History is like an expedition. Each generation helps chart the journey with
its twists and turns, and each picks up where the other left off.
Thomas Jefferson was 33 when he wrote the Declaration of
Independence. More than a dozen of those who signed it were
less than 35. Fifty years
later Jefferson and John Adams died on the anniversary of the Fourth. Their death marked the end of the generation
we know as the “founding fathers.”
I remember as a child when the last veteran of the Civil War
died. Albert Woolson was a drummer boy in Company C of the First
Minnesota. He died in 1956. At present we are witnessing the departure of
what Tom Brokaw called the “greatest generation,” those who lived through World
War II. Five years before I was born my
mother was on a picnic with my father when President Roosevelt interrupted their
1940s music to report the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Less than 325,000 of the 16 million Americans
who served in WW II are alive today.
Some of us can recall where we were the day John F. Kennedy
was assassinated, when Martin Luther King Jr. was killed and Robert Kennedy was
gunned down in Los Angeles. Vietnam and
Watergate evoke vivid memories. But the young know these events as history. Those
born after 9/11 have turned 20. They
have never known a world without TSA security.
The current generation will live their lives in the shadows of Covid. Every generation makes its own memories, and
each generation must find its own faith.
A few years ago I reflected on what I wanted to accomplish
with my remaining years. One of those
things was to encourage the younger generation to do greater things than I ever
imagined. I am pleased to see that
happening in many places. More people
are coming to Christ every day than at any time in history, especially in South
America, Africa and Asia. I am finding
many in their twenties and thirties who are passionate about going to the ends
of the earth and living transformed lives for Christ.
When God looks on humanity, he sees generations. Following Noah’s flood, God had us in mind
when he said, “This is the sign of the covenant which I am making between Me
and you and every living creature that is with you, for all successive generations.” Moses’
success depended on how well he encouraged Joshua, the leader of the next
generation that would enter the Promised Land. David sang, “Remember His
covenant forever, the word which He commanded to a thousand generations.”
The world has never been a safe place. Expeditions are
dangerous. We face huge obstacles and challenges, but the potential is
limitless. As our generations overlap, we have opportunity to build upon the
foundations of faith that others have laid and to create a better world for our
children, our grandchildren and those who will follow.
Thanks for perspective. May all who come behind us find us faithful
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