, God raised up to influence
a back-sliding nation as America would be in the early years of the 21st
Century:
“A people may prefer free government but if from
indolence or carelessness or cowardice or want of public spirit they are
unequal to the exertion necessary for the preserving it; if they will not fight
for it if it is directly attacked; if they can be deluded by the artifices used
to cheat them out of it; if they by momentary discouragement or by temporary
panic or by a fit of enthusiasm by an individual they can be induced to lay
their liberties at the feet of even a great man or trust him with powers which
will enable him to subvert their institutions; in all of these cases they are
more or less unfit for liberty, and though it may be that for their own good they
have had it even for a short time, they are unlikely long to enjoy it.”
President
George Washington in his Farewell Address likewise counseled us thusly:
“Of all the dispositions and habits which
lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man would claim the
tribute of patriotism who should labor to subvert these great pillars of
human happiness, the firmest props of the duties of men and citizens. The mere
politician along with even the pious man ought to respect and cherish them.”
Let us
resolve, therefore, and this year, to develop a higher patriotism, for
we will need it in the perilous and portentous days that will surely confront
us in the days ahead.
God
bless America, and help us mend our every flaw.