Valentine’s Day is once again upon us, and for loved ones who find themselves separated by distance, there’s never been a better time to be alive.
It would be hard to imagine a more fitting name for what would be required of that undisciplined army.
With his men’s enlistments expiring in one week, Washington had no choice but to risk everything on a desperate gamble he hoped would save the cause.
As George Washington stated in his presidential farewell address, “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.”
An unexpected miracle took place along the killing fields of Belgium and France, all because the men shared the same faith and wanted to celebrate the birth of their Lord and Savior in peace.
With Thanksgiving approaching, it’s a good time to recall the nation’s first wall, built by the Pilgrims.
For Lincoln, Thanksgiving was always intended as a day of national self-reflection—on both the blessings, and the curses, of life.
For sheer symbolism and the most glaring contrast between the evil of communism and the virtue of the West, it is hard to top the Berlin Wall.
Valentine’s Day is once again upon us, and for loved ones who find themselves separated by distance, there’s never been a better time to be alive.
It would be hard to imagine a more fitting name for what would be required of that undisciplined army.
With his men’s enlistments expiring in one week, Washington had no choice but to risk everything on a desperate gamble he hoped would save the cause.
As George Washington stated in his presidential farewell address, “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.”
An unexpected miracle took place along the killing fields of Belgium and France, all because the men shared the same faith and wanted to celebrate the birth of their Lord and Savior in peace.
With Thanksgiving approaching, it’s a good time to recall the nation’s first wall, built by the Pilgrims.
For Lincoln, Thanksgiving was always intended as a day of national self-reflection—on both the blessings, and the curses, of life.
For sheer symbolism and the most glaring contrast between the evil of communism and the virtue of the West, it is hard to top the Berlin Wall.