Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Bloody Ground

This weekend we stopped by the Gettysburg National Military Park which has a brand new museum and visitor center, much of it is funded by Northrup Grumman. For some historians the Battle of Gettysburg was the turning point in America's Civil War. The fact that hundreds of books, new ones each year, are written about America's Civil War are testament to this wound that still scars our history.


The photo above seems so sterile compared to the lives lost and blood soaked ground that it represents.

"In the aftermath of the battle, every farm field was a graveyard and every church, public building and even private homes were hospitals."

While reading some information about this war I came across this quote:

"The most astute theologian of the crisis, a layperson named Abraham Lincoln, framed the issue in simple terms: "Both sides read the same Bible and pray to the same God." And since they prayed for different outcomes, "the prayers of both could not be answered." In an environment like ours in which the role of religion in public life is energetically debated and values such as freedom are said not to be "America's gift to the world" but instead "'God's gift to humanity," the Civil War provides a cautionary tale about the limits of religious belief in guiding a democracy."


Sound familiar? I guess what amazes me is how easily some folks take the high ground without a second thought. They clearly have a clearer channel to the pure truth than I do.

2 comments:

  1. In the time its taken me to enjoy catching up on nearly a month of your blog posting, you have uploaded a new one!

    Ive so enjoyed reading it all in one go, but then Ive missed all the fun and stories as they happened.

    So I shall now, as I am retired *cheer*, be able to catch up again...apart from going on Zen retreats (which was why I havent been reading blogs) and babysitting my new granddaughter (going to London tomorrow for a couple of days) *more cheers*

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  2. Yes, it sound vaguely familiar. Replacing "humanity" with "mankind" in his speeches.

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