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Thanks Given

With the coming Thanksgiving holiday, I have been thinking once again about what this holiday means. I believe it was three years ago when I shared the holiday meal at a friend's home. It was a great experience. The food was as good as it could have been, the group of people was as comfortable to be around as my own family, and there was a general sense of "thankfulness" that one would expect at such a gathering. Then, as is wont to occur when given the opportunity, my mind began to wander.

I started to dwell on the incongruity of the moment. I was surrounded by a truly wonderful, gifted, talented, and heroic family and group of friends. We all truly were enjoying each other's company and conversation. And I truly believe that we were all celebrating thanks. The problem, from my perspective, was realizing that none of the people I was celebrating Thanksgiving with had Biblically accepted Christ as Savior. In fact, some of these people did not believe in a knowable God. This led to the question in my mind, "To whom are you thankful?"

I look back now on that night, and I look around at the billions of calories to be consumed this week in the name of thankfulness, and realize that so little gratitude will actually be offered up to God. Too many people are going to be thankful to some unnamed, and probably unthought-of abstraction. They will verbalize to their loved ones a general sense of well-being and security. They will reassure one another of the mutual love they have for each other. But they won't be able to acknowledge the source of these circumstances, because they don't know Him. These people are going to likely chalk up their good fortune to just that -- Good Fortune; or worse, with a self-righteous tip of the hat to just that -- Self.

If there is such a thing as a "Christian holiday," Thanksgiving would be it. It is a commemoration of the thanks given by Christians to God for their blessings, regardless of the difficulties they had to go through to appreciate them. Today, it is a chance for us to acknowledge the God that continues to bless, individually and globally, regardless of the difficulties He allows us to experience. It is, however, each individual's responsibility to allow these blessings to bring us closer to Him. By the way, the difficulties are blessings to that end as well.

I am thankful to God. I am thankful first and foremost for my salvation. I am thankful for the circumstances that brought me to the end of myself and back to a pursuit of God. I am thankful for my family -- the one I come from, the one I married into, and the one I have started. I am thankful to be born in a time and place in which I can declare the preceding with no fear of physical harm. I am endlessly thankful to God.

My prayer is that my nation can return to that state of earnest gratitude to the God of the Bible. Otherwise, we can be assured of a return of the difficulties that might bring that gratitude back.

Happy Thanksgiving.
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103 Weeks...

...Or so.

I guess that's how long until the course Conservatives are going to take will be demonstrated again.  However that course is already in the process of being determined, is it not?  The Republican party lost a lot of races (duh!).  Everywhere I turn for information, or more specifically, direction on where to next turn, I am only able to find professional wound-lickers applying a too-runny salve on themselves.  I want to see and take action.

Instead that course already seems to be slipping and slogging toward a mushy middle.  The president has seemingly tucked his tail and met with the speaker-elect, hat in hand.  This does not bode well for the future of the party.  It seems that those who might aspire to or who have already attained some degree of power have been frightened from tough stances after this election cycle.  And it seems these individuals are going to back off these tough and principled stances. 

I live in John T. Doolittle's district.  He seems like a nice enough fellow.  He seems to have flown relatively low on the radar screen.  And because he's a Republican, I think I'm glad he won his race.  You haven't heard of him?  Well, if his opponent's accusations of investigations are true, you will.

I think Charlie Brown's accusations were cheap shots.  And I don't think accusations alone should preclude one from seeking, attaining, or retaining office.  However, there was that old and familiar ring of truth.  Hindsight is said to be 20/20.  Republicans lost Congress.  I sure hope Doolittle did not stay in office and win reelection, only to become the latest Republican who goes down in the flames of another corruption scandal.  Are men and women like these the best either party has to offer for these positions?

This is only one poorly thought-out example.  I'm sure there are several congressmen who won their elections ignoring a cloud of suspicion that loomed over them.  And there is also a certain number of them who are guilty -- and will be found out.

This election presents itself as a great Etch-A-Sketch moment for Conservatism.  Things have been shaken up.  Now there is nothing to lose.  The Republican party has limped like a lame duck since the last election.  Look what that accomplished!

Unless the Lord returns, I will be around suffering the continual consequences of gimpy goose Republicans for about 50 more years.  I am not optimistic how a nation, let alone a party, led by weak-kneed, Brylcreemed Baby Boomers will turn out.  So I stand ready for action. 

I ask any who has vision and willpower -- where should we turn next?  Where can we find individuals with passion, vision, and zeal necessary to press toward a higher mark of excellence that generations before us strove for?  I look at current politicians and am struck dumb with the fact that none of them has the dignity, fearlessness, or love of country that the men David McCullough wrote about in his book 1776.  Today's politicians do not measure up to the shadows cast by the pinkies of some of those men.  (Proof - George Allen and George Washington are both Virginians?  The Commonwealth must be so proud of both!)

By the way, the electorate hasn't changed; only the elected have.  And they must be changed again.

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