June 14 is the day Americans celebrate the flag which
symbolizes our liberty and freedom as a nation. Each
year the president proclaims Flag Day and encourages
all citizens to fly the American flag outside their
homes and businesses. Many states hold special celebrations
and observances, and people are encouraged to recite
the Pledge of Allegiance to our great nation:
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States
of America and to the republic for which it stands:
one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and
justice for all.
Since Sept. 11, 2001, many Americans have rediscovered
the importance of flying the flag as a symbol of hope,
determination and national unity in the face of the
threat of danger. The true spirit of America—one
nation, under God, with liberty and justice for all—is
being restored.
The history of our flag began June 14, 1777, when
the Continental Congress issued a resolution establishing
an official flag for the United States to express
liberty and separation from Great Britain. It has
undergone some changes over the years, but the basic
design has remained the same with alternating red
and white stripes and a rectangular blue field containing
white stars in the upper corner near the staff. I’ve
heard it said the red stripes represent the stripes
Jesus bore for us and the blood He shed, the white
represents the purity of the new birth, and the blue
represents the truth of the Word of God. I believe
that.
Sometimes called the Stars and Stripes, the flag
is a powerful symbol for our nation. It is not a political
symbol, but rather, it represents a mighty and free
people—the freest people on the face of the
earth. It represents all that is good, sacred and
godly in this country.
Our flag is a standard of liberty and freedom, and
that includes above all, the freedom to worship God
as a Christian nation. Isn’t that what the Founding
Fathers came here for? Isn’t that what many of them
fought and died for?
The freedom to worship and praise God has never been
cheap. It cost Jesus His life. It cost a lot of other
people their lives too. Our flag represents those
who shed their blood for freedom—including Jesus.
That’s why Satan hates the banner called Old Glory.
He hates it the way he hates the Constitution. He
hates it the way he hates God. And he hates it the
way he hates the blood and the Name of Jesus. Satan
hates Old Glory’s guaranteed freedoms.
It has always been God’s plan to have a nation where
the glory of God could be sown and nurtured, from
which His glory could spread throughout the whole
earth. That nation would have to be a nation where
all people could freely praise and worship Him.
Why?
Because God inhabits the praises of His people, and
His glory is in His presence.
Our flag represents a nation where men and women
are not only free, but they can also worship and praise
God without fear.
“Conquer We Must, When
Our Cause It Is Just”
A number of years ago God began to deal with me about
ministering “The Star–Spangled Banner” to people.
He told me it is actually a psalm—an ode, or
poem from the Spirit of God, set to melody.
When I began to study “The Star-Spangled Banner”
and looked into the heart of the man who wrote it,
I discovered that Francis Scott Key wasn’t trying
to write a national anthem, although that is what
it became. Rather, as an eyewitness to a historic
battle, he wrote his testimony during a time of war
when men had decided they would rather die for freedom
than live under tyranny.
It so happened that during the War of 1812, Mr. Key,
a lawyer, sailed to the British fleet to negotiate
the release of a captured American. That night, detained
by the British on a ship in the harbor, he witnessed
the bombardment of Fort McHenry. As the battle raged
and the sky filled with smoke from the shelling, Francis
Key kept his eyes on the Stars and Stripes until the
sun went down and it was no longer visible.
Oh, say can you see, by the dawn’s early light,
What so proudly we hailed at the twilight’s last gleaming?
All night, through this critical battle, he had his
eyes fastened on the place where that standard flew.
The question in his mind, as important as the battle
itself, was: Is the flag still there?
Whose broad stripes and bright stars, through the
perilous fight,
O’er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming?
And the rockets’ red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof through the night that our flag was still
there.
The flash and glow of the rockets interrupted the
black of night to reveal welcome glimpses of the Stars
and Stripes.
Then in an instant, everything went quiet. Smoke
hung in the air. The sun had not yet come up. Francis
Scott Key didn’t know if the flag was still there
or not. He ends the first verse by asking God:
Oh, say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
Are we still a nation? Are we still a free people?
There was not another free nation on the face of
the earth. Some people even considered the establishment
of this country to be an experiment that would fail.
I imagine that throughout the night, these kinds of
thoughts were rolling around in this lonely man’s
spirit and in his mind: Oh God, if that flag is
not still there when the sun comes up, this thing
is all over. There won’t be a free nation anywhere.
But it has to be, Lord…it must stand as the
home of the free and the brave.
Surely God would help this nation to stand strong
as the ragtag army of courageous farmers and churchgoers
dared to go up against the most powerful, best–quipped
expeditionary force on the face of the earth.
These were people of faith who were not moved by the
odds. They were not moved by what they could see.
They were moved by what they believed—and they
believed they were already free, as of the day the
Declaration of Independence of 1776 was signed.
They fought the fight of faith and praise as well
as the fight of war. Throughout the war with Great
Britain, Congress declared days of fasting and prayer
and encouraged Americans to seek God’s help in the
battle for freedom. They were careful to declare days
of thanksgiving and praise when God intervened and
blessed them with victories.
Once more during the battle at Fort McHenry, God
honored their faith and the colonists stood strong
against the enemy. As the smoke cleared at dawn, Francis
Key was thrilled to find the beloved American flag
still flying high, proclaiming victory for all to
see. Historians report that the sight of that majestic
flag inspired the words which became “The Star-Spangled
Banner.”
Francis Scott Key was a man of faith, and I believe
he learned something as he witnessed the fierce battle
that was ultimately between freedom and oppression.
I’m certain he meditated throughout the night about
what the outcome of that fight would mean to our infant
country. The words of the song give us insight into
what was going through his mind. I believe Mr. Key
began formulating these words during the night and
that the last verse was the answer of his faith. He
could not see the flag—except by faith. Spiritinspired
prophetic utterance came out of his mouth:
Oh! thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved homes and the war’s desolation!
Blest with victory and peace, may the heaven–rescued
land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
As relevant as Francis Scott Key’s words were then,
they are even more so today. We must not forget to
praise the One who has given us our nation. We must
not forget to praise the One who has given us peace.
We must not forget to praise the One who has given
us the victory during wars to keep America free, to
keep the glory alive, to keep the Word alive, to keep
the Name of Jesus on the lips of its citizens throughout
this whole North American continent!
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: “In God is our trust.” And the
star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave O’er the
land of the free and the home of the brave!
Thank God, we’re free and our trust is in God. He
has preserved us as a nation and will continue to
do so. If our cause is just, we will always triumph.
And our most powerful symbol of freedom, the Star-Spangled
Banner, will continue to wave over the land of the
free and the home of the brave…forever!