Don’t Take Liberty for Granted
Rebecca Hagelin on how to truly celebrate Memorial Day.
By Rebecca Hagelin
May 26 is Memorial Day. We often think of it in terms of a three day weekend more than anything else. I want to challenge you to truly celebrate Memorial Day with your family this year.
As we consider how to honor our lost servicemen and women, it is only appropriate to look to the story of the greatest sacrifice of all time.
The most decisive victory of all mankind was earned by the sacrifice of one man. Jesus Christ purchased the fullest freedom we can experience this side of Heaven. In the Garden of Gethsemane, just before He was crucified, Jesus prayed, “My Father! If it is possible, let this cup of suffering be taken away from me. Yet I want your will to be done, not mine” (Matthew 26:39). No soldier, marine, airman or sailor desires death. But every single one of them has made the ultimate sacrifice already – they have laid down their own wills for a higher one. And for many, that sacrifice meant the laying down of their lives as well.
Christians gather together to take communion to remember Jesus’ body broken and blood poured out, His life offered up on our behalf.
Taking communion is a powerful act that serves a bigger purpose than remembrance alone. In the same way, Memorial Day holds deeper significance than merely remembering.
Before communion, we are supposed to search our hearts. What sins have I not brought to the light? Who do I need to forgive? Who do I need to seek forgiveness from? Communion is an invitation to survey the true condition of our souls, and initiate reconciliation and healing within the church.
What better way is there to honor those who died to preserve this country than to stop and consider the state of our nation? How have we taken our freedom for granted? Are we still, truly, the land of the free and the home of the brave? Would those who gave their lives in generations past be proud or dismayed? Where is tyranny or oppression sneaking in and how can we eradicate it? What are the weaknesses and threats and how can we turn them into strengths?
Even though Christ already purchased freedom for us from the tyranny of our sinful natures, we remember His sacrifice, in part, to be encouraged. We reflect on the truth that the war has been won – that we know good conquers evil – and we are strengthened. It increases our resolve to keep fighting our small daily battles to maintain our freedom. We must choose daily to walk in the freedom Jesus purchased.
Though our mortal victories could never compare to the victory Christ secured on the cross, the victories won by the honored men and women who gave their lives for our country should always be remembered and honored. It is so important that we remember them and reflect on why they gave their lives. Then we, as a nation, will be strengthened and encouraged.
This Memorial Day is the perfect time to teach your children about the high price of freedom. And it offers a golden opportunity for each one of us to amp up our own resolve to fight the small daily battles against all enemies both foreign and domestic, so that those battles might never turn into a bloody battlefield.