Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts

Saturday, May 28, 2016

SEASONS - HOW DECORATION DAY BECAME MEMORIAL DAY

(Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)



Did you know that Memorial Day wasn’t called Memorial Day in the beginning?  It was called Decoration Day.  They called it that because after the Civil War, people decorated the graves of the soldiers who were killed in battle on that day.  It was a southern tradition, to decorate graves to remember loved ones lost, but this tradition was now shared all over the country, for soldiers from the north and the south.  Maybe it was a way to bring the people of the north and the south together after the war.  It took the South a long time after the Civil War before they joined in the celebration in a national way. As a matter of fact, it took another war, World War I.  There were many organizations of southern women’s groups that went about in local areas decorating the graves of the Confederate soldiers on random but different dates in May each year, and they finally came to see that this day was not about division, but about reconciliation and coming together.  It was to be a time for honoring the soldiers who gave their all for all of us.  The North and The South finally came together and began placing flowers on the graves of their heroes who were buried in the Arlington National Cemetery.   
The Civil War was such a misunderstood war.  Most people haven’t heard the whole story.  It wasn’t really all about slavery, as many think.  It was mostly about state’s rights and taxation without representation.  As wrong as slavery was, many believed that the whole situation would have worked itself out eventually with the invention of the cotton gin and new farming machinery.  At any rate, the subject was often used for a political soap-box in order to get at some of the underlying issues that were really more important to those involved.  It is a sad fact that though  many people DID care about the situation of slavery; the truth was that neither side would be willing to send their sons to fight over the issue of slavery.  They were, however, willing to die for their freedom to own and keep their own property, and their right to make a living and receive the financial benefit from it without government interference. 

To understand what really happened, you must first see and note the contrast in the cultures.  The North and The South were two totally different cultures, with two totally different ways of life.  Out of the 5.5 million people living in the south, there were really only 12 rich and powerful southern plantation owners, who owned over 500 slaves each.  These men had a lot of political power, and they were involved with legislation.  In 1860 everything in the South evolved around agriculture, mostly cotton.  Everything in the North evolved around manufacturing goods.  There were 140,000 manufacturing facilities in the North in 1860.  The North thrived on exporting goods.  The South thrived on exporting cotton.  Most of the southern cotton was bought by England.  The English people manufactured their own products, and were not likely to import the North’s exports, but they were glad to export their own to the southern traders.  As a matter of fact the English had a good trade deal established with the South, where they would buy their cotton and in turn the Southern plantation owners would receive good prices on English products.  The South wound up buying goods from England instead of buying the goods being manufactured in the North.  In order to counteract this, the North, who controlled the House of Representatives and the Senate at that time, decided to tax both imports and exports.  That put the South paying high taxes on both the cotton they exported, and the goods they imported from England.  By 1860 the South was actually paying approximately 85% of the taxes collected by the U.S.   They felt they were overtaxed and under represented by our government.  That was the main issue, and slavery was the song it traveled on.  The politicians of the day knew that slavery was the political subject that would pull at people’s heartstrings and evoke emotion, and they used it to their own advantage to stir up people’s hearts.  


Many good people, most from the north, but also some good godly people from the south, were already hard at work trying to change the situation of slavery.   Slaves were considered to be property, and therefore, they were a good source of tax revenue for the government.   
In this respect, the north was just as guilty as the south in not stopping slavery.  They thrived from the revenue received because of slavery from the large plantations.  There were also excessive property taxes taken from the huge lands that made up the southern plantations where the slaves lived and worked.  Remember “Gone With The Wind”?  A huge part of the story came to light because of the lack of tax money to pay Tara’s taxes.  This was a catch 22 type situation though – when it came time for the numbers to be counted of people in an area, the southern plantation areas could count their slaves and claim a larger stake of the pie.  There was legislation over this, and some real odd ways came about by trying to justify whether a slave counted in a region as a whole person or not.  The North got the slaves reduced to a fractional number until after the war when the whole issue was corrected.   Because of the heavy taxation, and the reduction of the number of people the southern legislators represented, the southerners became financially and politically strapped.   They could not exist any longer under the current tax situation, and they could not gain any power in the House and Senate to make a change.  Desperate, they exercised their state’s rights to pull out.  When they did, everyone suffered. The northern industrial states had depended on southern plantations for their food sources. 


