The battle of Gettysburg was a meeting of
engagement, neither General Robert E. Lee, General George Meade nor President
Lincoln expected this battle to happen when and where it did. The two armies
just ran into each other at this little town in southern Pennsylvania.
The engagement resembled a three-act play,
growing as more and more actors converged on Gettysburg. General Meade,
commander of the Army of the Potomac, had only been in his position for three
days when the battle started. Before these three days ended, 165,000 soldiers
descended on these few acres in the bloodiest battle of all of North America.
More than 50,000 men fell as casualties in this brutal battle.
Like the unpredictability of a game of poker,
the first day’s battle went the way of the South on July 1. If Lee could have
withdrawn, he would have been declared the victor, but the next two days took
the victory away. On July 3, 1863, General Lee put all his cards on the table
when he sent 13,000 soldiers into the Union middle. The result was a crushing
defeat and a massacre for the South. Lee retreated toward Virginia in the rain.
Unfortunately, it took 10 days for General Meade to mount a pursuit against the
Army of Virginia and by that time, Lee and his men had crossed the Potomac.
Otherwise, the war might have come to an end much sooner than it did.
A few weeks after the battle, David Wills, a
Gettysburg attorney, coordinated plans for a national cemetery. Up until this
time, men had been buried where they fell. The date was set for November 19,
1863, Edward Everett would be the main speaker, and the President would be the
secondary speaker at the dedication ceremony.
Edward Everett spoke for 2 hours and eight
minutes while Lincoln’s address was a mere 272 words that were delivered in
about two minutes. The speech stirred the nation and continues to speak to us
today.
Lincoln started his speech with a look back at
the founding of the nation with the words, “all men are created equal.” Was
this proposition true, and did it really mean anything? Lincoln thought that it
did. In 1776, the nation experienced a birth of freedom, and now 87 years
later, it was experiencing a second birth of freedom. The first birth brought
freedom from tyranny from abroad, and the second birth brought freedom for
those still living under oppression at home.
Lincoln made a comparison with what “we say
here and what they did here.” He pointed out that though this was a dedication
ceremony, “we can not consecrate— we can not hallow— this ground.” The brave
men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our
poor power to add or detract.” Lincoln finished the speech pointing out what
the nation’s part was—“to make sure these brave men did not die in vain.” We
must make sure we preserve this freedom—freedom that endures— “and that
government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from
the earth.”
Now 243 years later, we see what has been
given us in our freedom. We must ask for God’s help to preserve these
liberties. We need insight to not be beguiled by enemies within and courage to
defend our freedom that came at such a high cost. We are hearing that socialism
will bring us such prosperity. Can we not remember those failed political
attempts? There have always been demagogues who have promised a paradise they
could not deliver. But, in pursuing these utopias, those poor people lost their
freedom. God help us to hang on to what we know to be dear and precious—our
freedom!
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