Thursday, August 25, 2016

Manassas Museum

I traveled with our www.GO group today to the Manassas Museum. This small community treasure bears evidence to the early days of the civil war and the tragic toll it took on Manassas, Northern Virginia, and our nation. Among the artifacts on display were spinning wheels used to make clothing, farm implements, reading glasses, Bibles, and hymnals alongside colt revolvers, carbine rifles, cannon balls, and battle flags. Neither the residents of Manassas nor the soldiers on either side of the conflict were prepared for the first battle of Manassas. The atmosphere was almost festive as soldiers and civilians alike seemed to revel in the exciting, even romantic quality of the impending battle. When the first battle of Manassas was over, however, thousands lay dead or wounded, homes and livelihoods had been destroyed, and the romance of war had been unmasked as the devastating tyrant it was...and still is.

I was struck by the seeming unpreparedness, even arrogance that often precedes human conflict. The pictures of the dead and wounded lying across fields that would not bear crops for years to come, and the rubble of houses, barns, and towns created by the weapons of war still give evidence to the destructive nature of humankind. After the war and throughout the last half of the nineteenth century, Manassas slowly recovered, but the stories still haunt those today who seek to learn from them.

In the often arrogant, self-serving rhetoric that marks much of our modern social and political discussion, it seems easy to speak the language of supercilious pride, but one must stop to count the costs in human terms that are all too often forgotten. Today, I read the stories of mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, generals and enlisted men whose lives were irrevocably changed in a matter of days, hours, and moments. Perhaps we would all do well to revisit such stories.

The back to school celebration at Springfield Gardens is this Saturday from 10-2. Again this year we will be providing and monitoring the moon bounce and the joyous giggles and screams of young children. We still need a few folks to help so please contact Janet Curtin to let her know you will help in this happy, happy celebration!

This Sunday is our final August Sunday at Westwood. Join us for worship at 9:30 featuring special music from our handbell players and then stay for fellowship in Whitten Hall. I look forward to seeing you then!

Jim Abernathy

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