It was a mess, and it was a stupid and greedy mess.  It took both sides a long time to recover from their wounds.
 
I find it very ironic that a war within our own country was the event that evolved into a time of remembering and honoring the soldiers that died protecting our country from other countries.  It actually started out because we needed to protect ourselves from each other.
    
Perhaps the greatest lesson of the Civil War was about coming together as a people of one voice, and putting aside our differences and creating workable solutions for all.  The abolishing of slavery certainly falls under this huge umbrella.  The Union soldiers never mentioned in their historical diaries that they were fighting to abolish slavery.  What you read in their writings was the fact that they were fighting to protect and establish the Union.  They wanted The United States of America to stay The United States of America, which was established as “one nation under God with liberty and justice for all.”  They gave their lives for the idea that we, as a nation, should always stay together and work out our problems, under all circumstances. 
  
Hence, Decoration Day was established, which later became known as Memorial Day after World War II.  It was officially moved to the last Monday of May in the 1970’s.  This was done so that all of America could enjoy a long weekend while they remembered those who died for their freedom.   

 

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

FOOD ART AND FAMILY TRADITIONS - MEMORIAL DAY PICNIC




(Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)


Our season is about to change!  Summer is on the way! 

Right before summer arrives on Monday, May 30th we stop to observe Memorial Day.  

On this day we are remembering all the American soldiers that gave us the freedom to enjoy life in our country.   All the wars that our country commemorates on this day have brought change and transition to our nation, so it is fitting that this day also brings change and transition to the time and seasons of our lives here on earth.  We remember this as we move from Spring toward Summer. 

Spring has been so lovely this year that I hate to tell it goodbye, but I'm sure summer is going to be just as wonderful. There are so many things I love about Summer! I don't know where to start.....maybe a Memorial Day picnic is a good place to begin? 

I hope you and your family have covered the bases this year and taken some time to remember the soldiers in a specific way.  A Memorial Day trip I will always remember is one that my family and I took to the Berman Museum in Anniston, Alabama.  That is a great place to go if you want to bone up on your American and World History.  They have an amazing collection of the items from every war ever fought on American soil and foreign soil.  The trip is a great history lesson.

 After that trip,we were educated and totally prepared to have a little gathering to celebrate the fact that we do still live in a free country.  In all of these thoughts about the cost of freedom the emphasis hangs on the fact that we must be the heroes now.  All of us in our daily lives must do our part to carry on the victory that those who have gone before us have given.  It is a group effort that requires the motivations of every citizen of the country.  We all have to do our part to keep this country free.  We are living in a crucial time for America as well as the whole earth.  Recovery starts by remembering what has happened in the past and keeping a deep respect and appreciation for our history.  Perhaps a little patriotic celebration in the homes across the land will light that one little candle needed to instill a ripple effect of pride in our nation.




Of course we cannot gather without food!  
So here is our menu:

MEMORIAL DAY PICNIC MENU
Cool Red White and Blue Cocktails
Red White and Blue Flag Fruit Kabob Platter
The Ultimate Memorial Day Open Faced Short Rib Sandwich
Memorial Day Potato Salad
White Chocolate Mini Cheesecakes with Blueberry Topping

The recipes are below, but first let's decorate our table!  I'm using the table on my back deck this year, so we can enjoy the beautiful summer day, but I'm also setting the dinning room table and the kitchen table for those who cannot tolerate the heat.  This gathering is a lot about the older generation communicating the past to the younger generations.  I want them all to be as comfortable as possible, so that they linger over the stories and soak them in to repeat to their own children in the future.






 I want to be very patriotic this year, so every thing is red, white and blue, not very original, but quite a cheerful setting.  

