No doubt there’s
N O T H I N G
Like it,
but being
A C A R I N G C A T A L Y S T
C O S T S
Here we are once again on the Fourth of July
where millions across the Country will celebrate
Independence Day. . .
It might well go largely unnoticed
that FREEDOM
isn’t F R E E
In this world
S O M E O N E ‘ S
truly pay the price
for people to be free. . .
Doubt it?
Go back to the very signers of
The Declaration of Independence
ALL 56 of them
paid with what you can’t cash in a Check
I F
they won the war with the British
there would still be years of hardship as a struggling nation. . .
If they lost
they would have faced a hangman’s noose. . .
and yet there it is where it says,
“WE HEREWITH PLEDGE OUR LIVES, OUR FORTUNES, AND OUR SACRED HONOR.”
They signed it. . .
but do you know what price was paid for those very signatures?
The late, great Paul Harvey
in his broadcast on July 4, 1974 reminded us
That Carter Braxton, a wealthy planter and trader, after signing saw his ships swept from the seas to pay his debts. . .He lost his home and all of his property. He died in rags
* * *
That Thomas McKean of Delaware was so harassed by the enemy that he was forced to move his family five times in five months. . He served in Congress without pay–his family in poverty and in hiding
* * *
That Thomas Nelson, Jr of Virginia raised $2 Million on his own signature for provision for our allies, the French Fleet. . .After the War he personally paid back the loans which wiped out his estate; he was never reimbursed by the government and he died bankrupt
* * *
That John Hart was driven from his wife’s bedside while she was dying; his 13 children fled in all directions for their lives. . His fields and gristmill were laid waste and for more than a year he lived in forests and caves to only return home from the War to find his wife, dead, his children, gone, his properties, gone only himself to die a few weeks later of exhaustion and a broken heart
* * *
Of all the 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence
few were long to survive. . .
Five were captured by the British
and severely tortured before dying. . .
Twelve had their homes
from Rhode Island to Charleston
sacked and looted
occupied by the enemy
or burned. . .
Two of them
lost their sons in the Army
One had two sons captured. . .
Nine of the 56 died in the War
from its hardships or merciful bullets. . .
They had learned that liberty is so much more important
than security. . .
For T H A T they pledged their lives
their fortunes
their sacred honor. . .
They fulfilled their pledge
They paid the price
AND FREEDOM WAS BORN
T R U T H :
I most likely will not give that much thought
with the second helping of potato salad
the extra piece of apple pie
the barbecue
and certainly not during
The Fireworks
b u t w h y. . .
why not think
give a second or even a third or Fourth thought
that being a Caring Catalyst
especially then
or even at the very moment
doesn’t come with a cost. . .
that needs
P A Y I N G
which leads to the ultimate question
On the Fourth or the quickly oncoming
Fifth of July
or E V E R:
Are You Willing To Pay IT?
They did. . .
D O Y O U ?
Great insight! Too bad that there is not the knowledge and appreciation of these facts! Thank you! Now living in Williamsburg, Va gave us the opportunity to experience the celebration in historic Colonial Williamsburg today!
Appreciate your kind thoughts and words, Bob; I’m really glad to hear that you have just not gotten adjusted to living in Williamsburg, but actually living some of your great life there. Here’s to your continued success and happiness.