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From Scott Richert:
On Independence Day, it is common to invoke God's blessing on our
country, and rightly so. Sometimes, however, we might begin to regard
the United States as uniquely blessed, in a way that other countries
aren't. "God bless America" can become a command, and not a request. And
if it does, then we lose sight of the reason why God blesses any
nation: because of that nation's fidelity to Him.
John Carroll, archbishop of Baltimore and the first bishop appointed
in the United States, truly understood that. In 1791, he wrote a Prayer for Government
that puts the relationship between God, country, and the civic order in
the proper perspective. The truth taught by the Church is the guarantee
of political order, and so Archbishop Carroll begins by praying for
Church, then for the guidance of the Holy Spirit for all the leaders of
our country, at every level. He prays then for the living, that they may
live lives worthy of eternal life, and finally for the dead, that they
may have eternal rest. (Read entire post.)
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1 comment:
We must continue to love and pray for our country and its' leaders just as we would for a person whom we love but is imperfect.
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