This will really throw our guest off, because I'm usually a modern-contemporary type decorator, but this occasion calls for some old fashion celebrating and I want the house to match the mood, nostalgic, old fashioned, traditional and colorful.    

I'm putting two deep red candle sticks at the center ends of the table.  I'm placing a patriotic basket container between them, and sticking  lots of little flags inside the basket.  The room is full of vivid colors!   

I'm mixing my flag patterned dishes with my solid blue plates and my solid red bowls, creating another mixture of cheerful red, white and blue.  This creates a casual, laid back summer kind of style that will suit the mood for the day.  


It is all about lingering and resting and listening to others talk.    I'm going to pick up some ferns for the deck and the hearth, because I think the greenery in the background adds a lot to all the red, white and blue.   Of course I want to incorporate my blue and white starred napkins into this whole tablescape.  I found an old red white and blue picnic basket.  Lovely! 

I hope you enjoy these recipes.  They were a lot of fun to find and try at our table, and they just seem to fit the whole occassion nicely. 










RED, WHITE AND BLUE COCKTAIL
1/2 cup crushed ice
1/2 oz Wild Hibiscus Flowers and Syrup (can be ordered on line from Amazon)
1/4 oz Fresh Lemon Juice
2 oz Hpnotiq Liqueur (A Refreshing Blend of Natural Exotic Fruit Juices, Premium Vodka and a Touch of Cognac)
2 oz Dry Sparkling Wine or Champagne
Mixing Instructions:
Separate the Flowers from the Wild Hibiscus Syrup. Place 1 Wild Hibiscus Flower standing upright at the bottom of the champagne flute.
Mix Lemon Juice and Hibiscus Syrup together. Pour the Hibiscus Syrup and Lemon juice mixture over the flower. Add crushed ice on top of the Wild Hibiscus Flower and Syrup. Slowly pour in Hpnotiq Liqueur over the ice. Slowly top with Dry Sparkling Wine or Champagne.
How it looks is Red on the bottom, layer of Blue in the middle and the crushed ice floats to the top with the champagne giving the illusion of white.
To make this cocktail in batches make sure to separate the flowers from the syrup.   Each one liter Jar of Wild Hibiscus Flowers contains approximately 25 oz. of syrup, which will make 50 cocktails. To pre-mix the Hibiscus Syrup/Lemon Juice add 12.5 oz Lemon Juice to every 25 oz. of Syrup.





RED WHITE AND BLUE FRUIT KABOB PLATTER
Grab a bowl of freshly washed blueberries, thinly sliced strawberries, and button sliced bananas.  Dip the sliced fruit in lemon juice to maintain freshness and pure colors.  Lay kabob skewers horizontally on to a square platter.  Make a flag pattern with the fruit, using the blueberreis for the blue starry part of the flag, the strawberries for the red stripes and the bananas for the white stripes.  Clever and eye catching, but so easy and tasty. 


For the main course I selected The Ultimate Memorial Day Short Rib Open Faced Sandwich.  This is not just a sandwich – it is “quite a sandwich indeed.”  Your going to love it.  It takes a little planning ahead and a little time to prepare, but the results are SO worth the trouble.  Your guest will remember it forever.  

I originally began making this sandwich from a recipe in The Southern Living 2008 Annual Recipes Cookbook.  I’ve changed the recipe over time to suit my own needs by adding a few twists, and have accommodated it to my own style of cooking for Memorial Day.  My recipe should make it easy for you to prepare for 8 people.  If you want more, just add more ingredients. 

