The rays of ravishing light and glory


  • Greg and I were some­what ambiva­lent on whether to buy fire­works this year. Since com­ing from the parts of Cal­i­for­nia where a sput­ter­ing hand-held sparkler is regarded as an invi­ta­tion to wild­fire to the parts of the Mid­west where blow­ing your hand off with a mor­tar rocket is regarded as a rit­ual of man­hood, we are rarely ambiva­lent about fire­works. I am not a boy and Greg is, so when we light the fuse on some­thing that squeals up in the air 150 feet and explodes into beau­ti­fully col­ored sparks that drift serenely onto the roof of our 120-year-old wooden house, I some­times can’t resist a chok­ing “urk” noise.

    But we’ve done it for a cou­ple years and the house doesn’t seem to have gone up in a ball of flames, so on we bravely go. Besides, there’s the lit­tle girl in me that remem­bers when we used to cel­e­brate Guy Fawkes Day in Eng­land and light fire­works like this. You know how it is with your ear­li­est mem­o­ries — they tend to color your per­cep­tion of what is the right and accept­able stan­dard. Fussy lit­tle “vol­ca­noes” that shower sparks for a while and then peter out and look dis­rep­utable were hard to stack up against the mem­ory of “real” fireworks.

    But the big ones and the small ones — even the annoy­ing ones that just pop or squeal and whose spent remains lit­ter the streets today like road kill — have their place. They were all called for by John Adams in a let­ter he wrote to Abi­gail on July 2. I think most of us have heard the part where he told her he expected the day to be remem­bered in gen­er­a­tions to come by ” pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bon­fires, and illu­mi­na­tions.” But did you know that before get­ting to that part he told her he thought the day should be com­mem­o­rated with “solemn acts of devo­tion to God Almighty”? I had never heard it, and so insert my usual com­plaint about sec­u­lar­ists tak­ing the whole coun­try to you-know-where in a handbasket.

    But in any case, here (via Michael Medved) is the whole quote. (Fans of the movie “1776″ will be sure to rec­og­nize some of the words from John Adams song “Is Any­body There?”)

    The sec­ond day of July, 1776, will be the most mem­o­rable epocha in the his­tory of Amer­ica. I am apt to believe it will be cel­e­brated by suc­ceed­ing gen­er­a­tions as the great anniver­sary fes­ti­val. It ought to be com­mem­o­rated as the day of deliv­er­ance, by solemn acts of devo­tion to God Almighty. It ought to be sol­em­nized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bon­fires, and illu­mi­na­tions, from one end of this con­ti­nent to the other, from this time for­ward forevermore.

    You will think me trans­ported with enthu­si­asm, but I am not. I am well aware of the toil and blood and trea­sure that it will cost us to main­tain this Dec­la­ra­tion and sup­port and defend these states. Yet, through all the gloom, I can see the rays of rav­ish­ing light and glory. I can see that the end is more than worth all the means. And that pos­ter­ity will tri­umph in that day’s trans­ac­tion, even although we should rue it, which I trust in God we shall not…

    It may be the will of Heaven that Amer­ica will suf­fer calami­ties still more wast­ing, and dis­tress yet more dread­ful. If this is to be the case, it will have this good effect at least. It will inspire us with many virtues which we have not, and cor­rect many errors, fol­lies and vices which threaten to dis­turb, dis­honor and destroy us. The fur­nace of afflic­tion pro­duces refine­ment, in States as well as individuals…But I must sub­mit all my hopes and fears to an over­rul­ing Prov­i­dence, in which, unfash­ion­able as the faith may be, I firmly believe.

    Amen. Happy Fourth of July, all. I’ll let you know if our house and all our hands make it through.



    Related posts:

    1. Fourth of July
    2. Sunny. Light clouds. Grumpy farm­ers expected.
    3. What’s the story, morn­ing glory?
    4. “Keeper of the Light”
    5. Quick Hal­loween re-cap

4 Responses and Counting...

  • Word­mama 07.04.2007

    So did you?

  • szi­ure!! :::-) (<– typ­ing with stumps of fingers)

    But seri­ously, all went well. We set off our “Black & White Show­stop­per” which had 25 dif­fer­ent fire­works all timed to go off one after another, and it was really pretty cool. It only lasted about a minute, but we only had to light one fuse, so we were happy. (In this humid weather, some­times get­ting the fuse lit takes a while)

    And then we got in the car, parked at the Pizza Hut park­ing lot with sodas and watched the 1/2 hour dis­play in the park put on every year by “Crazy Jimmy.” It was actu­ally a pretty darned amaz­ing show — com­pares with the ones we used to see at Dis­ney­land. And no burnt houses or fin­gers. So … another suc­cess­ful 4th.

    How ’bout you? (You can actu­ally e-mail me with this. The blog-faithful prob­a­bly don’t care, unless you can tie it in with great moments of Ortho­dox Truth.)

  • We had the same expe­ri­ence — we came from Cal­i­for­nia, where the choices were sparklers, pic­cilo petes (which I dearly love and are still my favorites) and snakes. The first year, it was like kids in the candy store.

    I like a few, and then wan­der home to read.

  • Our fam­ily does not do fire­works — I am too much of a chicken (know­ing how many acci­dents have maimed peo­ple, I think fire­works are best left to professionals).

    Our fam­ily reads the Dec­la­ra­tion of Inde­pen­dence together each year with every per­son present who CAN read hav­ing to read at least once sen­tence. It has become a game where each tries to fir­gure out how much to read so that it goes around sev­eral times and the final sen­tence falls to that per­son. I got to read the end this year.

    Our church has been pray­ing the Molieben to be Sung in Times of War every Mon­day night for sev­eral months now. Our priest is on vaca­tion, but I was left, after read­ing the Dec­la­ra­tion, with a strong desire to go sing the Molieben. How I wish Fr. were here so we could have had that ser­vice!
    If your church isn’t doing this, I rec­c­om­mend that you ask your priest about it. We are the only Ortho­dox church in our area to do this. Fr. says we will con­tinue until the troops leave.

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