Tag Archive - Love

Happy Mother’s Day

Memorial Inspiration

Once Upon a Town

Cover of "Once Upon a Town: The Miracle o...

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Ten days after the attack on Pearl Harbor, a group of citizens in North Platte, Nebraska, heard a rumor that soldiers from their town, part of the Nebraska National Guard Company D, would be coming through on a troop train on their way to the West Coast. Five hundred people showed up at the train depot with food, cigarettes, letters, and love to give the boys.

When the train showed up, it was not the Nebraska National Guard Company D boys on board; it was the soldiers from the Kansas National Guard Company D.

After a few awkward moments, a woman handed a young man she’d never seen the gifts intended for her own son. Everyone else followed that lead, and there were hugs and prayers and love shared all around. It was a spontaneous act of genuine devotion that touched both the soldiers and the people who came to the depot that day. That alone would have been a beautiful illustration of the willingness to “sacrifice for one another.” But the story continues.

A few days later, a 26-year-old woman named Rae Wilson wrote a letter to the editor of the local paper recounting the profound experience they’d shared that night. She then suggested the town organize a canteen, so they could do something similar for every troop train that came through. She offered to lead the effort as a volunteer.

For the next four and a half years, the people of North Platte and the surrounding communities met every troop train that came through their town. Every day, they prepared sandwiches, cookies, cold drinks, and hot coffee. They had baskets of magazines and books to give away to the soldiers, and snacks for the train. There were even birthday cakes for anyone having a special day. And they did this, some days, for as many as 8,000 soldiers and sailors.

The statistics are staggering. By the time the last train arrived on April 1, 1946, six million soldiers had been blessed by the North Platte Canteen. Forty-five thousand volunteers had served faithfully until the war was over and most of the troops had been transported home.

Most of the troops had only ten minutes to sprint from the train, grab some food, maybe dance with a pretty girl, hear the appreciation of those present, and sprint back before the train left without them. But in those ten minutes, they got more than a meal. They received a dose of unconditional love that they remembered later—during the heat of battle as well as decades after the war was over.

Bob Greene, whose book Once Upon a Town made the North Platte Canteen story known to the world, wrote that, as he interviewed those few surviving soldiers who had experienced the canteen firsthand, there was a universal reaction from the men (who were by that time in their late seventies and eighties): they cried.

As we approach Memorial Day, let us remember those who gave their lives for us and our freedom. Be sure and thank those that serve in our military. Thank the families whose loved ones serve. Remember especially those who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our great country. May we realize, just like the women who gave the young soldier the gifts she had prepared for her own son, and Rae Wilson who proposed the idea for the canteen, that what we have is not just for ourselves.

“Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. ” (John 15:13, NIV)

 

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I’ll Need You Mom

I’m Sorry Mom

Unconditional Love

Maxie Dunnam tells the story of an elderly man who began spending a significant amount of time with an elderly woman. Neither had ever married and had lived alone for many years. Gradually the old gentleman recognized a real attachment to her but was shy and afraid to reveal to her his feelings. After many days of anxiety and fear, he finally mustered up the courage to declare his intentions. He went over to her home and after a few bumbling words, in a nervous frenzy blurted out “Let’s get married!!”
Surprised, she threw up her hands and shouted, “It’s a wonderful idea to think about, but who in the world would have us?”

With Valentine’s day coming next week, when our thoughts are supposed to turn to love, let us remember that there is one who will love us no matter what. Even when we cannot find someone that will have us, God will. It matters not who we are or where we’ve been or what we’ve done, God loves us and is willing to have us if we turn to Him.

“But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. ” (Romans 5:8, NIV84)

Accept No Substitute

In Nome, Alaska, teachers receive the same professional journals and publications as teachers in other states. But the situations they face are quite different from all the other states.

A fourth-grade teacher, a newcomer to Alaska, had just received her latest curriculum resource and was discussing with the class the suggestions for a Christmas pageant. The instruction manual read: “For the children playing Santa’s reindeer, there should be brown outfits, and passable reindeer horns could be made of bare branches, trimmed to the proper shapes and painted.”

She looked out at the barren, treeless, snow-covered landscape. “Well, children,” she sighed, “I guess we’ll have to do something else. We can’t make horns of branches because there isn’t a tree for miles.”

The children looked disappointed. Then one little boy spoke up, “We haven’t any trees, teacher,” he said. “But we do have lots of reindeer horns.”

Sometimes we have to improvise. Our shepherds wear bathrobes. We make camels out of cardboard. But sometimes we substitute so much that we overlook the real thing.

We adults do a good job of substituting as well. We are so caught up in the festivities that we have forgotten the real message of Christmas. We have let Santa Claus and bright lights and packages take the place of the Christ Child and His message of salvation and hope.

This Christmas, let’s not substitute any longer. We will still have joy and happiness, but it will come from having Christ in our hearts and not tree branches on our heads.

Father’s Day: A Broader Perspective

Memories of Dad

In His Shoes

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