New Church Life May/June 2016 | Page 95

Life Lines tableaux of remembrance The Memorial Day Address by the Rev. Thomas Rose on page 233 is one of thousands of such tributes to fallen soldiers that echo throughout the United States on Memorial Day – the last Monday in May. His is unique, of course, for its New Church perspective. Similar observances around the world honor the men and women who have died in service to their country and our freedom. They deserve our deepest gratitude and respect – every day. In the tiny park below the Bryn Athyn Cathedral where this observance is held every year is a plaque listing those who served in foreign wars. The names ring with the generations of the community and the Church: Alden and Cooper, Pendleton and Pitcairn, Bostock and Gyllenhaal, Odhner and Rose, Smith and Synnestvedt. It is such names on plaques and monuments that bring it all home for us. These are the men and women driven to protect our freedom and to accept responsibility – values nurtured in churches and schools and living rooms. They accepted the calling that it is nobler to risk death for the sake of honor than to risk dishonor for the sake of life. We honor them for their character. Beyond the tranquil setting of a quiet little park in Bryn Athyn are searing symbols of what “laying down your life for your friends” is all about. Two of the most stirring to me are the American Cemetery at Omaha Beach in France and the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, DC. The American Cemetery sits above the beaches where the cataclysmic horror of D-Day gives way now to sacredness and serenity. Ten thousand stark white crosses and Stars of David stand eloquent and mute – and shout the price of freedom. There is an eerie stillness among those endless, perfect rows, mocking the wantonness of war. The impact of so many silenced brave young men dulls voices to whispers. This is hallowed ground. When you read the names on each alabaster tombstone – some inscribed “Known only to God” – you begin to understand that each of these men had a story, a dream, and each was a hero to his loved ones and his country. The connection to names is all the more compelling at the Vietnam Memorial, a stark and piercing slash in the ground in the shadow of the Lincoln Memorial, with 58,000 names etched into its somber black marble. Its 297