For Veterans Day in the U.S. on the 11th, and for Remembrance Sunday in the UK.
John 5:28: “Marvel not at this, for the hour is coming in which all that are in the graves shall hear His voice.”
In the aftermath of World War I, many parents from Great Britain, whose sons did not return home, tried to come to terms with their losses by traveling to Northern France or Belgium to search for their beloved sons. Often they found no trace. In two battlefields, the Somme and Passchendaele, for example, it was often impossible in the heat of battle to give the remains proper burial so they were left where the soldiers fell, disappearing under the muck and mire of muddy grounds. No grave, no headstone, no memorial place for loved ones to grieve their loss or to pray; no plot of ground on which to decorate with flowers. There in the ground lay a fallen son, father, brother, known but to God.
The same words are inscribed on the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington National Cemetery: “Here rests, in Honored Glory, an American soldier, known but to God.” The Tomb contains the remains of unknown American soldiers from World Wars I and II, the Korean Conflict and the Vietnam War.
No matter the final resting place of the men and women who have given the ultimate sacrifice in foreign fields and beaches, at sea or in the air, each name is known to God and a day is coming when all shall hear His voice. Hallelujah!
O, God, may we be forever grateful to those who serve our nation now, those who have served in the past, and especially for those who gave the ultimate sacrifice of their lives for the sake of our freedoms. Teach us, Lord, that the best way to show our gratitude is to demonstrate by our lives that we haven’t forgotten. May each day be Remembrance Day in our hearts. For Your sake. Amen.