Wanted: A leader with courage

“These are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.”
When polemicist Thomas Paine penned these words in late 1776, the American quest for freedom was on the rocks. The lusty early days of the war crashed into the reality of fighting the world’s most powerful army. After suffering repeated defeats, American troop morale was low, reenlistments were down and defections up. With enlistments terminating on Jan. 1, 1777, George Washington was on the verge of losing his army and the American cause when Paine wrote the first of a series of articles in his American Crisis series on Dec. 23, 1776.
Washington desperately needed a victory and he had just a few days remaining to pull it off. With his army lodged in southeastern Pennsylvania, he would famously cross an icy Delaware River on Christmas Day, demolish the Hessian troops at Trenton, and make another crossing on Dec. 29 with a larger force and chase the British out of southern New Jersey.
Washington got his inspirational victories, morale soared, troop numbers swelled, and the Virginian would lead America to victory in 1783. Washington’s courage was the key to this stunning turn of events.
Do we value courage when electing leaders today?
From his youth Washington was known for his bravery. The Delaware wasn’t the first icy river he had crossed. As a 21 year-old, on Dec. 29, 1753, Washington’s raft was demolished by ice as he was crossing the Allegheny River in present-day Pittsburgh. He was returning to Williamsburg, Va., following a treacherous assignment from the governor Virginia to tell the French to abandon their forts in western Pennsylvania and their plans to control the rich Ohio territory. An Indian ambush nearly killed Washington the day before he was hurled into the icy Allegheny. He pulled himself from the river and slept on an island wearing frozen clothes.
Courage. Washington had it from an early age and he passed it on to his troops on Christmas Day in 1776. If America is to survive its present day crisis, and it can, a leader with great courage and commitment to the American cause of ordered liberty must emerge soon, for these too are the times that try men’s souls.

















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back to top21 Comments to “Wanted: A leader with courage”
Amen!
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…courage to do the right things rather than the popular things.
…courage to do the hard things rather than the easy things.
…courage to do the eternal things rather than the temporary things.
…courage to do for others rather than for self.
…courage to risk failure doing things many believe impossible.
…courage to, after failing, try again.
…courage to deflect any honor to all the unknown helping heroes without whom success would truly be impossible.
…courage to truly defeat an enemy. …and…courage to be merciful at he earliest appropriate moment.
Unfortunately we are looking for these qualities in politicians. Politicians are simply looking for votes. Our nation is in desperate need of Statesmen… men and women whom God would call to step in the gap for such a time as this. People like George Washington answered His call. May it happen again, in families, in churches, in businesses, in schools, in communities, states, and in our dear United States of America.
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I missed one the greatest areas for needed courage…
…courage to ask others to join in the sacrifices …to work
…to contribute.
and in dealing with those who refuse,
…courage to let people suffer the consequences of their personal choices.
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Note to all our politicians. If you don’t start doing something right now, today, then what’s happening in Greece will be your future:
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/greeks-vent-anger-entire-political-class-211328854.html
In fact, it may already be too late. And it’s going to be your necks on the line when it happens. The populus will NOt take credit for the economic failure that is surely coming because of inflationary policies carried out by the FED, congress, and administrations of the past 20 years or so…
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Politicians are simply looking for votes. Our nation is in desperate need of Statesmen…
Sadly, Statesmen don’t get elected. If, as many here believe, the U.S. is on the fast-track to third-world status, then I have to conclude that the American Experiment in representative democracy was a failure. “We the People”, fallen as we are, are not capable of self-governance over the long term. Perhaps there is no better alternative short of the rule of Christ, but if so then what a depressing thought.
(My personal feeling is that representative democracy could be “tweaked” in a number of ways to address the deficiencies of the American system, but I’m not sure if there are any existing governments that incorporate any of my ideas.)
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BuddyGlass, I agree. We will never get statesmen on the national level until we have more statesmen as heads of homes, churches, etc. It is true that apart from the grace of God we get what we deserve.
As far as the American Experiment being a failure. It is certainly not a failure in that it has accomplished much for God’s good in our world. And, of course any system designed and run by fallen human nature is less than perfect and in need of constant tweaking. But it also could be said that the American Constitution is the greatest civil government idea the world has known.
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The entitlement culture–its beneficiaries and its apologists/administrators– has sapped much of the good out of American character.
Neil Evans you are sooo on target, esp with the “statesmen as heads of homes, churches etc”. That I think is why so many of us cringe when we read about churches voting to allow gay priests, pastors, youth ministers etc.
