Monday, December 12, 2016

JOHN GLENN’S AMERICA

By Edwin Cooney

It was sad to learn last Thursday, December 8th, 2016 of the passing of John Glenn.  It wasn’t really unexpected by me or probably anyone else.  After all, the former Marine, astronaut, and U.S. Senator was 95 years old!  The heart of the discomfort for me was the realization that Mr. Glenn’s death was another sign of the end of an era.  I see it as the era between 1933 and 1969 when Americans, reasonably sure of who they were and where they were going, gave this nation the best of their talents and their patriotism.

John Glenn was a product of small town America and its most sterling values: family, church, school, and neighbors.  Born on Monday, July 18th, 1921 to John and Clara (Sproat) Glenn in Cambridge, Ohio, he was raised to expect the best of himself, an expectation inherited from his parents.  His father was a railroad conductor who also owned a plumbing business. He moved the family to Concord, Ohio when John was very young.  Gifted with a healthy and highly functioning physique, John was an energetic, capable, and industrious lad.  From college on, young Glenn not only participated but would excel in practically everything he did whether it be football and tennis or space exploration and politics.  He deservedly earned recognition and rewards along the way.  Even more significantly, he conducted himself in such a way that all who knew of him never doubted that he was a genuine gentleman which was the foundation of his national status as a hero.

From Muskingum College which he entered in 1939 as a chemistry major, through flight training at the Naval Sea Cadet program, and on into  the Marine Corps, Glenn was an achiever.  He participated in 59 combat missions in World War II and 90 combat missions in Korea where one of his fellow pilots was baseball’s Ted Williams.  In 1957, he flew a F8U Crusader from Los Angeles to New York in 3 hours, 23 minutes and 8 seconds.  Then, in April of 1959, he joined Alan B. Shepard, Virgil I. Grissom, Walter Schirra, Scott Carpenter, Donald (Deke) Slayton, and Gordon Cooper as America’s Mercury Astronauts.

It was only natural that Colonel Glenn hoped to be the first man shot into space, but that honor went to Al Shepard.  Perhaps Robert Gilruth, the head of NASA, saw Glenn as far more valuable to the program and the nation if he were put on the orbital flight rather than the suborbital flights of Shepard and Grissom.  Glenn’s flight aboard “Friendship Seven” had a huge impact which placed Glenn in the category of “national hero” along with Charles Lindbergh.  That assessment may be legitimately debatable but only among scholars and historians.  To most Americans, John Herschel Glenn Jr. was and remains a national hero.

What makes a man worthy enough to be called a national hero?  Achievement has to be the basis, but there are inevitably elements of personality and circumstance that make a person worthy of heroic status.  In John Glenn’s case, his lack of personal presumption had a lot to do with how much mid 20th century Americans came to love him.  Always reluctant to talk about himself, he always insisted that his national prominence had more to do with the tenuous circumstances in which Americans thought they were living.  He asserted that anyone who was assigned the orbital flight would have been viewed with the favor he enjoyed.

Of course, John Glenn had an ego; without one he could hardly have achieved what he did.  His twenty-four year Senate career and his 1984 quest for the Democratic presidential nomination attest to Glenn’s healthy self-esteem.  However, there are two aspects of his personal life that stand out.

Anna Margaret (Castor) Glenn was John’s sweetheart almost from birth.  As babies, the two often played in the same playpen.  Known as the “doctor’s daughter,” Anna, whom Glenn always called Annie, had a severe stuttering malady.  John, who was exceedingly articulate, was never in the least put off by Annie’s struggle.  He loved her and she was a vital part of his being.  Eventually, Annie had therapy which enabled her to conquer her stuttering to the extent that she was able to give speeches.  Gone were the days when her husband, children, family and friends had to take messages for her or deliver her essential messages to the outside world.  For the Glenns, Annie’s triumph was theirs.

Another perhaps less significant element in Glenn’s character was his rather low-key advocacy of military needs.  His pronouncements lacked that sharp authoritarian military urgency.  His public statements and addresses lacked the biting advocacy and dramatics of most military experts.

John Glenn’s America did what it had to do to survive the perceived Russian threat, but it didn’t panic about it.  America in the late 1950s and early 1960s, John Glenn’s era of prominence, was dutiful in the face of challenge, but it lacked the self-righteousness of today’s patriotism.  John Glenn did his duty. He didn’t revel in it and he most certainly didn’t brag about it.

I’ll never forget the night of Monday, July 12th, 1976 at Madison Square Garden when John Glenn, who was considered a possible vice presidential candidate on Jimmy Carter’s ticket, was assigned to give the first of two keynote addresses to the Democratic National Convention.  Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, a brilliant speaker and the first black woman ever to give a keynote address at a major party convention, would follow Senator Glenn.  Senator Glenn was very articulate, but he was no orator.  Nevertheless he stood on that platform and doggedly performed his assignment.  Many thought that Governor Carter would be watching to see which one of them gave the best address. They thought that Senator Glenn had much more to lose than Barbara Jordan.  In fact, she did give the superior address that night, speaking eloquently to the prevailing urgencies of 1976.  Still, John Glenn, as he usually did, presented practical priorities. His speech may not have had the urgency of Ms. Jordon’s presentation, but it was, after all, reflective of John Glenn’s America.

John Glenn’s America was far from perfect.  The lifestyles of minorities as well as their civil rights were too often the subject of derisive humor. Republicans and Democrats in Congress were very often fast and loyal friends.  Lyndon Johnson often drank scotch in the White House after 5 o’clock with GOP Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen.  Jerry Ford of Grand Rapids, Michigan, would support legislation in Democratic Congressman Carl Albert’s Oklahoma district in exchange for Albert’s support on GOP-sponsored legislation.  Elvis was King.  Muhammad Ali was on the way to being boxing’s king.  Most Americans could go to college without breaking the bank.  Hit songs had tunes and the lyrics were often understandable.  The “British invasion” was still preparing its American onslaught on the Mersey.  Most significant and important, there existed in John Glenn’s America an expectation of public civility that is mostly lacking today.  To suggest that a political opponent ought to be jailed or that a war hero wasn’t really a hero because he was captured by the enemy would have resulted in the certain defeat of such a candidate in John Glenn’s America.

As for the goals of John Glenn’s America, there were several: the successful and peaceful containment of communism; overcoming Jim Crow in the South; the perfection in the packaging, quality and marketing of consumer goods; and putting the American flag on the moon by 1970.  Astronaut Glenn would never get to the moon himself although in 1998 he would become the oldest American to fly in space at the age of 77.  (We’ve since learned that President Kennedy, John Glenn’s friend, kept him from participating in additional space travel because he was simply “too valuable to lose.”)

Of course, John Glenn didn’t create John Glenn’s America, he merely personified it. He made it so memorable that it has become the bedrock of some of our fondest memories!

RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
EDWIN COONEY

Monday, December 5, 2016

GOD BLESS AMERICA - A PRAYER OR A COMMAND?

By Edwin Cooney

In the wake of a clearly aggressive administration forming at Trump Tower in New York City, it’s increasingly frightening for me to fathom why in the world God should bless America.  It isn’t that God is anti-Republican or anti-Donald Trump. (May God never be forced to be either!)  However, there’s little about either the president-elect or the party he finally appears to be in control of that indicates that he —or they — represent Christianity’s strongest attribute: love for and tolerance of all God’s people. Before going any further, I should note that President Barack Obama, who ended many  of his addresses with “may God bless America,” never convinced me of America’s worthiness of God’s special blessing.

The first ten words of the Bible say it best:  “In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth.”  Holy Writ makes no reference, except to the early Jews, as a special people.  Yet we know that, again, according to Holy Writ, God subjected His chosen people to periods of punishment for the errors of their ways.  So the question remains, at least in my mind, what does it mean for God to bless America?

There is an implication in the very wish that God should bless America above other nations.  Thus the question: why would the Creator, the Father of all nations and the ground they rest on and live from, not be equal in God’s sight?  Of course, many nations have been created since the Bible was written and these nations have been largely born of the desires of men whose motives have not always conformed to God’s will, or indeed according to any spiritual virtue.

America is naturally a part of a whole, with humankind being the whole!  Therefore, shouldn’t we be more concerned about constructively contributing to the well-being of the whole rather than asking for special blessings from the Almighty?

