I
was in the ninth grade, and I happened
to stay home from school that day; the only day I missed that year. I was
watching television.
Suddenly, the broadcast was interrupted
by the well-known anchorman, Walter Cronkite. And the rest of the story has to
be one of the top ten events of the 20th Century. President Kennedy
had been assassinated.
This event was, beyond any doubt, the
first “national trauma” to which I was ever exposed. I was 14, and as innocent
as the driven snow. “Leave it to Beaver” and “Dobie Gillis” were as provocative
as it got. Dad and Mom going to church, eating a nice pot roast at the dinner
table. Doing a half hour of homework at night. Petting a cocker spaniel.
Stopping by the soda shop after school. Watching The Dick Van Dyke Show.
(Funny, Rob and Laura actually looked like the President and First Lady!)
But everything seemed to change on that
November day in 1963. The innocence of a nation seemed to evaporate.
Many of you, perhaps most of you, don’t
remember this event. A little math informs me that you’d have to be almost
fifty to distinctly remember that day.
There are those days in our national
history, and in our own personal
lives
that challenge our belief in the providence of God, (and sometimes our own
sanity.) I will always remember the long procession; that parade that
included
the caisson, and rider-less horse. I can still imagine “John John” stepping
forward a half-step, and raising his right hand to the edge of his brow. Odd,
Jackie had taught him that little salute a week before that dark day in Dallas.
John John kept saluting with his left hand. I’ve seen a film clip.
John Jr. keeps marching around in
circles, a little soldier’s helmet on his head. His Mom is giving instructions,
and laughing all the while. That arm snaps up, and he salutes. Again and again.
If we live very long, we will experience
a host of national and personal traumas; those raw events that challenge our
belief in providence. But I think we are the better for it, when we summon up
“that something” within us which allows us to go on… though hesitantly.
And so like John John. Stepping forward,
and in the midst of sheer annihilation and confusion,
... snapping out a salute.
By William McDonald, PhD. Excerpt from "Unconventional Devotions" Copyright 2005
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