THE ULTIMATE MEMORIAL DAY SHORT RIB OPEN FACED SANDWICH
Ingredients for Cooking Ribs:
12 lbs. short ribs
1 tsp. Kosher salt
1 tsp. Ground Pepper
12 tsp. crushed garlic cloves
4 Carrots, chopped very small
4 Celery ribs, chopped very small
2 Onions, chopped very small
2 14.5-oz cans Italian Style Chopped Tomatoes
4 cups dry red wine
2 cups chicken broth
1 tsp. Rosemary
1 tsp. Thyme
1 tsp. Oregano
Make the ribs first.  Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.  While you are waiting, gather the ingredients needed and use a food chopper to finely chop all the vegetables.  Rub the salt and pepper into the ribs, place ribs in a large Dutch Oven and cook in the oven for about 7 minutes on each side.  Remove the ribs to another dish.  Add garlic, carrots, celery and onions to the Dutch Oven.  Cook the vegetables on top of the stove on medium heat until they are tender and brown, this will take about 8 - 10 minutes.  Set the vegetables aside in another dish and stir the tomatoes, wine, chicken broth, rosemary, thyme and oregano into the dutch oven, bring this to a boil.  Once boiling, pour into a temporary container, wash and line the Dutch Oven with heavy duty aluminum foil, then return the ribs to the Dutch Oven.  Covering with a tightly sealed lid, to the stove, baking at 350 degrees for 4 hours until the ribs are tender.  At some point, while the ribs are cooking, drain the vegetables through a wire-mesh strainer and reserve the juices for gravy.  Let the juices stand while the ribs are cooking and skim any fat that forms from the gravy.  When ribs are cooked, add the gravy and vegetables back to the Dutch Oven and cook for about 20 more minutes over medium high heat uncovered until thickened.  Set this aside to cool.  After the ribs are cooled, remove the meat from the bones and shred.  Reserve the gravy in another bowl.  Gather the following ingredients for making the sandwiches:.   
2 large red onions sliced thin
8 Tbsp. balsamic vinegar
2 12-oz. Sour Dough French Bread Loaves
6 Tbsp. Dijon Mustard
6 cups of shredded short ribs prepared as noted above
 1 cup gravy from short ribs recipe above
4 ounces crumbled blue cheese
6 cups arugula lettuce
Saute the onions over medium high heat for six minutes.  Remove from heat.  Add balsamic vinegar and let stand for five minutes.  Cut the sour dough bread into sandwich sized pieces.  Place on a wire rack in the oven and broil 6 inches from heat for about 3 – 4 minutes.  Bread should have a lightly toasted look.  Spread mustard on one side of the bread.  Mix the shredded meat and gravy.  Place bread slices on a baking tray.  Spoon the meat and gravy mixture over the bread.  Sprinkle this with crumbled blue cheese.    Broil in oven about 4 to 5 minutes until cheese is melted.  Toss arugula into onion mixture, which is now cooled.  Place sandwiches onto pretty patriotic plates (I mixed solid red and blue plates with flag patterned plates at my own table).  Top each sandwich with the onion and arugula mixture.  Serve warm open-faced sandwiches as your  main course.  Delicious!



MEMORIAL DAY POTATO SALAD
4 potatoes
1/3 cup French Dressing
1/4 cup chopped vidalia onion
1/4 cup green onion
1/4 cup sweet pickle relish
1/4 cup sliced radishes
salt to taste
pepper to taste
3/4 cup thin sliced celery
1/2 cup mayonnaise
3 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
Peel and cube potatoes.  Cook in boiling water until tender.  Drain.  While still warm, combine potatoes, French dressing, onion, pickles, radishes, salt and pepper in a bowl and toss to coat potatoes.  Cover, refrigerate overnight.  Just before serving stir in celery, mayonnaise and eggs.   

(I serve the potato salad in a large deep navy blue bowl.  It adds another splash of color to the table.)


WHITE CHOCOLATE BLUEBERRY MINI CHEESECAKES


 

For The Crust:  2 cups crushed graham crackers, 1 cup slivered almonds, 1/2 cup white sugar, 1/4 cup butter, melted, 2 tablespoons caramel topping.

For The Filling:  1 pound white chocolate (chopped), 4 8-ounce pkgs. cream cheese (softened), 3/4 cup white sugar, 4 eggs (beaten), 2 egg yokes, 1 tablespoon all purpose flour, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

For The Topping:  1/2 cup white sugar, 3 teaspoons cornstarch, 1/4 cup water, 1 pint fresh blueberries, 2 teaspoons lemon juice.

