Why History Matters
Our first president, George Washington, was born on February 22. Abraham Lincoln, another iconic president, was also born mid-February.And every year on the third Monday in February, we honor the two of them as well as all past presidents of the United States.
President鈥檚 Day can be an easily overlooked occasion, however, because most of us don鈥檛 do anything to celebrate. We don鈥檛 get together with family, we don鈥檛 set off fireworks, schools don鈥檛 all close their doors, and most of us don鈥檛 get the day off of work.
But let鈥檚 at least take a moment to remember.
There have only been 44 presidencies in the 226 years since Washington began his first term in 1789. In our short history as a nation led by various presidents, we鈥檝e participated in momentous events that are worthy of being applauded, and we鈥檝e also committed acts of tragedy鈥攖hings for which we need to repent. If we want to be truthful, if we want to honor the past, if we want to learn, we need to remember all of those moments鈥攖he good and the bad.
A Little Historical Perspective
We also need to acknowledge that the U.S. actually has a history, short as it may be.
My mother just got back from a trip to Italy. She stepped into cathedrals with painted frescos hundreds and hundreds of years old, walked down streets cobbled together more than two millennia ago, and visited the ruins of towns that were thriving long before the angel鈥檚 announcement to Mary that she was to bear the King of Kings.
In the places my mom visited, you can practically see the brush strokes of Michelangelo and can quite literally still see divots worn into the roadway from horses and chariots. Everywhere she stepped seemed to be marked with a piece of history. In fact, Italy drips with so much history that they simply can鈥檛 preserve it all.
As Americans, it鈥檚 humbling to visit places where our 200-year history as a nation is a proverbial 鈥渄rop in the bucket.鈥 Countries who have experienced the rise and fall of empires must chuckle as they watch us strut around like cocksure teenagers who haven鈥檛 faced their own mortality.
But a lot has happened since the Declaration of Independence was signed. The relative shortness of our history is no excuse for ignoring or denying it. If we鈥檙e wise, we鈥檒l humbly accept that being so young means we still have much to learn, and we鈥檒l look to others to teach us.
How Should We Remember?
Napoleon once said, 鈥淲hat is history but a fable agreed upon?鈥
Usually the history we hear is the side that yells the loudest, the side that 鈥渨ins.鈥 But, there are two sides to every story, and we rarely get to see the full picture.
For example, in school, I remember learning about Pilgrims and the eventual westward expansion, but I heard little to nothing about the bloody conflicts between the settlers and Native people. We learned about the great achievements of the first few presidents, but not that they were slave owners.
There are many ways for us to expand our historical horizons. One way to learn is just by talking to people鈥攐r, to be completely accurate, listening. Talk to people who have a different experience than your own. Talk to people from other generations. My grandfather, the son of immigrants who grew up during the Depression, is full of wisdom and integrity, and a history buff to boot; he is a wealth of information. I love to learn from him鈥攆rom his own stories and the wisdom he鈥檚 gleaned from his long life.
I am also of the opinion that you can learn a lot from reading. Read books by and about Americans of different ethnicities and socio-economic backgrounds. Read autobiographies, memoirs, and biographies. And read fictional narratives. It may seem odd, but even stories that come only from the imagination of the author can be filled with truth. There is a treasure trove of perspective in books; they transplant us to another time and place, they allow us to step into the shoes of another person鈥檚 experience, they make real realities outside of our own, and they bring to life histories long past.
Why Should We Remember?
As I鈥檝e gotten older, my knowledge has grown little by little, and my picture of history has become more complex. I鈥檓 still learning too, of course.
This bigger picture鈥攗ncomfortable as it sometimes is to discover鈥攈as given me a broader perspective. It helps me see what鈥檚 true and what鈥檚 evil in the world. And I can understand present world dynamics better when I know the historical roots of the issues.
A broader perspective also helps us learn from our mistakes as a nation. The more we acknowledge the tragedies in our past, the better equipped we are to move forward without making the same mistake again. This means living authentically now, not hiding behind a veneer of righteousness; it also means being honest with ourselves and other people.
I hope that having a broader perspective will also foster deeper grace in us. When you think you鈥檝e got it together, when you think you鈥檙e perfect, it鈥檚 so easy to become judgmental and hard, like the Pharisees in Scripture. But with mistakes comes wisdom, and wisdom tells us that we鈥檙e no better or worse than anyone else. As Paul says in Romans 12:3:
By the grace given me, I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourselves more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourselves with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has distributed to each of you.
Being filled with grace means being soft around the edges, forgiving ourselves for our failures, and offering the same forgiveness to others.
Choosing Hope
Even now that my understanding of history is fuller and more true than what I learned in elementary school, I鈥檓 not a cynical person. I am cheerful and upbeat and optimistic. In fact, my sunny disposition often makes people think that I鈥檓 naive and that I don鈥檛 see the world for what it really is.
But I鈥檓 not. Life is filled with good and bad, tragedy and blessing; it鈥檚 a both/and, not an either-or. I choose to move forward in faith, hopeful that we are learning from our past (even if it鈥檚 a two-steps-forward-and-one-step-back journey) and becoming a better country.
So let鈥檚 take some time today to remember. To honor the good things in our past. To mourn the tragic things. And to look ahead to what we hope we become鈥攁s individuals, as a country, and as believers in Jesus鈥攌nowing that at the end of history on earth, Jesus will make all things new.
For more perspective on the history of the U.S., check out these resources:



