Bruce Catton, Civil War historian...
Illustration
Object:
Bruce Catton, Civil War historian, told of Civil War veterans of his youth and a war
memorial they built. "The monument they built ... was completely homemade. It was a fat
column of field stone and mortar ... four or five feet tall, capped by a round slab of rock
... it looks like an overgrown toadstool, and it would be funny if it were not so
unmistakably the work of men who were determined to have a monument and built one ...
because they could not pay for a professional job."
That memorial was much like the altars that Abram built -- rough stones piled together. That's all worship needs: a way to remember that God appeared to us on our journey and revealed what life is about. Abram learned that he didn't travel for himself alone. He journeyed toward a land that would belong to his descendants, who became a light to the nations. Worship reminds Christian descendants of Abraham that we don't live for ourselves, but to glorify God and to love others.
That memorial was much like the altars that Abram built -- rough stones piled together. That's all worship needs: a way to remember that God appeared to us on our journey and revealed what life is about. Abram learned that he didn't travel for himself alone. He journeyed toward a land that would belong to his descendants, who became a light to the nations. Worship reminds Christian descendants of Abraham that we don't live for ourselves, but to glorify God and to love others.