Directions:  Preheat oven to 275 degrees.  Make the crust by blending together the graham cracker crumbs, almonds and sugar until the almonds are fine.  Use a chopper, blender or food processor for this.  Melt the butter and caramel and pour into mix.  Press this mixture into individual wrappers inside a cupcake tin  (if you can find patriotic colors, all the better).  Be generous with the crust.    Make the filling by melting the white chocolate in a metal bowl over a pan of barely simmering water and stirring until smooth.  Set aside.  In a large bowl beat cream cheese and 3/4 cup of sugar until smooth.  Beat in the eggs and the egg yolks, one at a time.  Beat in the flour and the vanilla and blend in the melted white chocolate slowly, beating until the filling is well combined.  Pour filling into the individual crust holders.  Bake the cupcake tin in the middle of a preheated oven for 45 minutes.  Turn off the heat, crack the oven door an inch, and let the cheesecake cook in the oven to room temperature.  Cover loosely in cooled cupcake tin and refrigerate overnight before removing from the pan.  Make the topping in a saucepan by combining 1/2 cup sugar and cornstarch.  Stir in water 1/4 cup of water and 1 pint of blueberries.  Bring to a boil.  Simmer for 10 minutes stirring occasionally.  Press through a fine sieve.  Stir in 2 teaspoons of lemon juice and allow to cool, then store in a glass jar until time to serve.  At serving time, pour over top of mini cheesecakes.   (I stacked these on top of two tiered navy blue glass servers, they add wonderful color to the presentation, and are so tasty!)

When you thank God for this bountiful feast He has granted, thank Him too for the soldiers who presently defend our country as well as those who have gone before them.  Pray that our country will be renewed to the glory of God and flourish and remain to be a place worth living and dying for. 


GOD BLESS AMERICA


  


Monday, May 23, 2016

PEN ART - MEMORIAL DAY POETRY







SOLDIERS AND PILGRIMS, PENTECOSTS AND MEMORIAL DAY

(Written By Sheila Gail Landgraf)

They came a marching through the land,
Many mocked, scourged, thrown in prison, stoned, slain by the sword,
Still they came marching on,
Ragged,
Destitute,
Afflicted,
Tormented,
Braver than the world was worthy,
They came a marching,
With a loud swooping sound, like that of a mighty wind,
With raging flames of fire burning in their hearts, 
driving them onward,
They came a marching through the land.
Onward,
Through deserts and mountains,
Through dens and caves of the earth,
Never seeing the final victory,
Yet knowing others would come after them and enter the promised land.
Medals were given and honors were spoken over their graves
Tears were shed in the memory of their valor
But there is a joyful celebration going on in an unseen place,
And the rewards being given are everlasting.
The Commander Of All will open His book,
And they will once again stand at attention.
He will note his observations of battles well fought,
He will remember those who kept His commandments.
And their crowns will all be solid gold,
The stars will light the sky in an amazing display of glory,
As they lay them at the feet of God,
And the stories of each soldier will be told.
Then the cherished words will fall softly on eager waiting ears,
“Well done, good and faithful servant.  You were faithful with a few things,
I will put you in charge of many things;
Enter into the joy of The Kingdom.


Monday, May 18, 2015

SEASONS - HOW DECORATION DAY BECAME MEMORIAL DAY


  
Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf



Did you know that Memorial Day wasn’t called Memorial Day in the beginning?  It was called Decoration Day.  They called it that because after the Civil War, people decorated the graves of the soldiers who were killed in battle on that day.  It was a southern tradition, to decorate graves to remember loved ones lost, but this tradition was now shared all over the country, for soldiers from the north and the south.  

Maybe it was a way to bring the people of the north and the south together after the war.  It took the South a long time after the Civil War before they joined in the celebration in a national way. As a matter of fact, it took another war, World War I.  