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It has to do with citizens not seeing themselves as part of the process. When your attitude becomes, “what’s in it for me?” you don’t see much point for personal sacrifice, much less civic responsibility.
Many of our politicians have becomes salesmen, not inspiring folks to a greater good beyond themselves. Mark Helprin’s comments at the Hillsdale College commencement three weeks ago are lengthy, but worth listening to as he describes Churchill’s leadership qualities and our need for a man like him:
http://www.hillsdale.edu/news/imprimis/digital/helprin.asp
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#7
You’re correct, Sawgunner. Perhaps dependents should not be allowed to vote. Crudely, if one is a dependent, one is incapable of governing one’s own affairs well enough to be independent, so why should we allow one like that to participate in governing those who manage themselves well enough to be independent?
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Courage is simply doing what needs to be done, despite adversity or personal consequences.
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“Courage is fear that sees a bigger perspective.” (Soren Kierkegaard.
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I have seen Emmanuel Leutz’s awe-inspiring painting in person. Unforgetable!
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You really do need courage to go up against a thug like O who will go after you AND your family.
We have a lawyer here that does that to our police. He will go after a police officer and his family claiming something bad was done to the criminal he represents. He includes the family so he figures you will settle out of court.
SO SAD!!!
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The entitlement culture–its beneficiaries and its apologists/administrators– has sapped much of the good out of American character.
What’s so ironic about this statement is that Thomas Paine, who Lee Wishing quotes in the original column, was an apologist for entitlements.
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Courage is indeed a vital characteristic.
And Mr. Paine had it as well.
From his Wikipedia entry:
He became notorious because of The Age of Reason (1793–94), his book that advocates deism, promotes reason and freethinking, argues against institutionalized religion and Christian doctrines.[3] He also wrote the pamphlet Agrarian Justice (1795), discussing the origins of property, and introduced the concept of a guaranteed minimum income.
Paine remained in France during the early Napoleonic era, but condemned Napoleon’s dictatorship, calling him “the completest charlatan that ever existed”.[6] In 1802, at President Jefferson’s invitation, he returned to America where he died on June 8, 1809. Only six people attended his funeral as he had been ostracized due to his criticism and ridicule of Christianity.
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Somehow, I just cannot imagine our current crop of politicians in Washington being mentioned in the same sentence with “courage”, unless it is in a negative statement. And notice I did not use the word “leaders” in describing them? Yeah, they are neither courageous nor leaders.
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One of the things our technology has allowed and even encouraged is to remain anonymous as we interact. This is not courageous. I appreciate those here and elsewhere in the “blogosphere” who are willing to put themselves at some risk by including their names with their words.
Seemingly a small thing, our leaders will not change until we have the fiber and habit of expecting the truth and standing by it as best we can.
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17. If if were just me I would use my own name but as Mrs. New2me pointed out the tread is to go after families. If someone went after my child, my elderly mother or my deceased sister fur would fly. And as we’ve seen with Sarah Palin defending your self will only cause them to ramp up the attacks.
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Wanted: A leader …
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According to my somewhat biased Canadian history books, George Washington was attempting to chase French Canadians fur traders in order to protect land deals made by Virginian elites. He wasn’t demonstrating courage, he was protecting an investment. And when the Seven Years War (French Indian War) was over, Washington and friends thought the Ohio Valley was theirs but ……
One of the Intolerable ACts was the Quebec Act which created an “Indian Territory” on the west side of the Appalachians to be administered from Quebec City. This maintained the fur trade benefiting both French Canadians and British merchants but upset Virginian elites who independently made land deals with several native chiefs.
When war came, its no surprise George Washington picked the rebel side. If the revolution didn’t succeed, all that time and money invested in the Ohio Valley would be for naught. Sure he may have been courageous but he was motivated by baser elements. The irony of this column — Wishing uses a quote from Thomas Paine and an anecdote about George Washington. Paine had nothing in common with the Virginia “gentlemen” who ruled the US after the Revolution. Paine demonstrated courage in standing up for his principles whereas Washington demonstrated courage in protecting his investments.
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KBELLS 18 – I understand your point. Everyone may not be up to it for one reason or another but too many people throw out words without standing behind them. How will the truth prevail if we casually seek to be anonymous? This is too often a ploy of those who want to create disorder and lawlessness. It is certain that those who desire truth will be attacked even by folks using things like freedom of the press to undermine that very freedom. Who will pay the price of being counted and perhaps singled out for attacks?
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