Steve and I spent some time last night watching some of the convention speeches on the internet. It was a surreal experience.
I have never watched a convention from another country.
I have never been so interested in a speech that I would watch it twice.
I have never been so thankful to be an American citizen.
I think the emotions rose up in my heart because our conventions are so uniquely American. The flags, the patriotism, the hope and pride, the fact that we, unlike so many places, get to choose our leader. We are not made to vote. We are not coerced or threatened into voting for a particular candidate. We vote, and it counts.
I remember the excitement I felt when I finally got to vote in my first election. I lost that feeling for awhile, but after these last few days, that thrill is back.
I am thankful for the country I live in, the place God has called our family. But every time I have boarded a plane this last year, I have realized what a gift that blue passport is, how many people dream of the day they can have one, and how I don't want to take it for granted.
God has brought us to a new country, and He has proven that He can tenderly change my heart to feel contentment and even happiness in a new and very different place. He keeps drawing us to relationships, to meeting people that we already have grown to love. But, when I send that absentee ballot in this year, I will not think of it the same again. God bless America, and God bless us all.
The Root Fallacy and "The Work of the People"
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Marva Dawn (although others have made this point also) on why "Liturgy"
doesn't exactly mean "The Work of the People." A nice corrective to the
overemphasi...
10 years ago
1 comment:
Thank you for sharing these feelings with us. It helps those of who are living in America to look at the voting process from a different perspective. Mom
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