There were many organizations of southern women’s groups that went about in local areas decorating the graves of the Confederate soldiers on random but different dates in May each year, and they finally came to see that this day was not about division, but about reconciliation and coming together.  It was to be a time for honoring the soldiers who gave their all for all of us.  

The North and The South finally came together and began placing flowers on the graves of their heroes who were buried in the Arlington National Cemetery.   


The Civil War was such a misunderstood war.  Most people haven’t heard the whole story.  It wasn’t really all about slavery, as many think.  It was mostly about state’s rights and taxation without representation.  

As wrong as slavery was, many believed that the whole situation would have worked itself out eventually with the invention of the cotton gin and new farming machinery.  At any rate, the subject was often used for a political soap-box in order to get at some of the underlying issues that were really more important to those involved.  It is a sad fact that though people did care about the situation of slavery, the truth was that neither side would be willing to send their sons to fight over the issue of slavery.  They were, however, willing to die for their freedom to own and keep their own property, and their right to make a living and receive the financial benefit from it without government interference.  Hmmmm…..I wonder how people are feeling about that today?

To understand what really happened way back then, you must first see and note the contrast in the cultures.  The North and The South were two totally different cultures, with two totally different ways of life.  Out of the 5.5 million people living in the south, there were really only 12 rich and powerful southern plantation owners, who owned over 500 slaves each.  These men had a lot of political power, and they were involved with legislation.  In 1860 everything in the South evolved around agriculture, mostly cotton.  Everything in the North evolved around manufacturing goods.  There were 140,000 manufacturing facilities in the North in 1860.  The North thrived on exporting goods.  The South thrived on exporting cotton.  Most of the southern cotton was bought by England.  The English people manufactured their own products, and were not likely to import the North’s exports, but they were glad to export their own to the southern traders.  As a matter of fact the English had a good trade deal established with the South, where they would buy their cotton and in turn the Southern plantation owners would receive good prices on English products.  

The South wound up buying goods from England instead of buying the goods being manufactured in the North.  In order to counteract this, the North, who controlled the House of Representatives and the Senate at that time, decided to tax both imports and exports.  That put the South paying high taxes on both the cotton they exported, and the goods they imported from England.  

By 1860 the South was actually paying approximately 85% of the taxes collected by the U.S.   They felt they were overtaxed and under represented by our government. That was the main issue, and slavery was the song it traveled on.  The politicians of the day knew that slavery was the political subject that would pull at people’s heartstrings and evoke emotion, and they used it to their own advantage to stir up people’s hearts.  




Many good people, most from the north, but also some good godly people from the south, were already hard at work trying to change the situation of slavery.   Slaves were considered to be property, and therefore, they were a good source of tax revenue for the government.   In this respect, the north was just as guilty as the south in not stopping slavery.  They thrived from the revenue received because of slavery from the large plantations.  There were also excessive property taxes taken from the huge lands that made up the southern plantations where the slaves lived and worked.  

Remember “Gone With The Wind”?  A huge part of the story came to light because of the lack of tax money to pay Tara’s taxes.  This was a catch 22 type situation though – when it came time for the numbers to be counted of people in an area, the southern plantation areas could count their slaves and claim a larger stake of the pie.  There was legislation over this, and some real odd ways came about by trying to justify whether a slave counted in a region as a whole person or not.  The North got the slaves reduced to a fractional number until after the war when the whole issue was corrected.   

Because of the heavy taxation, and the reduction of the number of people the southern legislators represented, the southerners became financially and politically strapped.   They could not exist any longer under the current tax situation, and they could not gain any power in the House and Senate to make a change.  Desperate, they exercised their state’s rights to pull out.  When they did, everyone suffered. The northern industrial states had depended on southern plantations for their food sources.
  
It was a mess, and it was a stupid and greedy mess.  It took both sides a long time to recover from their wounds. 

I find it very ironic that a war within our own country was the event that evolved into a time of remembering and honoring the soldiers that died protecting our country from other countries.  It actually started out because we needed to protect ourselves from each other.    

