"It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds." Samuel Adams

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

The connection between Christmas and liberty

It is difficult to find any of our recent presidents speaking to a legitimately national audience or a crowd of public citizens with such fearless religious conviction as President Reagan, who refused to allow the secularization of America deter him from declaring the true meaning of Christmas. On December 23, 1981, Reagan spoke on national television from the Oval Office about how "Christmas means so much because of one special child" and that many "of us believe in the divinity of the child born in Bethlehem, that he was and is the promised Prince of Peace." He told specifically of a "love Jesus taught us," and with unflinching Biblical references, explained that "Americans have always tried to follow a higher light, a star, if you will." And that the success of our nation lies in "trusting in God's help." Reagan went on to declare that even though we have been divinely blessed, we have a reciprocal "obligation to the God who guides us, an obligation to the heritage of liberty and dignity handed down to us by our forefathers." Our 40th president knew and explicitly displayed through his words and actions that America is gift from God, and if we stray from His guidance the very purpose with we have been ordained will gradually erode.

2 comments:

Brian C. Caffrey said...

Dave, thank you for this wonderful message. And what a beautiful picture of the Gipper, one of the best shots ever taken of him. How recently it seemed that we would hear, on a regular basis, about "the shining city on a hill." Unfortunately, I'm afraid we will soon become refamiliarized with "the soup kitchen of the welfare state" about which the Gipper also spoke so eloquently.

Bill said...

Great words from a great and fearless man. One forgets that about Reagan: his moral courage. He spoke truly and never worried about whether the editorialists at the New York Times would approve. He knew America was bigger than that.
Reagan didn't wear his religion on his sleeve - I don't recall that he was a big, overt, look-at-me going-to-church sort of man - but he held and was true to a solid core of Christian faith.