Is Patriotism Dead?
"The day that patriotism ceases, that day we will have ceased to be a people."
A Christianity Today Editorial | posted 7/01/2001 12:00AM

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Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just, And this be our motto: "In God is our trust." And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
Christians ought to be the best citizens and the finest patriots. Certainly they have a prior allegiance to God Almighty. But this can only make them better Americans. They need not gloss over the nation's defects or sweep its failures under the rug. They need not claim that their country is always right. When it is right, they will support it; and when it is wrong, they will love it and work to correct it. Even as the Apostle Paul could speak proudly of his Roman citizenship, so should every American Christian speak proudly of his. The day that patriotism ceases, that day we will have ceased to be a people.
Patriotism is not dead; our nation is not finished. Let us rally behind our flag; let us love our country with all its faults; let us work to improve it with all our strength; let us defend it with all our resources; let us hand it on to generations unborn better than it was when we received it; let us instill in our children the hope of our forefathers for the ultimate fulfillment of their dreams. But above all, let us tell them that the greatness of America lies not simply in the achievement of the ideal but in the unrelenting pursuit of it.
This article originally appeared in the July 4, 1969 issue of Christianity Today.
Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.
Related Elsewhere
See today's other articles on patriotism, in commemoration of the American Independence Day:
What Jonathan Edwards Can Teach Us About Politics | Before Jerry Falwell and Jesse Jackson, another preacher ventured into the public square.
Watching My Daughter 'Defect' | Part of being a good Christian is being a good citizen
More articles are available at ChristianityToday.com's Fourth of July area.