Perhaps the greatest lesson of the Civil War was about coming together as a people of one voice, and putting aside our differences and creating workable solutions for all.  The abolishing of slavery certainly falls under this huge umbrella.  The Union soldiers never mentioned in their historical diaries that they were fighting to abolish slavery.  What you read in their writings was the fact that they were fighting to protect and establish the Union.  They wanted The United States of America to stay The United States of America, which was established as “one nation under God with liberty and justice for all.”  They gave their lives for the idea that we, as a nation, should always stay together and work out our problems, under all circumstances.   

Hence, Decoration Day was established, which became known as Memorial Day after World War II.  It was officially moved to the third Monday of May in the 1970’s.  This was done so that all of America could enjoy a long weekend while they remembered those who died for their freedom.   


Monday, May 11, 2015

SEASONS - MEMORIAL DAY AND PENTECOST


(Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)

It is that time between Passover and Pentecost, the time of The Counting of the Omer.  I've been faithfully counting the Omer, waiting on The Day of Pentecost to come,reading the scriptures, pondering the verses, numbering the days of my life and examining them to see how much I need to change in order to grow closer to God. 

 I believe it is the blood of Jesus that covers me and saves me from the wrath of God.  This brings me salvation, but it is my desire to please God and grow closer to Him that brings sanctification.  Salvation and sanctification must not be confused.  Salvation is our gift from God.  Sanctification is our gift back to God.  It is what we do with the life He has given to us.  It is a growing process and one step leads to the next.   This is what happens every year in the journey of my soul during the 50 days between Passover and Pentecost when I count the days of the Omer and ponder the days of my life before God.  The Jewish people have followed this practice for many, many years, and I agree with them that it is scriptural and right.  This is not about a Christian trying to be Jewish, it is about a heart desiring to move closer to God.  One scripture that confirms my thoughts for carrying out this practice each year is found in Leviticus.

Leviticus 23:15-16

15 And ye shall count unto you from the morrow after the sabbath, from the day that ye brought the sheaf of the wave offering; seven sabbaths shall be complete:
16 Even unto the morrow after the seventh sabbath shall ye number fifty days; and ye shall offer a new meat offering unto the Lord.

 So I go through this counting and thinking process every year, and I'm never disappointed in how God moves my heart into submission to His will during the 50 days leading up to Pentecost.   I ponder, pray and wait, anticipating, expecting God to do His work in my life.  It is a time of deep listening and turning.  In no time at all the 50 days are up and I find myself approaching sunset and realizing the time is up and the actual time of celebrating Pentecost begins.  It always happens 50 days after Passover.    The practice is to keep the Sabbath first (Saturday), and then Pentecost comes right on it's heals.

Ironically, this all happens during the same time of the year that I find myself decorating my home for Memorial Day, so my house is usually always full of red white and blue candles, flowers and decorations.  One day (on a year that both holidays collided exactly) I caught myself wondering what these two days (Memorial Day and Pentecost) could actually have in common?  As I prepared for both, I kept thinking of one thing after another.   

Since Shavout (Pentecost) is normally called "The Harvest Festival" it is customary to adorn your home with fruit, greenery and flowers.  Part of the festival is to remember that the 10 Commandments were given at Mt. Sinai, which was a desert area, but legend has it that when the law was given the mountain bloomed and sproutted flowers.  There is great symbolism in this legendary story and I love it.   I look around my house and see the red and white roses and ferns that I've chosen for Memorial Day and realize I don't have to change a thing for Pentecost, it all flows beautifully together.  

It is also customary to eat dairy foods on this Pentecost festival. The spiritual nourishment we receive from God's word and His laws are compared to the nutritional factors found in milk.  The Hebrew word for milk is "chalav."  The numerical value of this word using Hebrew Gematria is 8 + 30 + 2, adding up to 40.  We know that Moses spent 40 days on Mt. Sinai receiving the Torah.   In his 40 days with God on the mountain Moses gained great wisdom.  In the first 40 days of counting the omer up until the 50th day of Pentecost, we too, if approached correctly, gain wisdom and knowledge from God.

