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Stewart Report from 11-10-2009

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Your Weekly Report from Jerry Stewart 

"Remember"
By Jerry Stewart

On November 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln delivered one of the most famous speeches in the history of our nation at a cemetery in a small Pennsylvania town. It wasn't a long speech, only 272 words, and lasting less than three minutes. In fact, the speech was so short; photographers didn't even get a picture. It wasn't a well-planned speech. Lincoln hadn't even practiced it. In fact, historians tell us he was still writing down just what he would say while waiting on the platform to be introduced.

So, what was it that has made the speech so famous? It was what had happened there, only a few short months before, there near that town of Gettysburg.

You see, our nation was in a terrible civil war, and tens of millions of men had left their farms and families to fight for their cause. Although the northern armies were larger in number and better equipped, the south was actually winning the war, and General Robert E. Lee had a plan to have his southern armies fight their way into Washington D.C. He knew that if he could take the nation's capitol, the north would have to surrender.

But, what happened in Gettysburg was not planned by anyone. The two large armies, totaling almost 170,000 men, literally came upon each other strictly by accident near this small town, Gettysburg. And the battle that took place over the next three days was the harshest single battle in the history of our nation with over 43,000 union and confederate soldiers killed, wounded or missing.

The battlefield was a terrible picture of suffering and blood and death. According to one account a small creek running through the battlefield was literally turned red from the soldier's blood. When a local schoolhouse was used as a makeshift hospital for the wounded, the blood ran so deep on the floors, they had to drill holes in the floor for the blood to drain out. When the battle at Gettysburg ended on July 3, 1863, there were so many dead, they actually turned part of the battlefield into a cemetery.

So, when Abraham Lincoln spoke that day to commemorate that Gettysburg cemetery, he felt whatever he said would not be enough. He said,

"We cannot consecrate this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work, which they who fought here 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."

You see, it wasn't what President Lincoln said that day that made his speech so powerful - it was what the brave soldiers had done - they had given everything they had, everything they were, everything they ever could be, to a nation they loved enough to die for. And this is the great task we have before us today - to remember, to honor, to never forget those who have given, who today are still giving, their last full measure of devotion.

But, finally, most of all, we must put all our trust and faith, all our hurts and sorrows into the hands of Almighty God who himself has given each of us the strength to endure what seemed to be unendurable. He has given us the light to walk when the path seems the darkest, and has given us the loving assurance that he is always with us if we will only give him a place in our hearts.

The Bible says,

"Those who wait on the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint."

Dear Lord, comfort these brave soldiers today who still carry with them the horrors of war. And for those who continue to live without their own brave soldier, give them your peace that passes all understanding. And dear Lord, help us to never forget each and every brave American who has given their last full measure of devotion.


May God Bless Our Soldiers

Jerry Stewart

P.S. email me with your own thoughts and ideas regarding our America at stewartreport@onemomentinamerica.com

JS

Quote of the Week

"Always for them, duty, honor, country; always their blood and sweat and tears as they saw the way and the light; the loneliness and desolation of jungle trails; the bitterness of long separation from those they loved and cherished. I do not know the dignity of their birth, but I do know the glory of their death. They died unquestioning, uncomplaining, with a faith in their hearts, and on their lips the hope that we would go on to victory."

General Douglas MacArthur - a tribute to the U.S. Soldier
 

Audio Clip for the Week

"The Price Of Freedom"

 

Short Story

“Martin Treptow's Pledge”

In 1917, Martin Treptow lived in Cherokee, Iowa. He was a barber, a common man. In that year 1917, our United States was drawn into a horrible war, World War I and Martin Treptow enlisted. He was a young man with his whole life in front of him, but he signed up to fight.

In December of that year, 1917, Private Treptow and his regiment landed in France. He was a member of the famous “Rainbow Division”. His job was to carry important messages between battalions on the frontline -- it was very dangerous -- but Martin took on the job.

The men in Martin's regiment noticed something about Martin – he carried a small notebook, a diary in his inside pocket. He never talked about his writings but he was always noting in his diary.

Martin Treptow was a good soldier, he did his job well, and on July 29, 1918, while carrying a crucial message between battalions under heavy artillery fire, Martin Treptow, a common man, an Iowa Barber, Private Martin Treptow was killed in battle. And when Martin's dead body was found on the battlefield, as they searched through his pockets to find that message he was delivering -- instead they found his diary, and in that diary there was a message -- a message to be delivered to all of us here tonight. At the top of the front page of his diary, it was titled “My Pledge", and under it, these simple, common, powerful words:

“America must win this war. Therefore
I will work,
I will save,
I will sacrifice,
I will endure,
I will fight cheerfully,
and do my utmost,
as if the issue of the whole struggle depended on me alone.”

Let us all take serious consideration of what our own "Pledge" to our America must be.

 

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