The Meaning of Memorial Day

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Each December I urge my congregation to focus
on the true meaning of Christmas. The worry my fellow pastors and I share is
that the solemn message of Christ’s birth gets overshadowed by the
commercialization, jingle bells, and Santa-fication of the yuletide season.

As we turn the calendar’s pages to yet another
Memorial Day, I feel compelled to issue a similar challenge, one I offer not as
a clergyman but as an American. Simply, let’s not lose focus about what this
most solemn of national holidays should really be about.

Too often Americans view the Memorial Day
holiday as a pleasant three-day weekend kicking off the summer, perhaps with
the year’s first trip to the beach or the lake. We are inclined to think of the
Fourth of July as the highlight of the season, with parades and fireworks to
renew our nation’s dedication to the principles of liberty. But it’s worth
remembering that we are able to celebrate Independence Day only because of the
sacrifices made by the men and women whose lives were cut short to advance
those principles. Memorial Day is for honoring their supreme sacrifice.

But what does that mean? It is not enough
simply to bow our heads and note that more than a million men and women have
given their lives so that we may be free. That reduces their sacrifice to mere
statistics. The challenge for the living is to keep in mind what each of those
individual sacrifices represented. Each soldier, sailor, airman, or marine who
died in battle left behind loved ones who mourned their deeply personal loss.
They were fathers and sons, mothers and daughters, childhood friends,
relatives, neighbors, and members of the community. In giving their lives, they
left unfulfilled dreams and ambitions to add to their loved ones’ sorrows.
That’s a million instances of tremendous personal anguish.

The hole their deaths have left in the hearts
of those closest to them can never be filled. No letter of condolence, no
tribute, no ceremonial flag, no medal or token of our esteem can ever make up
for what they’ve lost. All of those things may help make the grief just a
little bit less intense, but can never fully alleviate it. That is what their
survivors must bear.


Their deaths are our loss too, less personal
but in many respects more meaningful. It’s a different type of loss. Think of
the treasure of American youth that has been spilt over rolling farmland, on
sandy beaches, or in distant jungles. Today our heroes fall in unforgiving
mountains or in hostile deserts. Our nation’s greater loss is what the country
foregoes when large numbers of promising, productive men and women are killed
before they make their meaningful contributions to the greater good. Scientists
and statesmen, engineers and poets, cut short before their time; what they
might have accomplished one can only guess.

At the same time, this loss must be viewed
through the lens of a great cause that renders their deaths heroic and
honorable – contributions that, taken as a whole, are infinitely more valuable
than the collective sum of what might have been.

Memorial Day is a time to salute those who
gave, in Lincoln’s words, “the last full measure of devotion” so that the rest
of us might live freely. Nothing underscores the importance of liberty as much
as the price paid for it. How else to explain the paradox that the price for
freedom was so often paid for by those who willingly gave up their own? That
sacrifice testifies to the extraordinary power of the ideal of freedom.

The first widespread observance of what we know
as Memorial Day was held in 1868, just a few short years after the conclusion
of the Civil War. Future President James Garfield, who had served with
distinction as a Union general, delivered an oration at Arlington National
Cemetery that rings no less true today than when he stood to speak. Of the
nation’s fallen soldiers in our various wars, Garfield said “for love of
country they accepted death, and thus resolved all doubts, and made immortal
their patriotism and their virtue.”


Americans are asked to pause at 3 p.m. local
time on Monday for a moment of remembrance. That is the very least we should do
to honor the patriots who have lost their lives in conflicts from Lexington and
Concord to Baghdad and Tora Bora. We need to do more. If we are to truly honor
them, we will reflect not just on our fallen heroes, but on what their
sacrifice means for us every other day of the year.

Dr. Richard G. Lee is pastor of First Redeemer Church in Atlanta and author of God’s Promises for the
American Patriot (Thomas Nelson Inc.).

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