Tuesday, November 5, 2013

The Cold World and the Shadow of a Veteran


There are times that I will be sitting within the comforts of my own home, and like a thief in the night, a memory from my former life will envelope me and take me to an un-invited revisit of pre-Veteran life. It had been said by natives along the Pacific Coast that the sea has “no memory”. Not only do I have a vivid memory, but I have an emotional one to go with it, mixed in with a little “Post-Trauma”, different and somewhat unique compared to the demons other warriors from the military possess (Marines. Navy SEALs, Army Rangers…)

As I lay here tonight, my mind retraces its steps to an evening in San Diego a few years ago…

I was sitting outside the barricade of the “Wet Side” of Naval Base, SD, waiting for the community trolley to take me downtown to a local pub. I sat there alone, waiting… The sea air was brisk, and the embers of freshly lit cigarettes dirtied the seating area, probably of other Sailors off-duty and looking forward to a long night of clinking glasses and no chance of censorship on any of their lips.

A gentleman approached the waiting station, interrupting my tinkering on my cell phone and attracting all of my attention. Every moment he was there, I thought I was seeing him at his ”lowest of lows”, and with each passing moment, I realized that I was continuously wrong. This man had two tiny dogs on a leash, a long and dirty trench-coat, a mini-shopping cart full of rags and clothing, and a Styrofoam To-Go box. And before these little dogs could sniff out my feet from the bench, the man picked up both of the dogs, placed them inside the cart, began placing clothes on top of them to keep them from being seen (as one of the rules of the transit was that no live pets were allowed onboard), and then placed the To-Go box on top of the clothes, which was quite possibly his dinner and maybe a small bite or two for the little ones….

As my heart sank into my chest, a familiar and standard “way of life” filled the air. The trumpet blazed. TAPS was being blasted for all ships in the Pacific Fleet to hear. I stood, placed my fists by my sides and stood at attention… I soon discovered that a fellow Ship-Mate had stood alongside me, raggedy clothes and all, to pay his respects to his former life and those who had proudly taken his place…

I will never forget that day, nor will I forget this man. I pray the cold Pacific air is not chilling his bones this evening. Others have had encounters of the sort, and instead of rambling any further, I will merely quote a beautiful lyric from a young artist, Trevor Morgan: “Jesus Rides the Subway.” Fellow Veteran, this grateful man still remembers you and thanks you…

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Calvary...and the calvary.


 C.S. Lewis once said, “We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst. We castrate and bid the geldings be fruitful.” I have had the honor of attending a funeral once where I received the best Christmas gift I could have asked for: getting to meet the Patriot Guard Riders and a chance to watch them in action.  There is much honor in the way these men and women conduct themselves for “a warrior that has crossed over”. It truly is an antithesis to the evil factions in our broken world. Now, in this context, I am referring to the skewed (to say the least) views of a clear dichotomy, the Westboro Baptist Church, but this goes deeper than patriotism and honor for the fallen.
Lately, I have reveled in reading Charles Colson’s final printed work, The Sky is Not Falling (just in case you are unsuspecting, Colson, after surviving his prison sentence following the Watergate scandal, had a change of heart after studying C.S. Lewis’ Mere Christianity). This book shines the light of truth on where our country has really gone wrong: postmodernism and a “lukewarm” morality. He writes about how since September 11th, the eminent theologian Mike Novak called the current evolving era “the beginning of the end of postmodern preeminence”. America started coming back to the realization that there is such a device as moral truth, that there is good and evil in this world.
Heroes such as these, the Patriot Guard, are a prescription for America’s malaise.
Our culture today seems to exhibit the erroneous indication that liberty is to be interpreted as not the autonomy from tyrannical, oppressive dictatorships, corrupt governments, etc… but the right to do what we please whenever we please. I think Benjamin Franklin illuminated it in quite a different light: the right to do what is right. 1 John 1:9 articulates it this way: “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”
Can this precedent of thought equip our American brothers and sisters for a brighter future before it is too late?