As an American citizen, I want America to be safe and prosperous, to balance tolerance and righteousness in both our domestic and international affairs.  However, over the years it seems increasingly to me that our ongoing request that “God bless America” has become more of a command by the politically ambitious than a prayer from the humble citizen.  Even more to the point, how do we gauge God’s response to that request or prayer, call it what you may?  Let’s examine some recent world developments so that we might grasp God’s role in them:

(1.) The Korean war (1950-1953 ) ended as a truce, not a peace. Did God have a favorite in that “police action?” After all, it cost some 30,000 American lives! To make matters worse, North Korea is now a nuclear power seemingly anxious to try out a missile or two on her southern neighbor and perhaps on our west coast. Thus, Ike’s truce, rather than a peace, has spawned Kim Jong-un as Kim Il-sung’s benefactor. 
(2.) The Vietnam War and the “peace with honor” that ended our part in it. Since 1975, Vietnam united has existed quite benignly within the world community. It’s all communist, but it’s hardly the threat we insisted it would be at one time when we sacrificed over 58,000 young Americans.
(3.) The Camp David Accords. On the surface, it would appear that God would more than likely bless Jimmy Carter’s noble quest, but practically every effort on the part of American administrations to expand on it have been met with very limited success.
(4.) The fall of the Soviet Union and America’s triumph over communism seem to have only turned into another set of less than satisfactory conflicts between American and Russian values. Under Putin, a former KBG agent, communism has melded into gangsterism gobbling up, as did Stalin before him, all of its opponents.
(5.) The capture and execution of Osama bin Laden would again seem to be within what we perceive to conform to God’s righteous wrathful justice. The question is, what tangible evidence is there that the Almighty was the least interested in President Obama’s successful venture. Some Americans, myself included, wonder if the practice of stealthily invading another nation’s sovereignty didn’t set a dangerous precedent for future international relations. 

All of us, in one way or another, are understandably in search of encouragement or approval.  For many of us that means God’s blessing or approval.  Abraham Lincoln wasn’t worried as much about whether God was on his side as he was about whether he was on God’s side.  If a man of Abraham Lincoln’s stature can be humble enough to wonder if he was acting according to God’s will, shouldn’t 2016 America show some humility and seriously wonder if we’re on God’s side doing things according to God’s will rather than demanding that we have God’s blessing?

A dear friend of mine and a subscriber to these weekly musings, I’ll call him Mr. Kentucky, is a man deeply devoted to God and American Conservatism as he perceives it.  I’m sure he’s delighted about the recent election results.  Anytime Mr. Kentucky was about to engage in a questionable venture he’d say: “it’s easier to ask for forgiveness than it is permission!” Then he’d often do exactly what he wanted to do anyway.

There is no certain way that any one of us, let alone a whole nation of us, can ask for and receive God’s permission.  Thus we seek God’s blessing, the evidence of which invariably we discern long after the request.

I’ve reached the following conclusions which I cordially invite you to challenge:
(1.) Since we do not live in God’s world we must find God’s blessings within our own ability to follow God’s command that we love our neighbor as ourselves.
(2.) Since we do not live in God’s world we will not even begin to grasp who God is or what God is all about until we live within God’s dimension.
(3.) God has granted that man and woman run this world. God has given men and woman the essential talents to create, nurture, understand, and apply concepts on a continuing basis for their growth and benefit. Some of these gifts are as old as humanity while others have emerged with time. Medical and other sciences emanate from God’s original gift to human beings. The world in which every person abides is a physical rather than a spiritual world.
(4.) You and I may legitimately ask God’s blessings for ourselves or people we love so long as we realize that God’s response may disappoint us. We may ask for healing, but death may be the only path to healing until the day that men and women have utilized God’s gifts to create and apply the God-given forces that result in healing.
(5.) If I correctly interpret some recent scripture reading, Jesus’s divinity was challenged by one of the Pharisees on the grounds that the Messiah would be sent to free Israel from the domination of the Roman Empire. Jesus’s response was to remind the Pharisees that they lived in man’s world not God’s and if He were to free Israel from Rome, Israel itself would become as dominant as Rome itself according to man’s understanding of justice. Thus, “render therefore to Caesar the things which are Caesar’s; and unto God the things that are God’s.”

As we enter what seems to be the world according to Trump, I would sing Irving Berlin’s song a little differently. In fact, I would call it “God Guide America.”

I’m no different than anyone else. I’d like America to be forever safe and prosperous, abiding in peace at home and abroad. However, God will surely require America — as God requires of every other nation — to earnestly administer justice with equity and mercy toward all.

For Mr. Lincoln, the task of reuniting an angry and divided nation was far from easy. 
In fact, it was humbling and ultimately cost him his life.  Mr. Lincoln himself proved to be a blessing from God not because he sought God’s blessing, but because he ultimately met God’s second command “to love thy neighbor as thy self.”

It’s my contention that whatever may be your faith or state of spiritual doubt, if you expect the world to be a domain of justice and equity, you’ll discover that you’re a blessing from God!

RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
EDWIN COONEY