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The America I Love

Today, as my husband and I were driving home from the gym, I heard Rush Limbaugh ask his listeners to think of the things about America that made us proud. I've had time to contemplate that throughout the afternoon.
My father, Fritz, was born in Amsterdam and was four-years-old when Hitler's armies filled the skies and streets of Holland. He remembers, at four years of age, awakening to the sounds of the bombers overhead and soldiers goose-stepping through the cobblestone streets. There began year after year of unmitigated hell in my father's life.
He vividly recalled the lines for food, hours upon hours of waiting to receive one egg for the month to feed their little family. He recalled the need for a permit from the Nazis to travel from one block to the next. His nightmares are filled with the Nazis piling out of their trucks lining up all the men and boys in the neighborhood and gunning them down. After meting out unspeakable horror upon the Dutch, the Nazis would pile back into their trucks and speed away. And yet another memory took him back to his mother fighting hand-to-hand combat with her Dutch neighbors to get to their top floor apartment.
All these things were spoken of many times in the last years of my father's life. My parents instilled in me a deep and abiding love of America as well as the rights, privileges and responsibilities of being a citizen of this country.
We are coming up on an election in America . . . a hotly contested election. In Proverbs 29:2 we read:
When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn.
My parents taught me wisdom, gave me knowledge and encouraged me to seek more, instilled courage deep within my soul and molded me into the woman I have become today. It is with these qualities I make an informed, and hopefully wise, decision when casting my vote.
There are many negative comments coming forth in this election about America which brings me back to the beginning, what is it about this country of which I am so proud.
Number One: I deeply enjoy the political process established by the Founding Fathers of America that allows one voice to be heard and counted.
Number Two: I enjoy the privilege of being able to express my opinions freely without fear of retribution or death from my government.
Number Three: I enjoy the right to pursue my dreams and work at any job I desire.
Number Four: I love the peaceful transfer of power every four years, a powerful example to the world.
Number Five: I love that America was the launching place of the restoration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as it was established at the meridian of time by the Savior Himself.
Number Six: I adore the fact that no one, let alone my government, tells me how many children I may have.
Number Seven: I love that I can travel anywhere within the United States without the need to report to each city and state my whereabouts.
Number Eight: I love that we prosper as a nation and share with the world our bounty, strength and courage . . . although it is not as appreciated as I believe it should be.
Number Eight: I love that we value life, no matter what race, creed or culture.
We may not be a nation of perfect people, but we espouse these beliefs and I hold them dear.
On July 4th of 1776, the 13 colonies of America gathered together and these words were written:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. (The Declaration of Independence)
This is the core of what America is about. And it was in this climate in 1805 when the prophet of the restoration, Joseph Smith, Jr., was born into the world. As the religious furor grew great Joseph sought after and found the truth as God the Father and Jesus Christ appeared to him. It was only in a free nation that the Gospel of Jesus Christ could be restored. And it was in this free country where man retained the right to worship according to the dictates of his conscience that this gospel took root and flourished spreading across the world to over 13,000,000 members.
My father knew the difference between a complete lack of freedom and the freedoms we enjoy in America. He was the fiercest patriot this nation has ever seen. He has now shuffled off this mortal coil and passed the torch of freedom and righteous to his children. I have picked up that torch and am politically involved, religiously devoted to my God and my family, loyal to my country and avail myself constantly of the freedoms of this nation as I fight to protect them.
I am my father's daughter and could not be more proud of that fact. So yes, Rush, I love my country with all her growing pains, weaknesses and imperfections. Because this is still the land where the Gospel was able to grow, dreams were fought for and achieved and a country established on the basic principles and rights given by God to every human being on the earth. It is in America we continue to fight for those rights.
As have the men and women who sacrificed their all to bring us this nation, I have dedicated my life to God and my country. The legacy given to me by my parents.
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3 comments
BTW, thanks for the recent blog visit.
This entry touched so many chords with me. I'll just respond in appreciation to some of the closing thoughts, with material ready at hand...as evidence that I'm eternally musing.
"A substitute teacher in a Virginia suburb who polled his students in three advanced government classes a few years ago found that fifty-one out of fifty-three of them saw no moral difference between the American system of government and that of the Soviet Union. The two who could see a difference were both Vietnamese boat children" (William K. Kilpatrick, WHY JOHNNY CAN'T TELL RIGHT FROM WRONG: MORAL ILLITERACY AND THE CASE FOR CHARACTER EDUCATION [New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992], 124).
"If he had sent the angel in the third century, or in the fourth, or in any of the centuries intervening, before religious liberty was established, the consequence would have been the shedding of the blood of apostles, prophets and saints again, and in order that they might not bring upon themselves this great condemnation the Lord saw that it was far better to postpone the sending of the angel, until he should prepare, among the political governments of the earth, a nation where the church could exist, and have a little degree of safety. And even our nation, the best nation on the earth, having the wisest laws, laws that are calculated, if put into execution, to protect all religious denominations, laws founded upon justice and principles of equity--even in our nation, it has been just as much as the Lord could do, without destroying the agency of man to get his Church once more established on the earth" (Orson Pratt, JD, 21:310-311).
"I feel proud of the nation of which we are a part because I am convinced in my own mind that there is not another nation upon the face of the globe where the Lord Almighty could have established His Church with so little difficulty and opposition as He has done here in these United States. This was a free country and religious toleration was the sentiment of the people of the land. It was an asylum for the oppressed. All the people of the world were invited here to make homes of freedom for themselves, and under these tolerant circumstances the Lord was able to establish His Church, and has been able to maintain it and preserve it up to this time, that it has grown and spread, until it has become respectable--not only by its numbers, not only by the few years of age that it possesses, but respectable because of its intelligence, respectable because of its honesty, its purity, union and industry, and for all its virtues" (Joseph F. Smith, CR, Apr. 1905, 6).
"The Book of Mormon proclaims America to be the land of Zion; a land dedicated to righteousness and liberty; a land of promise to certain branches of the house of Israel, and also to the Gentiles. It declares that God will fortify this land against all other nations; and 'he that fighteth against Zion shall perish.' By revelation to Joseph Smith, the Prophet, the Lord declared that he had established the Constitution of the United States through 'wise men raised up unto this very purpose.' It is also our belief that God has blessed and prospered this nation, and given unto it power to enforce the divine decrees concerning the land of Zion, that free institutions might not perish from the earth. . . .
"In reaffirming our belief in the high destiny of America, our attachment to American institutions, and our loyalty to the United States, we declare that these sentiments, this loyalty, have outlived the memory of all the wrongs inflicted upon our fathers and ourselves.
"If patriotism and loyalty are qualities manifested in times of peace, by just, temperate, benevolent, industrious and virtuous living; in times of trial, by patience, resistance only by lawful means to real or fancied wrongs, and by final submission to the laws of the land, though involving distress and sorrow; and in time of war, by willingness to fight the battle of the nation,--then, unquestionably, are the 'Mormon' people patriotic and loyal" (Joseph F. Smith, John R. Winder, Anthon H. Lund, in MESSAGES OF THE FIRST PRESIDENCY, 4:149-150)
Some time ago I had to defend America's divine destiny to a group of scoffing fellow Latter-day Saints. It took no time flat to compile a sheet with statements on the matter from EVERY president of the Church. Any interest in a copy, just drop me a line.
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