Passover was celebrated on two days, then we had the seven days of unleavend bread, that made nine days in counting.  The day we reach Pentecost is the 50th day - that is one day, making 10 holy days in the count.  These days are the first 10 days and then there are the 40 days inbetween, with a total of 50 days.  The 40 days inbetween the two festivals of the 50 days we have been counting are symbolic of the time of Moses on the Mountain receiving the Torah.  Receiving the word of God into our lives is like taking nourishment from milk and honey; it is very good for us and makes us healthy.  So, we eat fruit and dairy at Pentecost.  I glanced at my Memorial Day menu, and  I see mini white chocolate cheesecakes topped with blueberries, and a Memorial Day Flag Fruit Kabob Platter.    Even the menu is working out for both days!  Pretty amazing to think about!


It is also traditional to eat meat on this festival day.  You eat the dairy first, then take a break, and eat the meat next.  This is because of the natural law of God that says you must learn to drink milk before you learn to eat meat.  You must learn the basic stories of Torah and each year as you study them more and more (it is traditional to stay up all night reading Torah on Pentecost eve) they become layered lessons in life.  The stories become meatier and meatier.  You are gradually moving from milk to meat.  I had chosen an Open Faced Rib Sandwich for my Memorial Day menu.  My ribs will be beef ribs (not pork).  Even the main course will fit this day!  Again, amazing!  I had no idea when I was making out the menu that things were going to come together so easy.  Was God putting the choices into my head?  I like to think so....even the fruit kabobs in the shape of a flag with blueberries, strawberries and bananas will work out fine.  This combination of the two occassions that often fall close together on the calendar this will work out just great, no problem.

Lots of things are being memorialized on both of these days.  The giving of the Torah on the Mountain, the memory of the fallen soldiers, the sacrifice of Christ that brought the freedom that comes from the gift of The Holy Spirit, and the sacrifice of our Americian soldiers that brought us freedom in our land.


It also occurred to me that both Pentecost and Memorial Day were about marking endings and beginnings. 

Pentecost marks the harvest, the end of the wheat growing season.  Things that have been growing all year are gathered up and stored in the barn.  The wheat harvest is ended and we wait until the time comes for enjoying the fruit of the crops.  An offering is offered up to God, to give thanks for His provision.     

Memorial Day marks the end of the lives of many good godly men, who selflessly put their all on the line for the benefit of others so that all could enjoy the abundance that freedom brings.  These soldiers were so much like that wheat gathered into the barn, their service representing the harvest that causes our lives to be full and abundant.  Because the wheat has been gathered in, the barns are full.  They gave themselves as an offering.  We send up prayers of thanks to God for all their lives have provided for us.            

Those were endings;  but with each ending comes a new beginning. The Book of Life turns a page and we get a chance for new heroes to walk the earth and give the service that true heroes always give.  What a perfect example we have received from our Lord, Jesus Christ, the First-fruit of the Harvest, who came to live on this earth, to be buried like a grain of wheat in the ground and to arise again.  He walked on this earth for 40 days after His Resurrection, then, He ascended into Heaven to give us a new beginning when He sent His Holy Spirit to dwell in us.   With the giving of The Holy Spirit on The Day of Pentecost, the whole earth received the offer of a new beginning. 

Perhaps those soldiers who died for us all were only imitating The One they knew so well.  There are soldiers that enlist in the battles of this country, and there are soldiers that enlist in the battle for The Kingdom of Heaven.  There are many who join both battles.   They all deserve our heartfelt memorials.  They all were seekers, looking for a better way of life for everyone.   Maybe our country fails miserably sometimes in maintaining the honor due to them.  Maybe our country fails in keeping the freedom that they fought so hard to obtain.  But take heart good friends, there is one Commander In Chief that will never fail.  He will provide all of us with a new beginning in a land that we have yet to see, but a land that is held in our hearts as we fight our own battles.  We are all but soldiers and pilgrims fighting through the battles of this life. 



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