Forgotten?
Do you ever feel forgotten, overlooked, or helpless in a world that seems increasingly confusing, rancorous, and on the brink of even more uncertainty and lurking disaster? Maybe you long for someone to come along and say, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself” or, “It’s morning in America again.”
Striking a Great Depression nerve in the 1932 presidential campaign, Franklin D. Roosevelt spoke to the nation soothingly about the “forgotten man.” Roosevelt was confident and reassuring in his radio address. Known earlier as a great humanitarian, the sitting president in 1932, Herbert Hoover, seemed increasingly distant and cold. Weeks after Roosevelt’s hopeful national address, Hoover sent the army to deal with World War I veterans camped out in Washington, D.C., in protest over a pension dispute. In July, Gen. Douglas MacArthur moved aggressively against the impoverished men who had defended their nation in the “war to end all wars.” The result: A burning makeshift encampment became a symbol of the Hoover presidency.
Most Americans wanted someone who would help the forgotten man—not trample him—and they gave Roosevelt a landslide victory in November. They believed the national nightmare would end and joy would return to America.
Do you groan, even ache, to feel like Americans must have felt when Roosevelt won?
Today, if you’re a conservative you may be wondering when the current political nightmare will end. If you’re a liberal, you’re probably disappointed that President Obama is not pushing hard enough.
Is anybody ever truly happy with politics? Remember, when Roosevelt won, the United States was in big financial trouble and his policies had not worked by the 1938 mid-term elections. By then, Hitler was a growing threat and Japan bombed Pearl Harbor three years later. Likewise, when Ronald Reagan took office after the 1970s malaise, he too had serious economic challenges, a deep recession, a critical press, and the Soviet nuclear menace to confront.
This year we’re in the midst of a mid-term election season. The Republicans smell blood and are relying on Scott Brown’s 41st vote. Democrats want to make the most of their majority status, and President Obama hopes to recover his lost magic. However, no matter whether we’re Republicans, Tea Partiers, conservatives, Democrats, or progressives, the question to ask ourselves is, “Where do we place our hope?”
Take a moment and remember the Christmas season just past. To all you who feel forgotten and overwhelmed, cast your lot with Christ: “For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given; and the government will be upon his shoulder. … Of the increase of His government and peace, there will be no end. . . .”

















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back to top14 Comments to “Forgotten?”
Odd that you mention all of the other stuff first and bring Christ in on the end……
We should begin with Christ.
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happy with politics?
That very notion is odd. Governments only rightfully exist to give the law thoughtful enforcement. And the law only exists because people don’t always get along with each other. So government and politics as described is really only the acknowledgment that people don’t get along. Who could be happy about that?
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oops sorry about so much bold print.
As far as being confused…. we can never know it all. To imagine that we could understand every nuance is like thinking we know how to run all the plays on a football field. Unless we happen to be football virtuosos , we don’t. And we won’t. But we can pray and learn a few things.
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“To all you who feel forgotten and overwhelmed, cast your lot with Christ…”
I agree. But there is nothing about this truth that should cause believers to coldly abaondon the public sector and, in the name of faith, stop caring about the effect that politics has on humanity today. We need to work in all realms bringing to them a spirit of faith that holds our ultimate hope at a higher level.
C.S. Lewis once said something about the fact that those who think the most of heaven are so often those who also do the most good on earth (my paraphrase from memory).
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Herbert Hoover was indeed a genuine and effective humanitarian in the real world, long beofre he was President. That is more true of him, perhaps, than any other President in his century.
In our political culture (I am just generalizing), we tend to blame and stigmatize the best human beings and we worship some of the worst.
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Govt as CS Lewis reminded us is at best a TEMPORARY THING made by flawed humans until the triumphal return of He about whom Scripture declares “the weight of the govt will be on his shoulders” and of his reign there shall be no end.
I’m grateful to live in a country built on the JudeoChristian understanding of flawed fallen sinners.
The nations and religions of the world where they do not understand or accept our Fallen-ness invariably expect strong heroic flawless men to lead them. And such people become sheeple subject to the dictator’s whims.
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Here is the C.S. Lewis quote I paraphrased earlier:
* “A continual looking forward to the eternal world is not a form of escapism or wishful thinking… If you read history, you will find that the Christians who did the most for the present world were just those who thought the most of the next.” C.S. Lewis. Book III, Chapter 10 (’Hope’) in Mere Christianity.
Here’s another Lewis quote that backs up what Sawgunner shared about Lewis’ view of gov’t as temporary and flawed:
* “Perhaps civilization will never be safe until we care for something else more than we care for it.” C.S. Lewis, God in the Dock, “First and Second Things” (1942).
I find these statements to be profoundly compatible.
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Lee — thank you for this. You place your fingers on the pulse, the right point: it is so easy to forget where our hope lies while we are in the midst of a political campaign (or any other all-consuming project). The other thing about hope is that it is grounded not in outcomes or victories, but in God’s gift to us in the Cross. That’s the hope that says our lives matter, whether they be big or small. And if you know you have a Place, then you can set about working to make this place here a little better (that being the stuff of politics and civic life).
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Joel Mark, if I may, here’s another Lewis quote I thought you were referring to:
“Aim at Heaven and you will get earth ‘thrown in’: aim at earth and you will get neither.”
From “Mere Christianity,” Chapter 10, Hope.
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Do you ever feel forgotten, overlooked . .
Sarah Palin thinks you’re beautiful.
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Monty #1, people don’t begin with Christ. But, hopefully, then end with Him.
Lee, thank you for this article.
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Correction: “then” should have been “they”.
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#10 – “Sarah Palin thinks you’re beautiful.”
The feeling is mutual.
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